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Twelve infants with severe perinatal asphyxia were found to have elevated blood ammonia levels (302 to 960 microgram/100 ml). In the seven survivors, hyperammonemia was associated with CNS irritability, hyperthermia, hypertension, and wide neonatal heart rate oscillations. Follow-up examinations
Hyperammonemic coma developed in a 69-year-old woman with prolonged symptoms of abdominal pain, dysphagia, and fever. At laparotomy for an acute condition within the abdomen, mesenteric vein thrombosis was found and partial intestinal resection was performed. Following surgery, the patient regained
Ureaplasma species (spp.) are common colonizers of the urogenital tract but may cause systemic infection in immunocompromised patients. They release significant amounts of ammonia via urea hydrolysis and have been recently implicated in the pathogenesis of hyperammonemia syndrome after organ
Noncirrhotic hyperammonemia (NCH) is a rare but often fatal complication of solid organ transplantation. We present a case wherein an infectious cause of NCH was suspected following kidney transplantation (KT) and the patient was promptly started on empirical antibiotic treatment which proved to be
Hyperammonemia is a typical symptom of urea cycle disorders. While early-onset argininosuccinic aciduria (ASA) can often be detected by hyperammonemia, patients with late-onset ASA predominantly present with psychomotor retardation and mental disorders. However, in late-onset ASA that develops
Hyperammonemia syndrome (HS) is a comparatively rare but often fatal clinical syndrome characterized by progressive respiratory alkalosis and abrupt mental status alteration associated with markedly elevated plasma ammonium levels. Although the exact mechanism of HS remains unclear, infection with
A 23-year-old Thoroughbred gelding was referred for the evaluation of acute onset of ataxia and depression, and a 2-day history of fever. On physical examination, the gelding was profoundly depressed and 10-12% dehydrated. The horse appeared very unstable, with a wide-based stance in the hind limbs,
A 69-year-old male presented with fever, ascites and leg edema in February, 1994. He had a pathological fracture of cervical supine in October. Pathological findings at operation showed plasmacytoma. Bone marrow aspiration showed 16.2% myeloma cells. So he was diagnosed as multiple myeloma
The case of a 4 years old boy, hospitalized for an unexplained coma, is reported. He is the first child of a non-consanguin couple. The psychomotor development of this child was considered as normal up to the age of 18 months; then, a delay in language development, behaviour disorders with an
OBJECTIVE
To alert the physicians to the possibility of a late-onset inborn error of metabolism in an apparently previously healthy patient with acute clinical presentation.
METHODS
Case report.
METHODS
Pediatric unit and general intensive care unit.
METHODS
An apparently previously healthy
A 6 1/2-month-old male offspring of consanguineous Egyptian parents was first seen because of fever, somnolence, vomiting, right focal motor seizures, right hemiparesis, elevated transaminase levels, hyperammonemia, and acidosis. A computed tomographic scan of the head suggested swelling of the left
Late onset of symptoms in a 12 1/2-year-old male with ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency were associated with unusual histological features in the liver. The patient presented with an acute onset of hyperammonemia and altered mental status after a 2-day prodrome of vomiting and lethargy.
We describe late-onset propionic acidemia in a 12-year-old boy who presented with vomiting, cough, and fever, and manifested a precipitous decline in mental status, accompanied by acute encephalopathy and severe neurologic damage, with bilateral basal ganglia involvement upon neuroimaging. He
Hyperammonemic encephalopathy is rarely caused by a urinary diversion. We herein experienced a case of rectal carcinoma with rectovesical and ileal fistulae that developed hyperammonemic encephalopathy. A 72-year-old man suffered from a fever, diarrhea, pneumaturia, and fecaluria beginning in April
Clinical characteristics: Multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD) represents a clinical spectrum in which presentations can be divided into type I (neonatal onset with congenital anomalies), type II (neonatal onset without