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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An 18-year-old mentally and physically retarded boy, suffering from episodes of anorexia,
vomiting
, coma and convulsion which have been severer with advance in age, had periodic hyperammonemia, hyperlysinemia and homocitrullinuria. Blood cell
arginase
activity of the patient on normal diet was markedly reduced after an oral load of L-lysine. The oral loading tests of L-lysine revealed hyperammonemia, hyperlysinemia, hyperargininemia, hypercitrullinemia and homocitrullinuria. Etiology of metabolic error of our patient was discussed in reference to lysine-urea cycle.
...
PMID:Clinical and biochemical studies on periodic hyperammonemia with hyperlysinemia and homocitrullinuria. 98 31
Congenital hyperargininaemia is a rare condition transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. Following a one-year free interval, repeated
vomiting
, psychomotor regression and spastic paraparesis with talipes equinus progressively develop. The diagnosis, confirmed by arginine assays in blood and urine, is probably often missed. We report a case of homozygous arginase deficiency belatedly diagnosed at the age of 18 years, when treatment with sodium valproate (VPA) was instituted. This female patient presented with psychomotor regression since the age of 15 months and with paraparesis since she was 3 years' old. These symptoms rapidly became worse. At the age of 18 years, when she was bed-ridden, she was hospitalized for subintrant tonic seizures. EEG showed generalized, continuous spike-wave discharges at the rate of 3.5 c/s. Treatment with VPA was instituted. Five days later, she went into a state of stupor. Blood ammonia level was elevated at 362 mumol/l. VPA was discontinued, and this was followed by a regression of disturbances of consciousness and by a decrease in arterial ammoniaemia, although the ammonia levels remained high, fluctuating between 40 and 100 mumol/l. Several months after VPA treatment was interrupted, the patient had a second episode of stupor, and her ammoniaemia was 500 mumol/l. Serum amino acid chromatography showed hyperargininaemia at 501 mumol/l (N = 30-150 mumol/l). The diagnosis of arginase deficiency was confirmed by the rise of arginine in red cells, cerebrospinal fluid and urine and, above all, by the finding of a deeply depressed
arginase
activity in erythrocytes. In all cases of intolerance to VPA, arterial ammoniaemia should be measured after withdrawal of VPA, some time after the acute episode.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Late diagnosis of congenital argininemia during administration of sodium valproate]. 229 Oct 40
Experiments were conducted with growing English Pointer puppies to examine the effects of ingesting excess lysine. A purified crystalline amino acid basal diet containing 0.40% L-arginine (the arginine requirement for maximal weight gain) and 0.91% L-lysine was fed in all assays. All diets were kept isonitrogenous by the addition of diammonium citrate, and lysine was supplied as L-lysine acetate. Both weight gain and gain/feed were reduced in the presence of 4% excess dietary lysine. However, 1 and 2% excess supplemental lysine had no effect on performance. In a second experiment, a growth response to supplemental arginine was obtained in the presence, but not in the absence, of a growth-depressing level of lysine (4%). Therefore, lysine appeared to depress growth by antagonizing arginine. The mechanism of the lysine-arginine antagonism was examined in a third experiment. Classic signs of arginine deficiency: orotic aciduria, depressed urea formation, hyperammonemia, a reduction in weight gain, and
emesis
were observed in puppies consuming excess lysine but not in their pair-fed controls. Excess lysine ingestion neither inhibited nor induced liver
arginase
, but it did result in a generalized amino aciduria early in the experiment. In addition, lysine did not appear to affect arginine absorption. Therefore, the mechanism behind the lysine-arginine antagonism in the dog remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:Antagonism of arginine by excess dietary lysine in the growing dog. 392 64