Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (encephalopathy)
18,178 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Carbamyl phosphate synthetase-I (CPS-I) catalyzes the first reaction required for the conversion of ammonia to urea through the urea cycle. Severe CPS-I deficiency causes marked hyperammonemia with encephalopathy in infancy and usually results in death within the first few months of life. We describe a 33-year-old woman whose CPS-I activity is less than 5% of normal. She has had mild, intermittent symptoms throughout life but has never experienced severe encephalopathy. Although mildly retarded, she has no major neurological deficits. Therapy with a low-protein diet, lactulose, and sodium benzoate has prevented recurrence of hyperammonemia and symptoms. Cranial computed tomographic scans demonstrate prominent lucency of cerebral white matter, and cerebral evoked potential recordings indicate slowed central conduction. These findings suggest that the metabolic disturbances in this patient may have adversely affected central myelin formation or maintenance. This woman represents, to our knowledge, the oldest reported patient with CPS-I deficiency, and the case illustrates the need to consider urea cycle disorders in the differential diagnosis of intermittent neurological symptoms regardless of the patient's age.
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PMID:Clinical features of carbamyl phosphate synthetase-I deficiency in an adult. 646 66

We report on 2 patients who became deeply comatose after transurethral resection of the prostate. Both patients were severely hyponatremic and hyperammonemic but the course of the comas followed serum ammonia concentrations more closely than serum sodium concentrations. The genitourinary irrigant used in both procedures was a 1.5 per cent glycine solution. Serum amino acid analyses in 1 patient suggested that the postoperative hyperammonemia was due to catabolism of glycine absorbed during surgery. The inadequate activation of normal pathways of ammonia metabolism in this patient may have been caused by a partial deficiency of the urea cycle enzyme argininosuccinate synthetase. We believe that hyperammonemia should be considered as a cause of encephalopathy after transurethral resection of the prostate. The 1.5 per cent glycine genitourinary irrigating solution may not be as nontoxic as generally believed.
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PMID:Hyperammonemia after transurethral resection of the prostate: a report of 2 cases. 649 93

A symptomatic elevation in plasma ammonium concentration, termed hyperammonemia, is associated with numerous congenital and acquired conditions (Table 11). In some cases, such as urea cycle disorders, ammonia is the principal toxin. In other instances, such as portal systemic encephalopathy, it is but one of a number of metabolic disturbances, However, in either case hyperammonemic episodes should be treated aggressively to prevent coma, subsequent brain damage, or death. This involves restricting protein intake, providing adequate calories, and giving agents that remove accumulated nitrogen. Long-term therapy relies on diagnosing the specific disease rate. This rarely requires invasive procedures such as liver biopsy. In most cases measurement of plasma amino acids and urinary organic acids will identify the defect. Treatment involving restriction of nitrogen intake, vitamin supplementation, or stimulation of alternative pathways of waste nitrogen excretion can then be instituted. Early therapy, especially in patients with neonatal-onset hyperammonemia, is imperative to avoid severe brain damage. On this basis, the plasma ammonium level should be determined in virtually every newborn with lethargy, hypotonia, poor feeding, seizures, and/or respiratory distress of unclear origin (Table 12).
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PMID:Hyperammonemia. 651 17

Ornithine transcarbamylase (OCT) is one of the urea-cycle enzymes in mitochondria which is involved in metabolic disorders in man. Reye's syndrome, characterized by encephalopathy and fatty infiltration of the liver, is one of such diseases. During this syndrome a reduction of OCT specific activity was observed, probably due to increased proteolytic degradation or to alteration in the enzyme conformation. It has recently been found that OCT administration to patients with liver disorders, contributes to illness resolution. Since the therapeutic properties of the enzymes are usually related to their structure, this paper reports some findings obtained by spectroscopic measurements on OCT structure and conformation stability in solution.
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PMID:Structural investigations on pharmaceutical enzymes. Ornithine transcarbamylase (OCT) from bovine liver. 687 74

Nine patients on long-term hemodialysis with dialysis encephalopathy were studied, with sex matched control subjects for eight of the patients. Each patient with dialysis encephalopathy and control subject were contemporaries in a similar dialysis environment. Rib and other fractures were found in excess in the patients with dialysis encephalopathy (p less than 0.005 and p less than 0.01). These patients had less radiographic hyperparathyroid bone disease, and no more osteopenia as measured by metacarpal thickness than did their control counterparts. Severe osteomalacia was documented by bone biopsy in four of te patients. In a retrospective review of clinical, biochemical and pharmacologic differences, the patients with dialysis encephalopathy were significantly older at the start of dialysis (45.6 years versus 38.6 years, p less than 0.02) and had higher mean concentrations of blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and lower serum hemoglobin in the first year of dialysis than the control subjects. Blood pressure weight, creatinine, calcium, phosphate, alkaline phosphatase and a number of transfusions did not differ significantly. There was no difference in prescribed vitamin D and elemental aluminum in phosphate binders. This study demonstrates that patients with dialysis encephalopathy had more rib fractures without more parathyroid or osteopenic bone disease than did the control subjects and suggests that the etiology of dialysis encephalopathy and osteomalacia is multifactorial.
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PMID:Dialysis encephalopathy and osteomalacic bone disease: a case-controlled study. 703 24

