Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The varied presentation and clinical features of classical galactosaemia are illustrated by the case histories of seven babies born in Western Australia since January, 1962, and of two babies born in South Australia in whom diagnosis was made as a result of adding galactosaemia to the Guthrie screening programme in October, 1974. All were shown to have a severe deficiency of galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase in their red blood cells. We compare our findings with those in 10 galactosaemic babies born in Victoria over a similar period, and show that in both groups these were two main modes of onset: acute and insidious. Jaundice and Escherichia coli infection were prominent in the 13 babies with an acute onset of galactosaemia, while poor weight gain, intermittent vomiting and cataracts were features of the five babies with an insidious onset. An enlarged liver was usually found in both groups. We discuss the various approaches to neonatal screening of galactosaemia in the light of experience in Massachusetts and South Australia. The use of cord blood can be expected to lead to diagnosis before babies with acute onset become ill, while the use of blood collected at five days for the Guthrie test avoids the collection of another routine sample for a relatively rare disorder. The result of red cell transferase assays of parents and siblings of our patients are discussed in relation to their implication for genetic counselling. The relevance of antenatal diagnosis to the prevention of possible intrauterine damage to an affected fetus is pointed out.
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PMID:Galactosaemia: case for neonatal screening illustrated by recent Australian experience. 73 9

The case history of a baby girl suffering galactosemia is described. This was due to a deficit of galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase, with symptoms during the neonatal period consisting in weight loss, vomiting, jaundice and bleeding syndrome. From the twelfth day of life, a strict diet without galactose was imposed and controlled by measuring galactose and Hb A1 in serum. The clinical evolution was satisfactory and a liver biopsy, which was taken after seven months of live, shows minimal histological changes. At present, however, the girl is now two years old and shows a marked backwardness in psychomotor functions. The etiologic treatment which consists in the exclusion of galactose from the diet, even when started at a very early stage, does not prevent the aparition of sequelae.
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PMID:[Galactosemia of early diagnosis with psychomotor retardation]. 380 Jan 74

Galactosemia is a treatable metabolic disorder caused by the deficiency of enzyme galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (GALT) and inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. A case of neonate manifesting with recurrent Escherichia coli sepsis is presented here which turned out to be a classic galactosemia. No other common presenting features were observed in this infant except cataract on slit lamp examination. To the best of our knowledge, there is no case of galactosemia reported in literature which presented with recurrent neonatal sepsis without hepatomegaly, hyperbilirubinemia, bleeding disorder, vomiting, diarrhea, failure to thrive, hypoglycemia, coagulopathy, hemolysis or renal tubular acidosis.
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PMID:Galactosemia presenting as recurrent sepsis. 2132 Oct 7