Metabolic Flashcards

1
Q

What enzyme converts D-Glucose -> Glucose-6-phosphate

A

Hexokinase

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2
Q

How many molecules of ATP and NADH and pyruvate are made via glycolysis

A

2 net molecules ATP (2 required, 4 produced)
2NADH
2 Pyruvate molecules

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3
Q

What enzyme converts pyruvate to lactate

A

Lactate dehydrogenase

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4
Q

What enzyme converts pyruvate to alanine

A

Alanine transaminase

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5
Q

Which GLUT transporter transports glucose to the brain

A

GLUT1

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6
Q

What GLUT transporter transports glucose to muscle and fat

A

GUT4

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7
Q

What glucose transport transports glucose to kidney/liver/pancreas

A

GLUT 2

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8
Q

What enzyme converts glucose –> glucose 6 phosphate

A

Hexokinase

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9
Q

What base molecule makes up glycogen and what does it connect to

A

Gluogenin
UDP Glucose

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10
Q

Which enzyme elongates the glycogen chain

A

Glycogen synthase

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11
Q

In a glycogen molecule
-what enzyme makes branches and what is the bond
-what enzyme elongates the chain and what is the bond

A

-Branching enzyme; a1-6 glycosidic bond
-Glycogen synthase; a1-4 glycosidic bond

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12
Q

What enzyme converts Glucose1phosphate to Glucose-6-phosphate

A

Phosphoglucomutase

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13
Q

What enzyme allows Glucose-6-phosphate to be relased into the blood

What organs is it found
What organ is it NOT found in

A

Glucose-6-phosphatase

Liver/Kidney/GIT
Not found in muscle

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14
Q

What pathway is used in the liver and RBC for glucose metabolism and to protect against oxidate stress

A

Pentose Phosphate pathway

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15
Q

What glycogen storage defect is due to a deficiency in glucose-6-phosphotase

A

von Gierke Disease- type 1

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16
Q

What causes Glycogen storage disease type 1: von Gierke disease and what are the symptoms

A

Glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme deficiency

Cannot convert G-6-P to free glucose so G-6-P builds up in cells
-hypoglycaemia
-G-6-P is shunted down glycolysis pathway to make pyruvate. Pyruvate converted ot
-Lactate (LDH)
-Alanine (ALT)
-Fatty acids –> hyperlipidaemia

Also get increased shunting of G6P down the pentose phosphate pathway –> increased purine synthesis –> increased uric acid

Conclusion
-Hypoglycaemia
-High lactate
-hyperlipidaemia
-Hyperalbuminaemia
-High uric acid

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17
Q

What can Glucose-6-phosphate become

A

glucose
Glycogen
Pyruvate–> alanine, fatty acids, lactate
Pentose phosphate pathway –> purine and pyridines –> urate

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18
Q

What features would you see in a child with GSD Type 1
what features on investigations

A

Hypoglycaemia –> seizures
Hepatomegally
Doll like facies + thin limbs
FTT

Investigations
-low BSL
-high lactate
-high alanine
-hyperlipidaemia
-hyperuraemia
-Liver biopsy: universal distension of hepatocytes with glycogen and fat

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19
Q

What foods should be avoided in von Gipple disease

A

Fructose
Galactose

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20
Q

What is the role of glucose-6-phosphate translocase

A

Glucose 6 phosphate is taken up into the ER
Dephosphorylated to glucose by glucose-6-phosphatase

Glucose-6-phosphate translocase allows the transport of G6P into the endoplasmic reticulum

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21
Q

SLCA gene is associated with what glycogen storage disease defect

A

GSD Type 1b: Glucose-6-phosphate translocase deficiency

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22
Q

What distinguishes type 1a via type 1b glycogen storage disease

A

Type1a= Von Gierke Disease- glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency
Type1b = Glucose-6-phosphate transferase deficiency due to SLCA gene

Both have accumulation of Glucose-6-phosphate –> hyperalanine, hyperlipidaemia, high lactate, hypoglycaemia

Type1b also has neutropenia and manage as per type 1a but also use prophylactic cotrimoxazole

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23
Q

hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, hyperuricemia, hyperlipidaemia

what is the disease

A

Glycogen storage disease type 1a or b

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24
Q

What is Pompe a disease of what enzyme
Where does glycogen accumulate
What are the symptoms

A

Pompe= GSD type 1
-disease of acidic alpha glucosidase (to break a1-4 and a-1-6 glycosidic binds)
-Accumulates in the liver and in muscle (skeletal, heart and smooth muscle)

