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Elevated urine 2-methylcitric acid level

MedGen UID:
1841959
Concept ID:
C5826571
Finding
Synonyms: 2-methylcitric acid high in urine; Elevated urine 2-methylcitrate level
 
HPO: HP:0034662

Definition

Amount of 2-methylcitric acid in the urine above the upper limit of normal. [from HPO]

Term Hierarchy

CClinical test,  RResearch test,  OOMIM,  GGeneReviews,  VClinVar  
  • CROGVElevated urine 2-methylcitric acid level

Conditions with this feature

Methylmalonic aciduria, cblA type
MedGen UID:
344422
Concept ID:
C1855109
Disease or Syndrome
For this GeneReview, the term "isolated methylmalonic acidemia" refers to a group of inborn errors of metabolism associated with elevated methylmalonic acid (MMA) concentration in the blood and urine that result from the failure to isomerize (convert) methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA) into succinyl-CoA during propionyl-CoA metabolism in the mitochondrial matrix, without hyperhomocysteinemia or homocystinuria, hypomethioninemia, or variations in other metabolites, such as malonic acid. Isolated MMA is caused by complete or partial deficiency of the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (mut0 enzymatic subtype or mut– enzymatic subtype, respectively), a defect in the transport or synthesis of its cofactor, 5-deoxy-adenosyl-cobalamin (cblA, cblB, or cblD-MMA), or deficiency of the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA epimerase. Prior to the advent of newborn screening, common phenotypes included: Infantile/non-B12-responsive form (mut0 enzymatic subtype, cblB), the most common phenotype, associated with infantile-onset lethargy, tachypnea, hypothermia, vomiting, and dehydration on initiation of protein-containing feeds. Without appropriate treatment, the infantile/non-B12-responsive phenotype could rapidly progress to coma due to hyperammonemic encephalopathy. Partially deficient or B12-responsive phenotypes (mut– enzymatic subtype, cblA, cblB [rare], cblD-MMA), in which symptoms occur in the first few months or years of life and are characterized by feeding problems, failure to thrive, hypotonia, and developmental delay marked by episodes of metabolic decompensation. Methylmalonyl-CoA epimerase deficiency, in which findings range from complete absence of symptoms to severe metabolic acidosis. Affected individuals can also develop ataxia, dysarthria, hypotonia, mild spastic paraparesis, and seizures. In those individuals diagnosed by newborn screening and treated from an early age, there appears to be decreased early mortality, less severe symptoms at diagnosis, favorable short-term neurodevelopmental outcome, and lower incidence of movement disorders and irreversible cerebral damage. However, secondary complications may still occur and can include intellectual disability, tubulointerstitial nephritis with progressive impairment of renal function, "metabolic stroke" (bilateral lacunar infarction of the basal ganglia during acute metabolic decompensation), pancreatitis, growth failure, functional immune impairment, bone marrow failure, optic nerve atrophy, arrhythmias and/or cardiomyopathy (dilated or hypertrophic), liver steatosis/fibrosis/cancer, and renal cancer.

Professional guidelines

PubMed

Zhang Y, Yang YL, Hasegawa Y, Yamaguchi S, Shi CY, Song JQ, Sayami S, Liu P, Yan R, Dong JH, Qin J
Chin Med J (Engl) 2008 Feb 5;121(3):216-9. PMID: 18298912

Recent clinical studies

Etiology

Zhang Y, Yang YL, Hasegawa Y, Yamaguchi S, Shi CY, Song JQ, Sayami S, Liu P, Yan R, Dong JH, Qin J
Chin Med J (Engl) 2008 Feb 5;121(3):216-9. PMID: 18298912

Diagnosis

Zhang Y, Yang YL, Hasegawa Y, Yamaguchi S, Shi CY, Song JQ, Sayami S, Liu P, Yan R, Dong JH, Qin J
Chin Med J (Engl) 2008 Feb 5;121(3):216-9. PMID: 18298912
Campbell CD, Ganesh J, Ficicioglu C
Haematologica 2005 Dec;90(12 Suppl):ECR45. PMID: 16464760

Therapy

Campbell CD, Ganesh J, Ficicioglu C
Haematologica 2005 Dec;90(12 Suppl):ECR45. PMID: 16464760

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