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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Methylmalonic acidemia is a recessively inherited inborn error of metabolism presenting with metabolic acidosis,
vomiting
, lethargy, anorexia, and
hypotonia
. The disease may either begin in the neonatal period with acute, life-threatening episodes, or manifest itself with a milder clinical course and a more favorable outcome depending on the location and the severity of enzyme block. Enzymatic abnormalities, clinical features, diagnostic approach with regard to differential diagnosis and the possible treatment are discussed. Genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis are also stressed.
...
PMID:[Methylmalonic acidemia: classification, diagnosis and therapy]. 636 67
Two cases of triglyceride storage in liver, kidney, heart, and skeletal muscle are described in infants who died at the age of 1 1/2 years and 4 d, respectively. In the first patient, a previously normal girl, the clinical symptoms began two months before death with encephalopathy (
vomiting
, unconsciousness), liver enlargement, hypoglycemia, increase in serum transaminases. These signs disappeared within the following days. Some weeks later she died during the second attack. The 4-d-old boy, the second child of healthy consanguineous parents, showed at the third day of life an impaired sucking, muscular
hypotonia
, respiratory arrest and bradycardia. An intensive therapy was inefficient. At autopsy gross examination showed only a moderately enlarged yellow liver and an edematous brain in the first case and pale organs in the second one but no cause of death. The microscopial examination of all tissues of both cases showed fat storage within the four organs mentioned above. The common histochemical methods for neutral lipids were positive, the Schultz-reaction for cholesterol and cholesterol esters was negative. The lipid loaden cells did not show birefringence in polarized light. A predominance and strong fat storage of the type I fibres was found in the skeletal muscle. The storage of triglyceride could be confirmed by histochromatography, a thin-layer chromatography of tissue sections. The triglyceride accumulation in liver, heart, kidney, and skeletal muscle is a characteristic feature of systemic carnitine deficiency. The clinical symptoms of the first patient are in agreement with reports of this disease also. A carnitine deficiency in a newborn was not yet described. Family studies revealed a low carnitine concentration in the mother's serum in both cases, while the serum of father and brother resp. sister showed normal carnitine levels.
...
PMID:[Metabolic triglyceride storage disorders. A report of 2 cases of systemic carnitine deficiency]. 652 56
A boy, aged 7 months, of consanguineous parents presented with an acute onset of
vomiting
, fever, nonketotic hypoglycemia and acidosis and died from cardiac arrest after ventricular fibrillation. He had hepatomegaly and echocardiographically a non-obstructive cardiomyopathy. Autopsy was not allowed. After birth the child had suffered from a severe respiratory distress syndrome, transient metabolic acidosis and had a sweaty feet odour. Later on, development was retarded with a severe muscular
hypotonia
. Post mortem, numerous unusual organic acids were found in high concentrations in urine, e.g. dicarbonic acids, 2-hydroxyisobutyric, isovaleric, 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid, N-acyl glycines, isovalerylglutamic acid and sarcosine. This pattern indicated deficiencies of several acyl-Co A dehydrogenases in the metabolism of leucine, isoleucine, valine, lysine, short-chain fatty acids and sarcosine. This could be confirmed using cultured skin fibroblasts which were shown to degrade the corresponding labeled substrates insufficiently to 14CO2. It is assumed that the functional multiple acyl-Co A dehydrogenation deficiency is caused by a deficiency of a common link in the electron transfer system of these dehydrogenases which is inherited autosomal recessively in this family. Among the 12 patients reported, 7 died within the first 5 days of age.
...
PMID:Multiple acyl-Co A dehydrogenation deficiency (MADD) in a boy with nonketotic hypoglycemia, hepatomegaly, muscle hypotonia and cardiomyopathy. Detection of N-isovalerylglutamic acid and its monoamide. 686 97
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.
...
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
The long term development of periodic syndromes among children is little known. Our research has revealed that about one third of periodic headaches, two thirds of cyclic
vomiting
and half the cases of recurring abdominal pain disappear either before puberty or during adolescence. Other Authors have shown that this also happens in most cases of early-onset vertigo. The remaining headache cases develop into migraines in adults. When there is persistent cyclic
vomiting
, the collateral neurologic phenomena (headaches, vertigo, pallor,
hypotonia
, drowsiness) become more intense. This also happens in some cases of abdominal pain and paroxysmal vertigo which start in late childhood. Other sufferers from acute abdominal pain develop ulcers, gastroduodenitis and colitis as adults. Altogether, some infantile periodic syndromes (in particular the multi-symptomatic ones) have a common outcome, i.e. develop into more or less typical migraine syndromes. In these cases one can presume a common pathogenetic mechanism. In those cases where the outcome is favorable the pathogenesis may be different. These cases may often be spotted in early childhood on account of the monosymptomatic nature of the complaint or the absence of collateral neurologic symptoms as well as of the infrequency of critical episodes.