Sx
-Hepatomegaly/ liver enlargement likely 2 to heart failure
-Cardiac: enlarged heart, Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
-Skeletal: hypotonia, proximal myopathy in juvenile disease
-Smooth muscles of blood vessels and organs
-Enlarged tongue

Involvement of the diaphragm can cause respiratory distress

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25
Q

An infant presents with an enlarged heart and hypotonia/weakness
What metabolic disorder does this suggest

A

Pompe disease

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26
Q

What deficiency is present in Coris disease
What type of disorder is it
What are the symptoms

A

Deficiency of debranching enzyme
Glycogen storage disease
Sx: mild hypoglycaemia, hepatomegaly, skeletal muscle wasting and weakness, short stature

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27
Q

What is McArdle syndrome
What symptoms does it cause
What is the test for it
What is the treatment

A

A glycogen storage disease due to muscle phosphorylase deficiency
-Symptoms: cannot utilise glycogen so muscle fatigue with a second wind aka more energy once fatty acid is utilised

-test: ischaemic forearm test.
-Pretest venous CK/Ammonia/lactate
-inflate a blood pressure cuff to force arm to use glycogen and get person to do repetitive movements
-repeat ammonia/CK/lactate at 5, 10 and 20 min mark
-post test urine myoglobinuria

Treatment
-Avoid statins
-Pre work out protein and surcose
-Activity modification

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28
Q

What enzymes are responsible for converting galactose to Glucose 6 phosphate

A

Galactose kinase (Galactose –> Galactose-1-phosphate)
GALT (Galactose-1-phosphate-urodyltransferase)= Gal-1-Phosphate + UDP-Glucose –> Glucose-1-phosphate + UDP-Galactose
-UDP-Galactose Epimerase: converts UDP-Galactose –> UDP-Glucose

-Phosphoglucomutase = converts Glucose-1-phosphate –> Glucose-6-phosphate

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29
Q

What 3 enzymes cause galactosemia and what are the symptoms of each

A

1) GALT (Galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase) -
-onset of sx within a week due to milk consumption (lactose= glucose + galactose)
-E. coli sepsis
-lethargy
-jaundice
-coagulopathy
-oil drop cataracts
-faltering growth, tubulopathy, rickets

2) Galactosekinase- cataracts is the only issue
3) UDP-Galactose epimerise - only affects RBC

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29
Q

What 3 enzymes cause galactosemia and what are the symptoms of each

A

1) GALT (Galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase) -
-onset of sx within a week due to milk consumption (lactose= glucose + galactose)
-E. coli sepsis
-lethargy
-jaundice
-coagulopathy
-oil drop cataracts
-faltering growth, tubulopathy, rickets

2) Galactosekinase- cataracts is the only issue
3) UDP-Galactose epimerise - only affects RBC

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30
Q

What is deficient in Hereditary Fructose Intolerance
What sx does it cause
What is the treatment

A

Aldolase-B deficiency
F=Vomitting/hypoglycaemia on ingestion of fructose approx 6 months of age. Chronic= faltering growth, hepatomegaly, proximal renal tubulopathy

Investigations
-Reducing substances in urine
-Lactic acidosis
-Deranged LFTs and coagulation studies

Management: Avoid Fructose + Sucrose + Sorbitol

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31
Q

E. coli Sepsis and cataracts in a neonate is associated with what error of metabolism

A

Galactoseaemia

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32
Q

What deficiency results in phenylketonuria

A

Deficiency in phenylalanine hydroxylase OR biopterin deficiency

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33
Q

What amino acid is phenylalanine converted to

A

tyrosine

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34
Q

what is the amino acid tyrosine used in

A

protein synthesis
cathecolamine synthesis
thyroxine
melanin

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35
Q

What symptoms does PKU caused if left untreated

A

microcephaly
mental retardation
spastic cerebral palsy
albuminism
widely spaced teeth
musty odor
eczematous rash and dry skin

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36
Q

A baby has elevated succinylacetone- what is this pathopnemonic of

A

Tyrosinaemia

Tyrosine is covered to Fumerate and acetoacetate by fumaryl-acetoacetate. If this enzyme is deficient it is shunted to succinylacetone

