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Most inborn errors of intermediary metabolism presenting in the neonatal period fall schematically into three clinical categories: (1) those which lead to a neurological distress 'intoxication type' with a symptom-free interval, vomiting, comas, hypertonia, abnormal movements and frequent humoral disturbances (organic acidaemias, congenital urea cycle defects); (2) those which lead to a neurological distress 'energy deficiency' type. Frequent symptoms in this group include hyperlactacidaemia, severe hypotonia, cardiomyopathy, failure to thrive and malformations (congenital lactic acidaemias, fatty acid oxidation defects, peroxysomal disorders); (3) those which present evidence of liver dysfunction and hepatomegaly (glycogenesis, neoglucogenesis defects, galactosaemia, fructosaemia, tyrosinaemia type I). According to these three major clinical presentations and according to the proper use of few screening tests (blood gases, glucose, ammonia, lactic acid, electrolytes, acetest), we propose a method of diagnosis which groups these children into five schematical syndromes: type I MSUD; type II organic acidaemias; type III; congenital lactic acidosis; type IVa, urea cycle defects; type IVb, non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia, sulfite oxidase deficiency, peroxisomal disorders; type V liver dysfunctions. Once the above classification has been made, sophisticated and specific investigations can be planned (amino acid chromatography, organic acid chromatography, enzymatic studies, etc).
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PMID:Clinical approach to inherited metabolic disorders in neonates. 226 19

Determining the cause of metabolic acidosis with a high anion gap may present a diagnostic challenge. Possible causes include ketoacidosis, certain toxic ingestions, renal failure and lactic acidosis. Many of these entities present with nausea, vomiting and changes in mental status; however, there are specific hallmarks in the signs, symptoms and laboratory findings that help to differentiate among them.
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PMID:Metabolic acidosis with an elevated anion gap. 265 May

Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (SNE; Leigh's disease), though a defined entity in neuropathological and morphological terms, is characterized by high clinical heterogenity. SNE of infancy can be defined and diagnosed on the basis of clinical symptoms more readily than juvenile and adult forms. Four patients with SNE displayed combinations of recurrent vomiting, difficulty in swallowing, failure to thrive, impairment of ocular innervation, muscle tone regulation and central regulation of respiration. These symptoms, particularly in combination, point to a disorder of the brainstem and basal ganglia. In addition, all four patients were suffering from lactic acidosis. Other possible indicators, but not in all 4 patients, were abnormal CT brain scans, impaired nerve conduction velocity, elevated CSF protein levels and enlarged mitochondria in muscle cells. Abnormal brainstem auditory evoked potentials have proved to be one of the best criteria for early diagnosis of brainstem lesions. Enzyme assays of pyruvate degradation in cultured skin fibroblasts revealed diminished activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in one patient (52 pmol/mg protein x min; median range 313, 82-917, n: 58). This paper summarizes the findings and proposes primary and secondary criteria of assistance in establishing an initial clinical diagnosis of infantile SNE. As no common pathogenetic mechanisms have yet been recognized and no uniform diagnostic markers are yet available, the diagnosis still requires confirmation by histological examination of brain and brainstem, as was the case with all four patients presented.
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PMID:[Diagnostic criteria in classical infantile subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh's disease)]. 271 38

A 12-year-old boy with corticosteroid-responsive mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) is described. His mother proved to have an asymptomatic mitochondrial myopathy on examination of a muscle biopsy specimen. Three weeks after the onset of vomiting, headache, ataxia and visual and speech impairment, he presented with a background of somatic growth retardation, deafness and school failure. Examination revealed disorientation, dysphasia, dyspraxia, optic atrophy, hemianopia, hemiparesis and sensory inattention. A cranial computed tomographic scan disclosed a large, low-density area, which was consistent with infarction, in the left posterior hemisphere and marked calcification of the basal ganglia bilaterally. Within two weeks of the commencement of corticosteroid treatment, the neurological dysfunction resolved. Attempts to decrease the dosage of dexamethasone caused an exacerbation of symptoms repeatedly. Two weeks after ceasing corticosteroid therapy, the patient developed a serious neurological relapse and a new, large, low-density area, which resembled an infarction, in the right posterior hemisphere on a computed tomographic scan. The reintroduction of corticosteroid therapy again resulted in the rapid resolution of all symptoms. It became evident that the patient had an exquisitely sensitive corticosteroid dependency, whereby a reduction in the dexamethasone dosage of even 0.25 mg a day caused confusion, headaches and increasing lactic acidaemia. Although it is difficult to assess the impact of various therapies in MELAS because of the episodic natural course of the disease, this remarkable corticosteroid responsiveness also has been noted in four previously reported patients with MELAS syndrome; therefore, it would seem reasonable to suggest that corticosteroid therapy now should be considered as standard treatment for this condition. However, corticosteroid therapy in other forms of mitochondrial disorders still awaits careful evaluation.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with corticosteroid dependence. 273 98

We describe a 16-year-old Japanese girl with a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy who presented with progressive dementia, limb weakness and atrophy, episodic vomiting, generalized convulsions, myoclonic seizures, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. CT scan revealed transient focal low density areas in her occipital and parietal lobes, and cerebellar atrophy. The clinical features were consistent with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes (MELAS). Microscopically, most of muscle fibers in the skeletal muscles and heart were occupied by markedly increased mitochondria. Polarographic studies on mitochondria isolated from postmortem heart muscle showed severe impairment of oxidation of NADH-linked substrates in contrast to normal succinate oxidation. The rotenone-sensitive NADH-coenzyme Q reductase activity was markedly decreased in heart, skeletal muscle and liver mitochondria. The biochemical investigations have led to the identification of a defect of complex I in the respiratory chain. Reported cases of a defect of complex I have revealed pure myopathy, encephalopathy or encephalomyopathy. The reason for a varied clinical expression of a single defect remains to be clarified.
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PMID:A mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with cardiomyopathy. A case revealing a defect of complex I in the respiratory chain. 310 81

