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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) is a mitochondrial-matrix enzyme that catalyzes conversion of ornithine and carbamyl phosphate to citrulline, the second step in the urea cycle. The urea cycle is the most important pathway to detoxification of ammonia in human beings.
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
(OTCD) is the most common urea cycle disorder, inherited as an X-linked disorder that can cause fatal hyperammonemia in male newborns. Women with OTCD have a variable expression of their disease, the variability being determined by lyonization (random inactivation) of the X chromosome. We report a case of a 28-year-old woman who presented with hyperammonemic
encephalopathy
that was precipitated by a gastrointestinal bleed unmasking OTCD.
...
PMID:Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency unmasked because of gastrointestinal bleeding. 1127 80
We present brain MR images in three patients with neonatal-onset hyperammonemic
encephalopathy
resulting from urea-cycle disorders (two sisters with deficiency of the carbamyl phosphate synthetase I reaction step and one boy with an
ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
). MR imaging revealed almost identical findings of injury to the bilateral lentiform nuclei and the deep sulci of the insular and perirolandic regions; to our knowledge, this pattern has not been previously reported. We hypothesize that these lesions presumably reflect the distribution of brain injury due to hypoperfusion secondary to hyperammonemia and hyperglutaminemia in the neonatal period.
...
PMID:Brain MR imaging in neonatal hyperammonemic encephalopathy resulting from proximal urea cycle disorders. 1281 52
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
(OTCD) is the most common inborn urea cycle disorder. Patients with OTCD are at risk of acute metabolic decompensation with hyperammonemia and subsequent
encephalopathy
, coma and death. Symptoms may be triggered by infections, drugs and stress, evoked by trauma, pain, fear, surgery and anaesthesia or by episodes of protein catabolism, i.e. fasting-induced, post partum or during gastrointestinal bleeding. Several specific considerations must be made for anaesthetic and intensive care management in patients with this disease in order to avoid metabolic decompensation. We report the intensive care management of the first manifestation of late-onset OTCD in a 16-year-old girl and a course of inconspicuous general anaesthesia with midazolam, s-ketamine, fentanyl and isoflurane in a 22-year-old girl with known OTCD.
...
PMID:[Patients with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. Anaesthesiological and intensive care management]. 1613 41
We report the case of a 7-year-old girl with
ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
whose quality of life (QOL) improved greatly after a living donor liver transplantation (LDLT).
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
had been diagnosed when she was 2 years old and she finally underwent LDLT, with her father as the donor, when she was 7 years old. The patient had suffered episodes of hyperammonemic
encephalopathy
ranging from lethargy to coma, treated by hemodialysis twice before LDLT, and her intelligence quotient was borderline for her age. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed an atrophic area in the subcortical white matter of the frontal lobe. After LDLT, the patient suffered acute rejection with hyperamylasemia, but not hyperammonemia. Postoperative MRI and quantitative MR spectroscopy showed no changes in the subcortical lesion. She has been followed up carefully for 16 months and has had no further complications or any sign of hyperammonemia.
...
PMID:Improved quality of life and unchanged magnetic resonance brain imaging after living donor liver transplantation for late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency: report of a case. 1634 94
This case report describes a 31-year-old woman with a neglected
ornithine carbamoyltransferase deficiency
, admitted for a hyperammonaemic
encephalopathy
induced by a commercial very low-energy diet. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case and it underlines the potential risk of such a diet in patients with undiagnosed or neglected
ornithine carbamoyltransferase deficiency
.
...
PMID:Hyperammonaemic encephalopathy induced by a commercial very-low-energy diet in a neglected ornithine-carbamoyltransferase-deficient woman. 1643 6
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
(OTCD) is the most common inborn error of the urea cycle. Several specific factors require care during anesthesia in patients with this condition to avoid metabolic decompensation with acute hyperammonemia and
encephalopathy
. We report monozygous twins with severe neonatal-onset OTCD undergoing general anesthesia twice each, with midazolam, s-ketamine, fentanyl and isoflurane in combination with surgical field infiltration with ropivacaine. Alternative pathway medication and high-caloric diet with 10% glucose solutions were continuously administered during the perioperative course. Both children were extubated within 10 min of the final suture, and their neurological state remained unchanged. Perioperatively, blood ammonia levels remained within the normal range.
...