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37
Q

What are the symptoms of tyrosinaemia

A

-peripheral neuropathy
-acute liver failure
-proximal renal tubulopathy

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38
Q

What is Maple syrup urine disease a deficiency of

A

Branched chain a ketoacid dehydrogenase

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39
Q

What effects does a deficiency in branched chain a-ketoacid dehydrogenase deficiency have

A

-high leucine –> outcompetes other amino acids to cross the BBB.
-In the brain, uses glutamine and alanine to convert back to other amino acids
-result = like glutamine = low GABA and glutamate (neurotransmitters) = impaired cell-cell communication

Also get elevated a-ketoacids which impair the kerbs cycle resulting in reduced ATP production
-Na/K ATP pump dysfunciton
-Cerebral oedema

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40
Q

what deficiency is present in homocysteinuria
what symptoms does it cause

what vitamins are given to help
if the vitamins don’t work what is given

A

cystathionine-b-synthetase

Sx
-marfanoid like sx
-ectopic lentis- downward
-intellectual disability
-blood clots as homocysteine inflames endothelium
-behavioural issues
-osteoporosis

Vitamin B6
Folate

BETANINE - think making homocystINI Better –> Better-nine

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41
Q

what is the role of glycine in the brain and spinal cord

A

acts as a neurotransmitter
-in the brain: excitatory effect
-spinal cord and brainstem: inhibitory affect

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42
Q

Non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia is a defect in what
What are the symptoms
what would you see on investigation
what is the treatment

A

Defect in glycine cleave which allows glycine to accumulate
Glycine is a neurotransmitter
-excitory effect in the brain
-inhibitory affect on spinal cord and brain stem

Sx
-hiccups
-hypotonia
-apnoea and encephalopathy
-seizures
-marked developmental delay

Investigation
-elevated blood and urine glycine
-CSF plasma glycine >0.9

Tx: sodium benzoate

43
Q

what is the treatment in non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia to reduce glycine

A

sodium benzoate

44
Q

Tryptophan is an important precursor for what

A

niacin - vitamin B3
serotonin

45
Q

Hartnup is a disease due to what
What sx are cause
what is the treatment

A

Disorder of non-polar amino acid absorption especially affecting the amino acid tryptophan
-do not absorb from GI tract
-unable to absorb in the kidneys –> high levels in the urine

Tyrptophasn is a precursor to Vitamin B3 (Niacin) and Serotonin
-Get pellegra sx (diarrhoea, dermatitis, dementia)
-Cerebellar ataxia
-Developmental delay
-muscle weakness

Serotonin supplementation
Nicotinic acid

46
Q

what accumulates in Canavan disease

A

N-acetyl-L-aspartate

47
Q

What gene and enzyme are deficient in Canavan disease
What does the enzyme do
what accumulates

A

ASPA gene
Enzyme: aspartoacylase
“what to get out of the caravan ASAP”  canavan = ASPA = aspartoacylase”

enzyme: converts N-acetyl-L-aspartate –> acetate and L-aspartate

Accumulates: N-acetyl-L-aspartate

48
Q

Canavan disease is a deficiency in Aspartoacylase (ASPA) which results in the accumulation of N-acetyl-L-aspartate

Why does this cause disease pathology
what are the symptoms

A

N-acetyl-L aspartate are converted to L-Aspartate and acetate by the enzyme Aspartoacylase.

Acetate converted to Acetyl-CoA and used in fatty acid synthesis in the myelin sheath
Defect - interfers with white matter tract
Result= leukodystrophy

Symptoms
-Regression of motor skills
-Macrocephaly (think child with a caravan on top of their head)
-hypotonia
-seizures
-paralysis
-blindness

49
Q

Glutaric acid is an intermediate in the degradation of what amino acid

A

Lysine

50
Q

Glutaric aciduria type 1 is due to a efficiency in what
What are the symptoms of GAT-Type 1

A

Glutaric acid is an intermediate in the degradation of lysine
Converted to Acetyle CoA via glytayl-CoA-dehydrogenase

Onset during illness/times of stress
-acute increase in Glutaryl-CoA-COA
-rigidity, dystonia
-metabolic decompensation –> vomitting, ketosis, seizures, death

51
Q

What should be avoided in Glutaric aciduria type 1

A

Lysine
Tryptophan

52
Q

What antibiotic is used in organic academia and why

A

Metronidazole- works on gut bacteria - reduces production of propionic acid

53
Q

What medication is given in organic academia that binds the organic acids to reduce them and allow excretion

A

L- carnitine

54
Q

What enzyme is deficient in Methylmalanoic aciduria

A

methylmalonyl CoA mutatase “MCM”