A new patient with neonatal lactic acidosis due to pyruvate carboxylase deficiency is described. Since birth he developed vomiting, hypothermia, lethargy, irritability, hypoglycemia and severe metabolic acidosis. During admission a progressive deterioration was observed. Despite different attempted therapies patient died at 4 1/2 months of age. High levels of plasma and urine lactate and pyruvate were detected. Enzymatic studies in cultures skin fibroblasts and postmortem tissues showed a severe deficiency of pyruvate carboxylase.
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PMID:[Neonatal lactic acidosis caused by severe pyruvate carboxylase deficiency]. 314 24

A severely mentally retarded infant with congenital lactic acidosis due to pyruvate carboxylase deficiency is reported. The patient suffered from vomiting and convulsions soon after birth and developed severe mental and motor retardation at 3 months of age. The persistent elevation of pyruvate and lactate in both blood and cerebrospinal fluid and hyperalanaemia suggested an impairment of pyruvate oxidation. The enzyme activities of pyruvate carboxylase in both liver tissues and cultured skin fibroblasts of the patient revealed values of about 5% of controls. However, pyruvate dehydrogenase and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activities in liver tissues were within normal limits. The patient had no response to administration of large doses of thiamine, lipoic acid and biotin, clinically and biochemically. A prenatal diagnosis was performed in the second pregnancy and the pyruvate carboxylase activities of the cultured amniotic fluid cells obtained by amniocentesis were within normal limits.
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PMID:A case of pyruvate carboxylase deficiency with later prenatal diagnosis of an unaffected sibling. 642 50

The purpose of this paper is to review the acid-base abnormalities in patients presenting with metabolic acidosis due to acute ethanol ingestion and to review the theoretical constraints on ethanol metabolism in the liver. Alcohol-induced acidosis is a mixed acid-base disturbance. Metabolic acidosis is due to lactic acidosis, ketoacidosis and acetic acidosis but the degree of each varies from patient to patient. Metabolic alkalosis is frequently present due to ethanol-induced vomiting. However, it could be overlooked because of an indirect loss of sodium bicarbonate (as sodium B-hydroxybutyrate in the urine). Nevertheless, the accompanying reduction in ECF volume may play an important role in the pathogenesis of alcoholic acidosis because it could lead to a relative insulin deficiency. Treatment of alcohol acidosis should include sodium, chloride, potassium, phosphorus, magnesium and thiamine replacements along with attention to concomitant clinical problems. Unless hypoglycemia is present, glucose need not be given immediately. We feel that insulin should be withheld unless life-threatening acidemia is present or expected. Lastly, alcohol need not be detected on admission to make the diagnosis of this metabolic disturbance. However, when present, it could contribute directly to the lactic, acetic and B-hydroxybutyric acidoses. With respect to the theoretical constraints on ethanol metabolism, it appears that "overproduction" of NADH in the liver is best averted by converting ethanol to B-hydroxybutyric acid.
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PMID:Metabolic acidosis in the alcoholic: a pathophysiologic approach. 682

A 6-month-old girl with vomiting, hypotonia and motor retardation was found to have elevated blood lactate, pyruvate, and branched chain amino acids associated with ketoglutaric aciduria. The combination of a congenital lactic acidosis with a variant form of maple syrup urine disease and ketoglutaric aciduria suggested a defect of a single component, common to pyruvate dehydrogenase, to branched chain ketoacid dehydrogenase, and to alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. Dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase is the common component (E3). The three enzyme activities and the E3 component activity were found to be reduced in liver and cultured fibroblasts, thus confirming that a single defect of this component can result in a multiple deficiency involving several oxidative decarboxylation reactions.
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PMID:Congenital lactic acidosis, alpha-ketoglutaric aciduria and variant form of maple syrup urine disease due to a single enzyme defect: dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase deficiency. 689 45

Three patients who had large, benign cerebellar tumors were operated upon in the sitting position and developed symptoms referable to the temporoparieto-occipital region of the brain 24-48 h postoperatively. They consisted of dizziness, nausea, vomiting, formed and unformed hallucinations, and inversion of image or disorientation in space, some of which were experienced by some of the astronauts and cosmonauts during space flight. Such findings are not due to stimulation of the cerebellum, the site of the lesion, but must come from the cerebral hemisphere. The symptoms were believed to be caused by "the luxury perfusion" of Lassen with the development of local lactic acidosis secondary to vascular insufficiency to the brain in the distribution of the posterior cerebral artery thus stimulating the temporoparieto-occipital region. This theory is suggested to some degree by the work of Endo et al. using CT scans, which showed the shifting of increased blood flow from the frontal region to the temporoparieto-occipital region following removal of a benign posterior fossa tumor. The mechanism for the compression of the posterior cerebral artery may be due to uncal herniation at the tentorium. The authors believe that it might be well to consider further testing in a vertical or oblique plane rather than only in a centrifugal horizontal one. This method would tend to cause uncal herniation more readily. Monitoring of such effects could be done with the colored CT scan.
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PMID:Motion sickness: part III--a clinical study based on surgery of posterior fossa tumors. 736 52


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