Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We describe on a 3-year-old child referred for evaluation and therapy of a cerebral vascular accident with residual hemiplegia and partial epilepsy. Metabolic investigations initially showed normal urinary organic acids as well as normal blood and urinary amino acids. Blood carnitine fractions had been pathological and a secondary carnitine deficiency was diagnosed and treated by oral L-carnitine supplementation. During carnitine treatment, abnormal urinary acylcarnitine profiles were noticed with excessive amounts of several carnitine esters including propionylcarnitine, butyryl- and/or isobutyryl-carnitine, isovaleryl- and/or 2-methylbutyryl-carnitine, hexanoylcarnitine and octanoylcarnitine. Subsequently, an urinary organic acid profile suggestive of glutaric aciduria type II was recorded during a clinical decompensation crisis. Morphological and biochemical studies on skeletal muscle and skin fibroblasts were performed and confirmed the existence of a defect of the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathways with lipidic myopathy, reduced palmitate and octanoate oxidation rates in cultured fibroblasts. Glutaric aciduria type II increases the list of metabolic disorders characterized by hemiplegia and other sequelae of brain ischaemia such as stroke-like episode, seizures, aphasia, ataxia and myoclonia, similar to those seen in MELAS.
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PMID:Stroke, hemiparesis and deficient mitochondrial beta-oxidation. 795 9

The clinical phenotype of multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency in infancy is characterized by recurrent episodes of hypoketotic hypoglycemia and lipid storage myopathy. Brain damage has been described only as a consequence of severe and protracted hypoglycemia. We describe a child who experienced normal physical and psychomotor development until the age of 3 years, who then developed progressive intention tremors, dysarthria, ataxia, and spastic tetraparesis. Episodes of acute metabolic distress were never observed. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed abnormal signals within the white matter of the brain and cerebellum, suggesting leukodystrophy. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis revealed abnormally high levels of glutaric acid, dicarboxylic acids, and glycine derivatives in urine. Riboflavin therapy was initiated at 4 years of age, when the patient had already lost control of trunk and head posture. Consistent improvement rapidly occurred after riboflavin supplementation. Glutaric aciduria type II may cause brain damage, in spite of the absence of acute metabolic distress, and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of leukodystrophies.
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PMID:Riboflavin-responsive glutaric aciduria type II presenting as a leukodystrophy. 877 Nov 70

Rosai-Dorfman disease is a benign lymphohistiocytosis that often involve lymph nodes and present as massive lymphadenopathy with sinus histiocytosis. The disease is rarely associated with intracranial involvement. Herein, we report a 33-years-old man with recent onset of unconsciousness. According to his past medical history, he was suffering from frontal headache, ataxia and dizziness with no sensory or motor defect since August 2010. At initial work up, MRI showed infiltrating mass in the left parietal region. Microscopically, the mass consisted of infiltration of abundant lymphoplasma cells, neutrophils and some histiocytes scattered in fibrotic background. Emperipolesis (lymphocytophagocytosis) of histiocytic cells made the diagnosis of Rosai-Dorfman disease. Rosai-Dorfman disease should be added in the list of differential diagnosis for a dural mass mimicking meningioma or cerebral mass mimicking glioma, therefore, immunohistochemical staining for EMA, S100 and CD1a should be performed to rule out the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Intracranial ROSAI-DORFMAN Disease. 2326 85