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Journal of neurology · Jun 2004
Case ReportsMyeloneuropathy and anemia due to copper malabsorption.
- Neeraj Kumar and Phillip A Low.
- Department of Neurology, E8A Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. kumar.neeraj@mayo.edu
- J. Neurol. 2004 Jun 1; 251 (6): 747-9.
AbstractDietary deficiency of copper results in a progressive ataxic myelopathy in ruminants called swayback. Menkes disease is a human disease due to an inherited defect in copper absorption; survival into adulthood is typically not known to occur. We report a 63-year-old woman who was evaluated by us for a myeloneuropathy that occurred in the setting of copper malabsorption. Her neurological deterioration stopped with copper supplementation. The limited literature on neurological manifestations of acquired copper deficiency suggests that the clinical presentation resembles the myeloneuropathy seen with vitamin B12 deficiency.
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