...
PMID:[Childhood periodic syndromes and their long-term development]. 692 13
A baby with congenital lactic acidosis is described. The blood levels of lactic acid and alanine as well as the excretion of these compounds in the urine were largely elevated. Clinically the illness presented with
vomiting
, poor feeding, areflexia, muscular
hypotonia
and hepatomegaly. The baby died at the age of three months. The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in cultured fibroblasts showed an activity of 14% of normal values.
...
PMID:[Chronic infantile lactate acidosis]. 741 Jan 11
Evaluation of Althesin in open eyeball surgery is reported. The anaesthetic gave surgically very useful and stable
hypotonia
, comparable with that offered by pentothal. Its is felt that steroid anaesthesia is excellent for surgical purposes and that Althesin is ideal on account of its overall features: lack of toxicity, high therapeutic index, tranquil induction, rapid return to consciousness, excellent quality, absence of carryover effects, and easy regulation. It is, moreover, rarely responsible for coughing and
vomiting
. It is preferable in eye surgery to "heavy" anaesthetics, such as barbiturates and volatile halogenates, particularly in the aged.
...
PMID:[Althesin in surgery of the eyeball]. 745 89
The files of 25 patients with propionic acidemia (PA), followed by the Inborn Errors of Metabolism Service (IEMS) at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH & RC) from 1990 to 1993, were studied retrospectively. In 14 patients PA presented acutely with acidosis, hyperammonemia and thrombocytopenia, while in 11 patients the presentation of the disease was unusual. In the latter group, two neonates with PA initially appeared as a primarily hyperammonemic metabolic disease. In two other neonates the
vomiting
was so severe that they were diagnosed as intestinal obstruction in referral hospitals. The presentation in three infants was primarily as an immune disorder. In four infants, PA appeared as an acute or chronic encephalopathy, i.e. as a silent organic acidemia, with few other findings of the disease. The clinical picture of PA includes facial and nipple dysmorphia, severe
hypotonia
and
vomiting
. Severe thrombocytopenia is the hallmark of the metabolic crisis. In one patient it was noticed late and caused intracranial hemorrhage, while in three others intracranial bleeding caused death. The prognosis in PA remained grave despite rigorous treatment. Only seven of the 25 PA patients remained to have a normal life-style, while eight patients expired. The diagnosis is readily achieved by urine gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS), by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), or by enzyme analysis of fibroblasts. While there may be both examiner- and patient-related reasons for the variations in the presentation of PA, one other reason may be the heterogeneity of the molecular defect in propionyl-CoA carboxylase.
...
PMID:Unusual presentations of propionic acidemia. 772 81
An example of subacute necrotizing encephalopathy, the fifth case in Thailand, was recorded. A 7-month-old boy presented clinically with
vomiting
, lethargy, respiratory difficulty, deteriorated consciousness, and
hypotonia
. The CT brain scan disclosed bilateral symmetrical radiolucencies in the basal ganglia, especially the lentiform nuclei, and thalami. Postmortem examination of these areas as well as the periaqueductal region revealed subacute necrotizing encephalopathy. It was characterized by necrosis, gliosis, and status spongiosus of the neuropil with relatively preserved neurons, and hyperplasia of small blood vessels as well as endothelium. As far as we are aware, the vast majority of abnormalities in the basal ganglia visualized by CT brain imaging often show calcific foci or high attenuation with asymmetrical distribution. Bilateral symmetrical lesions of low density are rare. We reported such an abnormality in a postmortem proven case of Leigh's disease. To recognize this finding should lead to correct antemortem diagnosis of the latter.
...
PMID:Subacute necrotizing encephalopathy (Leigh's disease) in a child with particular reference to CT finding. 775 78
Subcutaneous fat necrosis (SFN) of the newborn is an uncommon disorder, which occurs during the first years of life, and has been attributed to perinatal stress. Two typical cases are presented. This inflammatory disorder of adipose tissue affects primarily the back, buttocks, arms and thighs, and consists of sharply circumscribed, subcutaneous nodules and plaques. The lesions are red or violaceous and initially tender. Usually they involute spontaneously within months. Hypercalcemia,
hypotonia
, poor feeding,
vomiting
and fever are associated with SFN. The aetiology is still incompletely understood. Therapy is not required, except when associated with hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:[Subcutaneous fat necrosis of the newborn]. 777 Sep 74
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