Cases reported "Ketosis"

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1/39. Transcobalamin II deficiency with methylmalonic aciduria in three sisters.

    Transcobalamin II (TC II) is a plasma protein that binds vitamin B12 (cobalamin, Cbl) and facilitates cellular Cbl uptake by receptor-mediated endocytosis. In autosomal recessive TC II deficiency, intracellular Cbl deficiency results in an early onset of megaloblastic anaemia that may be accompanied by neurological abnormalities. Inadequate treatment may lead to neurological abnormalities. We describe three sisters, the daughters of first cousins of Moroccan origin, with TC II deficiency requiring continuous and long-term vitamin B12 treatment. The diagnosis was suspected from the finding of low unsaturated vitamin B12 binding capacity and confirmed by absence of detectable TC II by radioimmunoassay and by inability of cultured fibroblasts to synthesize TC II.
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ranking = 1
keywords = deficiency
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2/39. Treatment of pyruvate carboxylase deficiency with high doses of citrate and aspartate.

    A patient with severe pyruvate carboxylase deficiency presented at age 11 weeks with metabolic decompensation after routine immunization. She was comatose, had severe lactic acidemia (22 mM) and ketosis, low aspartate and glutamate, elevated citrulline and proline, and mild hyperammonemia. head magnetic resonance imaging showed subdural hematomas and mild generalized brain atrophy. biotin-unresponsive pyruvate carboxylase deficiency was diagnosed. To provide oxaloacetate, she was treated with high-dose citrate (7.5 mol/kg(-1)/day(-1)), aspartate (10 mmol/kg(-1)/day(-1)), and continuous drip feeding. Lactate and ketones diminished dramatically, and plasma amino acids normalized, except for arginine, which required supplementation. In the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), glutamine remained low and lysine elevated, showing the treatment had not normalized brain chemistry. Metabolic decompensations, triggered by infections or fasting, diminished after the first year. They were characterized by severe lactic and ketoacidosis, hypernatremia, and a tendency to hypoglycemia. At age 3(1/2) years she has profound mental retardation, spasticity, and grand mal and myoclonic seizures only partially controlled by anticonvulsants. The new treatment regimen has helped maintain metabolic control, but the neurological outcome is still poor.
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ranking = 317.52328680316
keywords = carboxylase deficiency, carboxylase, acidemia, deficiency
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3/39. kearns-sayre syndrome presenting as 2-oxoadipic aciduria.

    A patient with 2-oxoadipic aciduria and 2-aminoadipic aciduria presented at 2 years of age with manifestations typical of organic acidemia, episodes of ketosis and acidosis, progressive to coma. This resolved and the key metabolites disappeared from the urine and blood. At 9 years of age she developed typical kearns-sayre syndrome with complete heart block, retinopathy, and ophthalmoplegia. Southern blot revealed a deletion in the mitochondrial genome.
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ranking = 1.7760280216842
keywords = acidemia
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4/39. Hyperglycinemia and propionyl coA carboxylase deficiency and episodic severe illness without consistent ketosis.

    Propionyl CoA carboxylase deficiency was found in a 7-month-old boy who presented with attacks of vomiting, anorexia, weight loss, weakness, and hypotonia. He failed to thrive and had generalized seizures. He had propionic acidemia and hyperglycinemia; these are the manifestations of the ketotic hyperglycinemia syndrome. However, ketonuria was not a consistent part of his clinical picture, and he had at least two episodes of acute overwhelming illness, the latter one fatal, in which ketones were never found in the urine. Large amounts of pyrrolidone carboxylic acid were found in body fluids.
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ranking = 12653.398541858
keywords = ketotic, ketotic hyperglycinemia, hyperglycinemia, carboxylase deficiency, propionic acidemia, propionic, carboxylase, acidemia, deficiency
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5/39. hypoglycemia and resistance to ketoacidosis in a subject without functional insulin receptors.

    humans with congenital absence of the islets of langerhans and mice rendered null for the insulin receptor rapidly develop severe hyperglycemia and ketoacidosis and, if untreated, die in the early neonatal period. In contrast, children with homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations of the insulin receptor gene, although hyperglycemic postprandially, survive for many months without developing ketoacidosis. Paradoxically, they often develop hypoglycemia. The rarity of the condition and the difficulties of undertaking metabolic studies in ill infants have limited the physiological information that might explain the clinical features. We studied a boy with Donohue's syndrome who represents a further example of the null phenotype, with two different and novel nonsense mutations in the alpha-subunit of the receptor. He survived for 8 months without developing ketoacidosis, and fasting hypoglycemia was a frequent problem. Despite the complete absence of insulin receptors, evidence for persistent insulin-like effects on fat and liver was seen; fasting plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate and nonesterified fatty acid levels were low, fell further during the early postprandial period, and failed to rise in response to hypoglycemia. The inverse relationships between plasma insulin and insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1 levels were maintained, suggesting persistent hepatic effects of insulin. GH levels measured over a 6.5-h period were low throughout. Thus, the differences between congenital insulin deficiency vs. insulin receptor deficiency in humans may be explained by persistent insulinomimetic activity of the grossly elevated plasma insulin presumably being mediated through the type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor. As GH plays a critical role in the regulation of ketogenesis during insulinopenia in humans, but not in rodents, this may contribute to the distinct phenotype of human vs. mouse insulin receptor knockouts.
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ranking = 0.28571428571429
keywords = deficiency
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6/39. Case report: liver glycogen synthase deficiency--a cause of ketotic hypoglycemia.

