2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2015.04.003
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Neurocognitive and neuroimaging outcome of early treated young adult PKU patients: A longitudinal study

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Cited by 62 publications
(70 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…On this issue, statistical analysis showed that all the disease-associated determinants we included in the statistical model leave unexplicated about 30 % of variability of WMSS. The apparent lack of a consistent link between white matter abnormality variations and variations of IQ (as in the present paper) and other cognitive domains such as executive functions [12] suggests that white matter alterations could not reflect the neuropathological background of the neuropsychological impairment. The fact that the exposure to phenylalanine may affect both mental functioning [30] and white matter integrity [18,19,29] but that these two effects are non reciprocally related might indicate that the pathogenic effect of phenylalanine affects independently different brain structures/functions with a different timing, perhaps according to their critical developmental stage [14].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 62%
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“…On this issue, statistical analysis showed that all the disease-associated determinants we included in the statistical model leave unexplicated about 30 % of variability of WMSS. The apparent lack of a consistent link between white matter abnormality variations and variations of IQ (as in the present paper) and other cognitive domains such as executive functions [12] suggests that white matter alterations could not reflect the neuropathological background of the neuropsychological impairment. The fact that the exposure to phenylalanine may affect both mental functioning [30] and white matter integrity [18,19,29] but that these two effects are non reciprocally related might indicate that the pathogenic effect of phenylalanine affects independently different brain structures/functions with a different timing, perhaps according to their critical developmental stage [14].…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 62%
“…Despite the numerous studies focusing on this topic, several aspects of the white matter alterations in PKU remain to be elucidated: a) the outcome of white matter alterations; b) the weak link between neuroimaging alterations and neurological/neuropsychological impairment [1,11,12] even when more sophisticated MRI DTI-based microstructural examination were performed [19,28,29] c) the factors causing the wide interindividual variability in white matter alterations [10]; d) the neuropathological background of white matter abnormalities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Seven publications compared effects of high versus low Phe levels [33, 34, 40, 46–49]. However, all of these studies used different cut-off Phe levels for their high and low Phe groups: Bik-Multanowski et al [34] compared cognitive performance of ET AwPKU with concurrent levels of ≤720 μmol/L and > 720 μmol/L; Brumm et al [33] used cut-off Phe levels of < 1000 μmol/L and > 1000 μmol/L at the time of testing; Jahja et al [40] compared effects of concurrent, childhood, adolescent and lifetime Phe by comparing low and high Phe groups according to the most frequently used upper target treatment level during childhood, 360 μmol/L (low: < 360 μmol/L, high: ≥360 μmol/L); Bartus et al [48], de Felice et al [47] and Nardecchia et al [49] compared cognitive functioning of patients with Phe levels below and above 600 μmol/L, a frequently used upper target treatment level during adolescence and adulthood [50]; additionally, Bartus et al [48] compared cognitive task performance of ET AwPKU with average childhood (0–12 years) Phe below and above 360μmo/L; and, finally, Romani et al [46] divided their sample into two equally large subgroups based on their adulthood Phe levels (low: < 650 μmol/L, high: > 950 μmol/L), noting that their ET AwPKU group with good metabolic control (low Phe group) had adulthood Phe levels close to current treatment guidelines in the UK (< 700 μmol/L [51]).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, three studies reported on a longer-term follow-up study of ET AwPKU [42, 49, 52]. Two of these compared cognitive outcomes during childhood with cognitive outcomes in the same sample in adulthood [42, 49].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%