• Ann. Clin. Biochem. · May 2010

    Case Reports

    Fatal ammonia toxicity in an adult due to an undiagnosed urea cycle defect: under-recognition of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency.

    • Vanessa R Thurlow, Michelle Asafu-Adjaye, Stamatina Agalou, and Yusof Rahman.
    • Department of Chemical Pathology, St Luke's Hospital, 801 Ostrum Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA. sudipnanda2000@yahoo.com
    • Ann. Clin. Biochem. 2010 May 1;47(Pt 3):279-81.

    AbstractThere is a lack of awareness of acutely presenting inborn errors of metabolism in adults, of which the X-linked urea cycle defect ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency is an example, many comparatively mild mutations having been identified. In male hemizygotes clinical manifestations and age at presentation vary and depend on the mutation. In female heterozygotes the clinical spectrum depends on the extent to which the abnormal gene is expressed. Milder versions of the defect may not cause clear clinical symptoms and may remain unrecognized until the person is subjected to an unusually high nitrogen load when they develop severe hyperammonaemia. During acute episodes liver enzymes may be normal or only slightly elevated and occasionally accompanied by coagulopathy, but the key finding is hyperammonaemia. Boys with these milder forms may exhibit abnormal behaviour and be diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. This case illustrates how late presentation of OTC deficiency in a non-specialist centre can be difficult to differentiate from drug abuse, psychiatric illness or encephalopathy. Failure to measure blood ammonia in adults with unexplained key symptoms - particularly prolonged vomiting without diarrhoea and altered mental state/hallucinations, or to recognize the significance of elevated blood ammonia without evidence of liver decompensation can lead to delayed or missed diagnosis.

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