The alpha-keto analogues of the branched-chain amino acids, and particularly that of leucine, alpha-ketoisocaproate (KIC), have been found to reduce urea synthesis and as a result have been proposed for the treatment of uremia and portal systemic encephalopathy. Because little is known about the fate of these keto acids in the intact animal, we examined the disposal of a KIC load in five conscious overnight-fasted dogs with catheters previously implanted in an artery, and in the portal, hepatic, and renal veins. During the absorptive period (54 +/- 9 min; range, 20-75 min), 62 +/- 5% of the administered load (6,358 +/- 662 mumol) of the keto acid was absorbed as KIC and 23 +/- 3% was transaminated across the gut and entered as leucine. The hepatic uptake of KIC was equivalent to 35 +/- 5% (2.316 +/- 419 mumol) of the administered load, and of that, one-third was transaminated to leucine and two-thirds were converted to ketone bodies. The splanchnic output of KIC amounted to 1,732 +/- 256 mumol of 27 +/- 2% of the administered load, half of which was transaminated across the kidneys to leucine. As a result, the amount of KIC reaching the extrahepatic extrarenal tissues as KIC carbon amounted to 15% of the load administered. We conclude that the majority of an intragastrically administered KIC load reaches the (extrarenal) peripheral tissues in the form of leucine or ketone bodies. The study also underscores the importance of the "gut," the kidneys, and the liver in metabolism of the absorbed KIC load.
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PMID:Disposal of alpha-ketoisocaproate: roles of liver, gut, and kidneys. 705 44

Ammonia metabolism in Reye syndrome was studied by quantitative analysis of the time course of hyperammonemia and the urinary excretion of ammonia, urea, and total nitrogen. These measures were then utilized to assess the effect of citrulline administration in 8 patients compared to results in 22 patients managed without citrulline. Two indices of the severity and duration of hyperammonemia correlated strongly with mortality: the half-time for decline of hyperammonemia and the area under the hyperammonemia curve (an index of the total burden of ammonia presented to the brain). These results suggest that the total amount of ammonia delivered to brain may be important to the pathogenesis of encephalopathy. Citrulline-treated patients had more severe disease at admission and greater abnormalities in indices of nitrogen and ammonia metabolism, though the latter did not reach significance. The urine ammonia/urea nitrogen excretion ratio, an index of the efficiency of ammonia conversion to urea, normalized more rapidly in the citrulline-treated group, evidence that citrulline may have improved urea cycle function. Overall mortality did not differ in the two groups. The deaths of 2 citrulline-treated patients in this small group were attributable to factors unrelated to treatment, however, so the possible effect of citrulline on mortality was not definitively tested. No indication was found that citrulline was harmful, nor that it increased ammonia levels.
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PMID:Ammonia metabolism in Reye syndrome and the effect of citrulline. 705 28

A disturbance of cerebral neurotransmitters and an accumulation of octopamine, a putative false neurotransmitter, have been found in patients with uremic encephalopathy who manifest disorientation, somnolence, asterixis, and coma--symptoms also seen in portal systemic encephalopathy (PSE). Altered plasma concentrations of the neutral amino acids (NAAs) and increased blood-brain NAA transport may play a role in PSE, and in the present study plasma amino acid concentrations and blood-brain barrier NAA transport were investigated in rats with acute and chronic uremia. Acute uremia was produced by unilateral nephrectomy and occlusion of the renal artery of the remaining kidney for 70 minutes; the animals were studied 24 hours later. Chronic uremia was produced by unilateral nephrectomy and 70% to 80% devascularization of the remaining kidney; these animals were studied 2 weeks later. Brain uptake was studied with the technique of Oldendorf, and blood and brain amino acids (AAs) were measured. The blood urea nitrogen (BUN) level in rats with acute uremia increased to 108 mg/dl, in rats with chronic uremic 54 mg/dl, and in sham-operated rats 22 mg/dl. In both uremic groups there was a decrease in plasma branched-chain AAs. In the brain these AA levels were normal, while levels of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and histidine were increased in uremic rats.
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PMID:Blood-brain barrier derangement in uremic encephalopathy. 708 66

Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an X-linked recessive disorder of urea biosynthesis characterized by recurrent, often fatal, hyperammonemic encephalopathy in affected males; carrier females are usually asymptomatic. We report here the clinical and laboratory findings in five symptomatic heterozygous females with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. In each case, the onset of symptoms occurred in the 1st year of life, but diagnosis was delayed by up to 15 years. Symptoms included recurrent vomiting with lethargy (five patients), dietary protein intolerance (five), irritability (four), severe acute encephalopathy (three), ataxia (three), and acute hemiparesis (two). All eventually showed evidence of developmental delay or learning difficulties. Two of the three who experienced severe, acute, hyperammonemic encephalopathy suffered serious, permanent neurologic sequelae. Three of the patients showed decreased ornithine transcarbamylase activity in liver obtained by needle biopsy, and the other two had marked orotic aciduria associated with hyperammonemia. Neuroimaging studies demonstrated persistent abnormal lobar attenuation and abnormal signal on computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging. All patients showed marked symptomatic improvement on treatment with dietary protein restriction supplemented by pharmacologic measures to increase nonprotein nitrogen excretion. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute or chronic encephalopathy in females at any age.
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PMID:Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency in females: an often overlooked cause of treatable encephalopathy. 749 56

Central pontine myelinolysis (CPM) is a demyelinating condition of the central pons with or without associated foci of demyelination in extrapontine areas. We present a case of partial ornithine carbamoyl transferase deficiency in a 5-year-old girl which was complicated by CPM. The patient was a previously undiagnosed girl who presented with mild hyperammonemic encephalopathy with a maximum plasma ammonia level of 376 microM on admission. Laboratory testing established the diagnosis of OCT deficiency, and therapy with hydration and protein restriction was successful in returning the plasma ammonia levels to normal. Five days after correction of her hyperammonemia, the patient developed intractable seizures and coma. Serial MRI scans of the brain revealed the evolution of the characteristic findings of CPM. Plasma ammonia and electrolyte concentrations were well controlled throughout this time. This represents the first description of CPM in a patient with a urea cycle defect.
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PMID:Central pontine myelinolysis as a complication of partial ornithine carbamoyl transferase deficiency. 757 73


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