    glycogen synthase deficiency is a rare inborn error of metabolism, characterized by fasting hypoglycemia, hypoglycemic seizures, and ketonuria. Only 7 families with 14 affected children have been reported. Here, we report an additional patient with this deficiency. Findings in this patient were clinically and biochemically consistent with those reported in patients with ketotic hypoglycemia and may alert the clinician to consider glycogen synthase deficiency.
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ranking = 33811.84374952
keywords = ketotic, deficiency
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7/39. Ketotic hyperglycemia and epilepsia partialis continua.

    epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) may occur during nonketotic hyperglycemia but has not been described with diabetic ketoacidosis. The authors report a patient with EPC associated with ketotic hyperglycemia. Brain MRI showed two areas of abnormal signal intensity in the left precentral gyrus and in the right cerebellar hemisphere. hyperglycemia may reduce seizure threshold because of the increase in gamma-aminobutyric acid metabolism and may trigger epileptic discharges.
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ranking = 13524.337499808
keywords = ketotic
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8/39. Deranged isoleucine metabolism during ketotic attacks in patients with methylmalonic acidaemia.

    Two patients with methylmalonic acidaemia due to methylmalonyl-coa mutase deficiency were studied for several years. Both exhibited at least two attacks of severe ketoacidosis, during which they excreted, in addition to methylmalonic acid, a number of abnormal compounds: 3-hydroxypropionic acid, 2-methyl-3-hydroxybutyric, 3-hydroxy-n-valeric acid, 3-oxo-n-valeric acid, 2-methyl-3-oxobutyric acid, citraconic acid and N-tiglyglycine. These compounds represent partly intermediary metabolites from the isoleucine degradation pathway and partly secondary metabolites of propionyl-CoA and tiglyl-CoA.
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ranking = 27057.534480652
keywords = ketotic, propionic, deficiency
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9/39. Therapeutic effects of glycine in isovaleric acidemia.

    The effect of glycine administration on acute leucine loading (125 mg/kg) was tested in a patient with isovaleric acidemia. serum isovaleric acid at 1-3/4 hr after the leucine loading alone was elevated to 5.60 mg/100 ml and urinary isovaleryglycine excretion was 9.90 mg/mg creatine/24 hr. Whe the same amount of leucine was given with glycine (250 mg/kg) serum isovaleric acid was only 0.93 mg/200 ml. Unfortunately, urine was collected for only 12 hr after the leucine-glycine loading. However, the amount of urinary isovaleryglycine was 26.2 mg/mg creatine in this period. In the following experiments in which a meal containing 80 mg leucine/kg was given, serum isovaleric acid was elevated to 1.14 and 1.01 mg/100 ml at 3 hr and 6 hr after the loading, respectively. How-ever, serum isovaleric acid was only 0.53 and 0.79 mg/100 ml at 3 and 6 hr, respectively, when the identical mean was given with 2 g glycine. The effect of long term glycine administration (250 mg/kg/24 hr) was also tested. It did not prevent two ketotic episodes which were caused by infections. However, the duration of clinical symptoms such as vomiting and a large anion gap in the acute episodes were much shorter with rectal glycine administration. The patient's linear growth and weight gain durin glycine administration was much better than that in the pretreatment period.
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ranking = 6771.0488900123
keywords = ketotic, acidemia
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10/39. Efficacy of the Atkins diet as therapy for intractable epilepsy.

    The ketogenic diet is effective for treating seizures in children with epilepsy. The Atkins diet can also induce a ketotic state, but has fewer protein and caloric restrictions, and has been used safely by millions of people worldwide for weight reduction. Six patients, aged 7 to 52 years, were started on the Atkins diet for the treatment of intractable focal and multifocal epilepsy. Five patients maintained moderate to large ketosis for periods of 6 weeks to 24 months; three patients had seizure reduction and were able to reduce antiepileptic medications. This provides preliminary evidence that the Atkins diet may have a role as therapy for patients with medically resistant epilepsy.
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ranking = 6762.1687499039
keywords = ketotic
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