55
Q

Raised propionylcarnitine (C3) is elevated in what disease

A

Organic acidaemia
Proprionic acid + methymalanoic-CoA bind to carnitine to form methymalonlycarnitine (C4DC) and propionlycarnitine (C3)

56
Q

What are the symptoms of methymalanic acaemia
what enzyme is deficient
what do you see on blood testing
what is the treatment

A

enzyme: MCM = methymalanoic-CoA mutatse

symptoms
-first week of life
-poor feeding, lethargy
-vomitting
-encephalopathy
-dilated cardiomyopathy
-pancreatitis
-if untreated, basal ganglia necrosis

tests
-metabollic acidosis
-raised ketones
-neutropenia and thrombocytopenia
-elevatated C3 (propionylcarnitine)

Treatment
-L-carnitine
-B12 supplementation
-Sick day plan with 10% dextrose to prevent catabolism
-Special formula with no isoleucine, methionine, threonine or valine

56
Q

What are the symptoms of methymalanic acaemia
what enzyme is deficient
what do you see on blood testing
what is the treatment

A

enzyme: MCM = methymalanoic-CoA mutatse

symptoms
-first week of life
-poor feeding, lethargy
-vomitting
-encephalopathy
-dilated cardiomyopathy
-pancreatitis
-if untreated, basal ganglia necrosis

tests
-metabollic acidosis
-raised ketones
-neutropenia and thrombocytopenia
-elevatated C3 (propionylcarnitine)

Treatment
-L-carnitine
-B12 supplementation
-Sick day plan with 10% dextrose to prevent catabolism
-Special formula with no isoleucine, methionine, threonine or valine

57
Q
A
58
Q

what enzyme is deficient in propionic acidaemia
What treatment is used

A

propionyl CoA dehydrogenase

Tx
-L) carnitine
-Liver transplant
-Biotin
-Metronidazole

59
Q

Smelly feet odour is associated with what metabolic disorder

A

Isovaleric acidaemia

60
Q

A child has bilateral subdural and encephalopathy
what metabolic condition should be excluded
what enzyme is deficient

A

Glutaric aciduria Type 1
Glutaryl-CoA-dehydrogenase

61
Q

What are symptoms of Glutamic aciduria type 1

A

Pre crisis: asymptomatic with frontal bossing
During crisis: encephalopathy, dystonia, chorea, feeding issues, irritability, bilateral subdural haemorrhages

62
Q

What metabolic condition causes this and why

A

Hartnup disease - cannot absorb tryptophan which forms niacin (B3) and serotonin so you get Pellegra (dermatitis, dementia, diarrhoea)

63
Q

What is the pneumonic of the urea cycle
/ what is the urea cycle

A

“ Carbs combine with oranges to make a citrus appetizer that makes you full argaine but Urea continue to crave oranges”.
Carbomoyl phosphate + Ornithine  Citrulinne  Arginosuccinate  Fumrate + Arginine  Ornithine + urea

64
Q

What is the only urea cycle defect that is inherited in an x-linked fashion

A

Ornithine Transcarbamoylase deficiency is X-linked recessive

The remainder are Autosomal recessive

65
Q

In a urea cycle defect you have a deficiency in ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC). what does this cause in blood tests

A

Increased glutamate and ammonia
increased ornithine (orotic acid) and carboxyl phosphate

reduced citrulline
reduced arginine

66
Q

What deficiency causes citurllinaemia
what is seen in the blood

A

Argininosuccinate synthase

Increased citrulline and increased orotic acid (ornithine)
reduced arginine

66
Q

What deficiency causes citurllinaemia
what is seen in the blood

A

Argininosuccinate synthase

Increased citrulline and increased orotic acid (ornithine)
reduced arginine

67
Q

What key features are seen in a urea cycle defect
-ammonia level
-blood gas
-urine

A

Ammonia level >1000
Blood gas: respiratory alkalosis as urea is a strong stimulate of the respiratory centre
-urine: increased orotic acid

68
Q

A child has a urea cycle defect
-what is acute treatment
-what is long term medication

A

-acute: harm-filtration, IV dextrose to stop catabolism of proteins

-long term: sodium benzoate and sodium phenylbutyrate which conjugate with glutamate and glycine to allow urine excretion and removal of nitrogen
-Arginine supplementation

