Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00492 (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase)
2,385 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ten cases of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome have been followed for 3-19 years (mean, 11 years and four months). Criteria of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome were restricted to the following: complete absence of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) in hemolysate and fibroblast, spasticity, choreoathetosis, mental retardation, self-mutilation, and occurrence in males. Two patients have died of pneumonia and two died suddenly. However, autopsies produced no positive findings. Hyperuricemia has been controlled by benzbromarone in nine patients. One patient did not take any medical treatment and died suddenly when he was 19 years old, but showed no gouty signs. Patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome indicated no change or aggravation of choreoathetosis or spasticity. Self-mutilation was difficult to control by any treatment with continuing effect. After the age of ten, self-mutilation declined in seven cases, and in one patient disappeared completely. Mental delay was remarkable and suspected developmental age (DA) was 7 months - four years and 10 months (chronological age, 7 years and five months - 19 years and 6 months). Mean DQ score was 15.6. Physical development was severely delayed, and weight age was 28.9-46.4%, mean 37.4% of chronological age. Future investigations will evolve clarification of CNS signs and its treatment, and etiological research of sudden death.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of ten patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. 376 72

A three week old boy presented with pneumonia, weight loss, metabolic acidosis and renal failure (serum creatinine 3.1 mg/100 ml, uric acid 11.5 mg/100 ml). Renal biopsy revealed severe crystal nephropathy. Low activity of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) in erythrocytes and fibroblasts suggested a partial deficiency of the enzyme. A family study proved the mother to be heterozygous and the maternal grandfather to be hemizygous for HPRT deficiency. The grandfather developed gouty nephropathy and uraemia. The propositus was treated with allopurinol and kept on low purine diet and high fluid intake with sodium bicarbonate. Thereafter GFR gradually improved. At the age of two and a half years, growth and psychomotor development were normal, but ultrasound examination still revealed a dense renal parenchyma. Partial HPRT deficiency is a newly recognised treatable form of renal failure in the newborn.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in an infant with partial deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. 399 73

A 19-year-old man with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (LNS), had dyspnea and an inspiratory wheeze, and underwent assisted mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy. Bronchoscopy revealed tracheomalacia of the cresent moon type. He lost his weight, and his general condition gradually worsened. Four months post-tracheostomy, he died of massive hemoptysis from a tracheobrachicephalic artery fistula. Many patients with LNS have renal failure and pneumonitis, whereas occasional cases are complicated by convulsions, recurrent coma, abnormalities of respiration, and sudden death. The etiology of sudden death is not clear. Although tracheomalacia, to our knowledge, has not been described in the literature, it may be a clinical feature of LNS associated with abnormal respiration and sudden death. Tracheobrachiocephalic artery fistula is common in patients with neuromuscular disorders and a chronic tracheostomy tube. Caution is required in LNS patients with opisthotonic extensor spasms of the neck and trunk, chronic bronchitis, and malnutrition.
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PMID:[A patient with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome complicated by tracheobronchomalacia and fatal bleeding from tracheobrachiocephalic artery fistula]. 1367 52