ABSTRACT. Objectives. To further define the clinical spectrum of the disease for pediatric and metabolic spe cialists, and to suggest that the general pediatrician and pediatric neurologist consider succinic semialdehyde de hydrogenase (SSADH) deficiency in the differential di agnosis of patients with (idiopathic) mental retardation and emphasize the need for accurate, quantitative or ganic acid analysis in such patients.Patients. The clinical features of 23 patients (20 fam ilies) with SSADH deficiency (4-hydroxybutyric acid uria) are presented. The age at diagnosis ranged from 3
Indian youth, particularly school dropouts, remain at high risk for drug use. The similarity to trends for non-Indians indicates that prevention strategies effective with other youth can be effective with this population.
A subset of 299 patients with homozygous sickle cell anaemia, enrolled in the cohort of the French Study Group on sickle cell disease (SCD), was investigated in this study. The majority of patients were children (mean age 10.1 +/- 5.8 yr) of first generation immigrants from Western and Central Africa, the others originated from the French West Indies (20.2%). We report the frequency of the main clinical events (mean follow-up 4.2 +/- 2.2 yr). The prevalence of meningitis-septicaemia and osteomyelitis was, respectively, 11.4% and 12% acute chest syndrome was observed in 134 patients (44.8%). Twenty patients (6.7%) developed stroke with peak prevalence at 10-15 yr of age. One hundred and seventy-two patients (58%) suffered from one or more painful sickle cell crises, while the others (42.5%) never suffered from pain. The overall frequency of acute anaemic episodes was 50.5%, (acute aplastic anaemia 46%; acute splenic sequestration 26%). A group of 27 patients were asymptomatic (follow-up > 3 yr). Epistatic mechanisms influencing SCD were studied. Coinherited alpha-thalassemia strongly reduced the risk of stroke (p <0.001) and increased that of painful crises (p < 0.02). There was a low prevalence of Senegal and Bantu (CAR) betas-chromosomes in patients with meningitis (p <0.04) and osteomyelitis (p < 0.03). Prevalence of Senegal betas-chromosomes was lower in the asymptomatic group of 27 patients (p < 0.02). The patients come from a population of unmixed immigrants in whom the beta-globin gene haplotype strongly reflects the geographic origin and identifies subgroups with a homogenous genetic background. Thus the observed effects might result more from differences in as yet unidentified determinants in the genetic background than from the direct linkage with differences in the beta-globin gene locus.
Type II recessive hereditary methaemoglobinaemia (RHM) is a rare disease due to generalized NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase (cytb5r) deficiency. It results in mild cyanosis and severe neurological impairment. The clinical features and long-term outcome are poorly documented, and there are no systematic reviews. We examined six cases of type II RHM, four of which were new, together with 45 previously published cases, in order to establish the range of phenotypic expression. The clinical picture was very similar in most cases, with severe encephalopathy, microcephaly, generalized dystonia, movement disorders and mild cyanosis. The neurological prognosis was poor; in particular, none of the patients walked or spoke. In addition, the possibility of an atypical and milder phenotype was considered. We concluded that children with unexplained severe encephalopathy associated with generalized dystonia should be examined for cyanosis and have a methaemoglobinaemia assay performed. The diagnosis can be confirmed by very low cytb5r activity in both red and white blood cells. Here we report three novel mutations in the NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase gene. Prenatal diagnosis of this extremely severe disease should be proposed to affected families.
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