69
Q

What indicates a fatty acid oxidation defect in terms of blood sugar and ketones

A

low blood sugar and inappropriately low ketones

70
Q

Which fatty acid required carnitine to enter the mitochondrial matrix

A

Long chain fatty acids

71
Q

What deficiency causes medium chain fatty acid oxidation defect

A

medium chain fatty acid CoA dehydrogenase

72
Q

what causes raised C8 + C10 carnitine

A

medium chain fatty acid oxidation defect

73
Q

a mother has liver dysfunction during pregnancy- what fatty acid oxidation defect is this linked to

A

Long chain fatty acid CoA dehydrogenase deficiency

74
Q

What are the clinical features of VLCFA defect

A

All the ‘opathies’
-myopathy- muscle weakness and fatigue, rhabdomyolysis
-cardiomyopathy (hypertrophic)
-peripheral neuropathy
-pigmentary retinopathy

75
Q

What is elevated Carnitine 16 (CD16) and Carnitine-20 (CD-20) associated with

A

Long chain fatty acid defect
Very long chain fatty acid defect

76
Q

What should be tested in all babies born to mothers with AFLP (Acute fatty liver of pregnancy) and HELLP syndrome

A

Acylcarnitine profile

77
Q

which anti-epileptic forms a complex with carnitine

A

sodium valproate

78
Q

What are causes of carnitine deficiency
What is the result

A

Causes
1) Primary- genetic defect that results in a failure of intake/synthesis/transport of carnitine
2) Secondary- due to excessive loss of carnitine
-organic acidaemia
-disorders of fatty acid oxidation
-sodium valproate which forms a complex with carnitine

Result- inability to transport long chain fatty acids into the mitochondrial matrix for oxidation

79
Q

What is the role of carnitine in fatty acid oxidation
What defects are involved in defects of fatty acid oxidation

A

transports LCFA into the mitochondria

All are Medium/Short/Long/Very long CoA dehydrogenase defects

80
Q

what causes familial hypertriglyceridaemia
what causes familiar hypercholesterolaemia

A

VLDL overproduction or reduced destruction
LDL receptor mutation

81
Q

what is the major constituent of LDL

A

cholesterol - 70%

82
Q

what is the major constituent of VLDL

A

triglycerides

83
Q

what are features of hypercholesterolaemia in children

A

tendon xanthomas / thickening of the achilles tendon
corneal acrus
xanthomata
Premature CVD

84
Q

what 2 medications are used in the support of familial hypercholesterolaemia

A

-statins- HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor which is the rate limiting step in cholesterol production

-Ezetimbe= selective blockage of cholesterol uptake

85
Q

Abetalipoproteinaemia:
-what gene defect
-deficiency in what
-result of deficiency is what
-symptoms

A

MTP gene defect
Defective Apoenzyme B (ApoB)
Unable to absorb fat

Sx
-fat malabsorption –> steatorrhoea, failure to thrive
-Vitamin E deficiency
-Retinitis pigmentosa

86
Q

what is the role of peroxisomes

A

metabolism and synthesis of bile acids
Vitamin A brakdown
Oxidation of long chain fatty acids
Synthesis of plasmogens (consitutents of cell walls)

87
Q

what disorders are the below genes involved in
MTP gene
PEX1 gene
PEX6 gene
ABCD1 gene

A

-Abetalipoproteinaemia
-Zellweger syndrome + Neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy
-Neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy
-X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy

88
Q

what are the symptoms of Zellweger syndrome
what is it a disorder of

A

sx
-large forehead with frontal bossing and large fontanelle
-hypotonia
-seizures
-hepatomegally with cirrhoses
-cystic kidney disease
-calcific stippling and punctate lesions around the body

89
Q

What accumulates in Refusm syndrome

A

Phytanic acid (Vitamin A)

90
Q

In X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy
-Gene
-Age of presentation
-Symptoms

Finding on:
-Blood test
-MRI
-Short synacthen test

Treatment

A

ABDC1
5-15 years
Sx: developmental regression, visual impairment, hyperpigmentation, adrenal crisis

Bloods:
-high ACTH
-low cortisol – hypoglycaemia
-low aldosterone - low sodium, high potassium and low blood pressure
-MRI: bilateral posterior white matter involvement
-Short synacthen test blunted

Treatment
-BMT
-Lorenzo oil
-Steroid replacement

91
Q

what are the 5 conditions that cause developmental regression in school aged children