PMID:Anesthetic management of patients with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. 1649 Jan 2
Valproate-induced hyperammonemic
encephalopathy
(VHE) is an unusual complication characterized by a decreasing level of consciousness, focal neurological deficits, cognitive slowing, vomiting, drowsiness, and lethargy. We have thoroughly reviewed the predisposing factors and their screening, the biochemical and physiopathological mechanisms involved, the different treatments described, and those that are being investigated. Etiopathogenesis is not completely understood, although hyperammonemia has been postulated as the main cause of the clinical syndrome. The increase in serum ammonium level is due to several mechanisms, the most important one appearing to be the inhibition of carbamoylphosphate synthetase-I, the enzyme that begins the urea cycle. Polytherapy with several drugs, such as phenobarbital and topiramate, seems to contribute to hyperammonemia. Hyperammonemia leads to an increase in the glutamine level in the brain, which produces astrocyte swelling and cerebral edema. There are several studies that suggest that treatment with supplements of carnitine can lead to an early favorable clinical response due to the probable carnitine deficiency induced by a valproate (VPA) treatment. Development of the progressive confusional syndrome, associated with an increase in seizure frequency after VPA treatment onset, obliges us to rule out VHE by screening for blood ammonium levels and the existence of urea cycle enzyme deficiency, such as
ornithine carbamoyltransferase deficiency
. Electroencephalography (EEG) is characterized by signs of severe
encephalopathy
with continuous generalized slowing, a predominance of theta and delta activity, occasional bursts of frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity, and triphasic waves. These EEG findings, as well as clinical manifestations and hyperammonemia, tend to normalize after VPA withdrawal.
...
PMID:Valproate-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy. 1677 19
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
is the commonest urea cycle disorder which is transmitted in X-linked inheritance. It is mainly characterized in males by acute
encephalopathy
and hyperammonaemia with fatal outcomes in both classical neonatal and late-onset types. We report a 3-year-old healthy Hong Kong Chinese boy who presented with acute
encephalopathy
and coma after three days of gastroenteritis. He had no focal neurological deficit and brain CT imaging was normal. His plasma ammonia (54 micromol/L) and glutamine (747 micromol/L) concentrations were normal. The only biochemical abnormalities detected were marked orotic aciduria (700 micromol/mmol creatinine) and elevated urinary uracil. He regained consciousness spontaneously after three days under intensive care with parenteral fluid therapy. He recovered completely without any neurological deficits. Five months after discharge, urinary uracil concentration remained elevated despite normalized orotic acid concentration. Finally,
ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
was diagnosed by DNA analysis. A missense mutation of arginine-to-glutamine substitution on amino acid 277 (p.R277Q) was revealed to be a late-onset mutant. Our case strengthens the argument that in any child with coma or acute
encephalopathy
of undetermined cause, genetic analysis of the OTC gene and the measurement of urinary uracil concentration remain the most reliable indicators of late-onset OTCD during acute and even quiescent phases. Existing neonatal screening programmes for inheritable metabolic disorders fail to detect late-onset variants. Therefore, a high clinical suspicion is a key to correct and timely diagnosis, especially in those patients with atypical presentations.
...
PMID:Complete recovery from acute encephalopathy of late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency in a 3-year-old boy. 1792 16
The liver's role as the largest organ of metabolism and the unique and often critical function of liver-specific enzyme pathways imply a greater risk to the recipient of acquiring a donor metabolic disease with liver transplants versus other solid organ transplants. With clinical consequences rarely reported, the frequency of solid organ transplant transfer of metabolic disease is not known.
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
(OTCD), although rare, is the most common of the urea cycle disorders (UCDs). Because of phenotypic heterogeneity, OTCD may go undiagnosed into adulthood. With over 5000 liver transplant procedures annually in the United States, the likelihood of unknowingly transmitting OTCD through liver transplantation is very low. We describe the clinical course of a liver transplant recipient presenting with acute hyperammonemia and
encephalopathy
after receiving a liver graft form a donor with unrecognized OTCD.
...
PMID:Presentation of an acquired urea cycle disorder post liver transplantation. 1804 46
The association of genetic factors and cerebral infarction (CI) has long been established. A positive family history alone is a recognized risk factor for CI and vascular events in general. However, there are certain inherited conditions that further increase the risk of stroke. These conditions are generally metabolic and mitochondrial genetic defects that have variable modes of inheritance. This article reviews major inherited metabolic disorders that predispose an individual to CI. Ten main conditions will be discussed: Fabry's disease, cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, tangier disease, familial hypercholesterolemia, homocystinuria, methylmalonic acidemia, glutaric aciduria type I, propionic acidemia,
ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
and mitochondrial
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and stroke-like phenomenon.
...
PMID:Inherited metabolic disorders and cerebral infarction. 1898 43
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