Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 5-year-old girl with a previous diagnosis of cerebral palsy, nonprogressive psychomotor retardation, and hypotonia was found to excrete excessive fumaric acid in urine. Fumarate hydratase activity in skin fibroblasts was 10% of the control value. This case underscores the clinical heterogeneity of neurometabolic disorders and the importance of organic acid analysis in the diagnosis of static encephalopathy.
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PMID:Variability of clinical presentation in fumarate hydratase deficiency. 143 28

Fumaric aciduria (fumaric acidemia, fumarase deficiency) is a rare inborn error of metabolism caused by deficient activity of fumarate hydratase, one of the constituent enzymes of the Krebs tricarboxylic acid cycle. We describe the clinical and imaging features of this disease arising from a consanguineous pedigree in 8 patients in the southwestern United States. Thirteen patients have been previously described in the medical literature. Our patients presented with an early infantile encephalopathy with profound developmental retardation and hypotonia, and most experienced seizures. Previously unreported characteristics described here include structural brain malformations, dysmorphic facial features, and neonatal polycythemia. Magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple abnormalities, including diffuse polymicrogyria, decreased cerebral white matter, large ventricles, and open opercula. Fumaric aciduria should be included in the differential diagnosis of inborn errors of metabolism that cause cerebral malformations and dysmorphic features. The possibility that inborn errors of energy metabolism may cause structural malformations deserves increased recognition.
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PMID:Fumaric aciduria: clinical and imaging features. 1080 28

Monozygotic twins with fumarate hydratase deficiency presenting with profound hypotonia and developmental delay are reported. This rare organic aciduria has been previously described in random case reports, although, to our knowledge, these are the first reported monozygotic twins and gene testing revealed a novel mutation in both. During their course, one of the twins also developed acute pancreatitis, which has not been previously described in association with this particular organic aciduria.
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PMID:Fumarate hydratase deficiency in monozygotic twins. 1687 16

Fumaric aciduria is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder caused by deficient activity of fumarate hydratase (FH). Common clinical features are hypotonia, failure to thrive, severe psychomotor retardation and seizures. Facial dysmorphism and brain malformations are frequent. Recently, some FH gene mutations have been associated with inherited cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas and papillary renal cell cancer. Our patient had a relatively mild phenotype, a previously not reported genotype and familial tumour predisposition. The mother and grandmother had uterine myomas. The paternal grandfather and his two brothers died from lung and laryngeal cancers. The pregnancy was complicated by bleeding and intrauterine growth retardation. Delivery was after 35 weeks, with normal Apgar score. The girl was hypotonic since birth. At age 2 months the parents noticed short apnoeic crises. She could sit at age 1.5 years, and walk with assistance at 4 years. At age 8 years highly increased excretion of fumaric acid was found twice (217 and 445 mmol/mol creatinine). Shortly before that the girl started to have leg and arm spasms. Grand mal seizures occurred twice. Facial dysmorphism included depressed nasal bridge, anteverted ears, hypertelorism and microcephaly. Speech was limited to few disyllables. She was atactic with spastic paraparesis. Brain MRI showed slight ventriculomegaly, white-matter atrophy and hypoplasia of corpus callosum. Activity of FH in fibroblasts was 1.9 nmol/min/mg protein (controls 40-80). Analysis of the FH gene revealed the maternally derived c.1029_1031delAGT mutation, resulting in Val deletion and substitution of Gln by His, and paternally derived c.976C > T mutation, resulting in substitution of Pro by Ser.
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PMID:Fumaric aciduria: mild phenotype in a 8-year-old girl with novel mutations. 1697 75

Fumarase deficiency is a very rare inborn error of metabolism caused by decreased activity of fumarate hydratase enzyme. We describe a fumarase-deficient infant who presented with encephalopathy, metabolic crisis, psychomotor retardation, hypotonia, seizures, and facial dysmorphism. To our knowledge, this is the first Indian child to be described with fumarase deficiency.
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PMID:Infantile metabolic encephalopathy due to fumarase deficiency. 2277 60

Mutations in the FH gene cause the deficiency of the enzyme fumarase (fumarate hydratase, EC 4.2.1.2) which result in autosomal recessive fumaric aciduria in early childhood with failure to thrive, seizures, developmental delay, mental retardation, hypotonia and sometimes with polycythemia, leukopenia, and neutropenia. Many children with fumarate hydratase deficiency do not survive infancy or childhood; those surviving beyond childhood have severe psychomotor retardation. Recently, FH gene was also identified as a "non-classical" tumor suppressor gene and heterozygous mutations were shown to cause multiple cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas as well as hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer. A male patient who was referred to investigate the etiology of psychomotor retardation was later diagnosed to have fumaric aciduria due to the combination of a previously known (c.1431_1433dupAAA) and a novel (c.782G>T) mutation. The patient had an unusually mild clinical course without acidotic attacks. Interestingly his father who was heterozygous for the c.1431_1433dupAAA mutation in the FH gene had cutaneous leiomyoma.
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PMID:Mild clinical presentation and prolonged survival of a patient with fumarase deficiency due to the combination of a known and a novel mutation in FH gene. 2361 58