A
  1. Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis
  2. X – Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy
  3. Batten Disease (Seizures + Regression)
  4. Wilson Disease (Jaundice + Regression)
  5. Niemann – Pick C Disease
92
Q

What type of disorder is Tay-sach and Sandhoff disease
What enzyme is affected

What are their symptoms
What is the key difference on exam

A

Lysosomal disorder of glucoliosides
Due to deficiency in Hexosaminase A (Tay-each) and Hexoaminase A+B (Sandhoff)

Cherry red spots
Spasticity and quadraplegia
Progressive blindness
Seizures
Death within 2 years

Key difference= sandhoff- hepatomegaly, tay-sach does not

93
Q

What type of disorder is Gaucher Disease
What enzyme is affected
What are the symptoms

A

Cerebroside disorder- gluco-sphingolipid involved in most cell membranes

Enzyme -glucocerebrosidase deficiency

Features: think an Obese G (child with big belly)
-Hepatosplenomegaly
-Boney involvement - pancytopenia, avascular necrosis, erlenmeyer flask deformity
-peripheral neuropathy
-seizures

Treatment-
-Enzyme replacement therapy for types 1+3
-No effective treatment for type 2

94
Q

What enzyme is deficient in Krabbe disease
What are the symptoms

A

GALC (‘Krabbes belong in Genitalia And Long Cocks)
Enzyme: galacetocerebrosidase enzyme

Destruction of myelin - a type of leukodystrophy

Seizures
Absent reflexes
Progressive blindness
Opisthotonus
Death by 2

95
Q

What enzyme is involved in Fabry disease
What are the symptoms

A

a-galactosidase enzyme
Flakey skin- hypohydrosis
Angiokeratoma
Burning pain- nephropathy
Renal nephropathy
Y chromosome- boys affected as X-linked
Cardiovascular involvement
Corneal opacities

96
Q

What enzyme is deficient in metachromic leukodystrophy and what does it do
What is the age of onset
What symptoms does it cause
What do you see on MRI

A

alpha-sulfatasa A enzyme
Desulfatation of sulfate in Glycolipid of myelin
Lack of enzyme results in central and peripheral myelin destruction

Age: 1-2 years old
Developmental regression
Hypotonia
Muscle wasting
Lack of deep tendon reflexes
Death by age 5

MRI: frontal and peri-ventricular white matter lesions

97
Q

What is the symptoms of Cysteinosis

A

Accumulation of cysteine in cells
-destruction of proximal renal tubular cells –> Fanconi syndrome with hypophosphataemia, hyponatraemia, loss of bicarbonate so acidosis, hypoalbuminaemia, low urate
-accumulation in cornea –> cataracts
-accumulation of Kuppfer cells - hepatomegaly

98
Q

What are the enzyme issue and symptoms of Wolfman disease

A

Lysosomal acid lipase deficiency
LIPA gene
Cannot break down cholesterol esters

FTT, Hepatomegaly, adrenal calcifications
Fatal in infancy

99
Q

a-iduronidase and Idurisulfase are enzymes in what 2 disorders

A

-Hurler
-Hunter

100
Q

which mucopolysaccarhoides is associated with corneal clouding

A

Hurler syndrome

101
Q

heparan sulfate sulfatase is associated with what mucopolysaccharide disorder

A

San Fillippo

102
Q

X-linked leukodystrophy
-what type of disorder
-what do you screen for
-what is the age of onset
-what are the symptoms
-what do you see on MRI
-what is the treament

A

-perioxosmal disorder with an inability to break down very long chain fatty acids
-Serum VLFCAs
-5-15 years
-Learning difficulties, progressive blindness, hyper-reflexia, Addisons disease
-Parito-occipital white matter demyelination
TX
-stem cell transplant

103
Q

What is Smith-Lemi-Opitz Syndrome a defect of?
What are the symptoms
How is it diagnosed
What is the treatment

A

Defect of cholesterol biosynthesis- deficiency in 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase

Sx; microcephaly, syndactly of 2nd and 3rd toes, light sensitivity, ambitious genitalia for boys, renal abnormalities, learning difficulties

Diagnosis: raised 7-dehydrocholesterol
TX: cholesterol supplementation + statins to prevent precursor build up

104
Q

What is not synthesised in a disorder of glycosylation

What are the symptoms

A

Oligosaccharides
SX:
-Inverted nipples
-Fat pads
-Muscular hypotonia
-Faltering growth
-Cerebellar hypoplasia
-MR, cardiomyopathy
-Effusions
-Endocrine