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Autosomal Recessive Inheritance Disorders that are inherited in an AR manner manifest only when both copies of a gene pair located on an autosome chromosome have a mutation. Affected children usually are born to unaffected parents, each of whom carries one copy of the mutation. If both members of a couple are carriers (or heterozygotes) for this mutation, each of their offspring has a 25% chance of being affected
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Pedigree of Autosomal Recessive Inheritance
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Consanguinity: It is thought that we all carry at least one abnormal recessive gene. Fortunately, our partners usually carry a different one. Marrying a cousin or other relative increases the chance of both partners carrying the same abnormal autosomal recessive gene, inherited from a common ancestor. A couple who are cousins therefore have an increase in the risk of having a child with a recessive disorder.
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pedigree of autosomal recessive inheritance consanguineous marriage
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Racial Factor: Recessive gene frequencies may vary between racial groups. Certain recessive mutations are far more common in some genetic isolates (small populations separated by geography, religion, culture, or language) than in the general population. Cystic fibrosis is common in north Europeans, sickle cell disease in black Africans and Americans, thalassaemias in Mediterranean or Asian ethnicity and Tay-Sachs disease in Ashkenazi Jews. Screening programs have been developed among some such groups to detect persons who carry common disease-causing mutations and therefore are at increased risk for having affected children.
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Rules of AR inheritance: 1.Affected individual are homozygous for the abnormal gene, each parent is a heterozygous carrier. 2.1 in 4 risk of having an affected child for 2 carrier parents. 3.All offspring of affected individuals will be carriers. 4.Males and females are likely to be affected equally. 5.Risk of AR disorder increased by consanguinity and withen specific racial groups. 6. Often affect metabolic pathways (enzymopathy) and associated with serious illness and shorten life span.
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E.g. of some AR inheritance SystemDisorder MetabolicCystic fibrosis Phenylketonuria Galactosemia Hurler (MPS) Tay-Sachs (lipidoses) Glycogen storage disease HematopoieticSickle cell anaemia Thalassemia EndocrineCongenital adrenal hyperplasia SkeletalEhlers-Danlos syndrome NervousSpinal muscular atrophy Friedreich ataxia
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Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM) Optimal outcomes for children with IEM depend upon recognition of the signs and symptoms of metabolic disease, and prompt evaluation and referral to a center familial with their management. Delay in diagnosis may result in end organ damage including progressive neurologic injury or death, therefore,, all doctors need to be familiar with their variable presentation and diagnosis. Most metabolic disorders are individually rare, but they significantly contribute to the paediatric morbidity and mortality.
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Presentation: An IEM may be suspected before birth from a positive family history or previous unexplained deaths in the family. After birth, inborn errors of metabolism usually, but not invariably, present in one of five ways: screening 1.AS a result of newborn screening, e.g.PKU, or family screening, e.g. familial hypercholesterolaemia. late onset sepsis 2.After a short period of apparent normality, with a severe neonatal illness with poor feeding, vomiting, encephalopathy, acidosis, coma and death(mimicking late onset sepsis) e.g. organic acid or urea cycle disorders.
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hypoglycaemiaALTE near-miss 'cot death', 3.As an infant or older child with an illness similar to that described above but with hypoglycaemia as a prominent feature or as an ALTE (acute life-threatening episode) or near-miss 'cot death', e.g. a fat oxidation defect such as medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD). subacute way 4.In a subacute way, after a period of normal development, with regression, organomegaly and coarse facies, e.g. mucopolysaccharide disease or other lysosomal storage disorder or with enlargement of the liver and/or spleen alone, with or without accompanying biochemical upset such as hypoglycaemia, e.g. glycogen storage disease. 5. As a dysmorphic syndrome, e.g. maternal phenylketonuria syndrome.
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Phenylketonuria (PKU) brain PKU is AR aa metabolic disorder, primarily affects the brain. It is either due to: Deficiency of the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase (classical PKU). Defect in the synthesis or metabolism of tetrahydrobiopterin, the cofactor for this enzyme. Affected infants are normal at birth, if untreated severe mental retardation (IQ 30) develops in the first year of life, seizure, blond hair, blue eyes, eczema, and mousy odor of the urine. Fortunately, most affected children are detected through the national biochemical screening programme (Guthrie test). A positive screening test must be followed up by performing quantitative plasma amino acid analysis.
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Treatment: Treatment of classical PKU is with restriction of dietary phenylalanine, whilst ensuring there is sufficient for optimal physical and neurological growth. The blood plasma phenylalanine is monitored regularly. The current recommendation is to maintain the diet throughout life. This is particularly important during pregnancy, when high maternal phenylalanine levels may damage the fetus. Maternal hyperphenylalaninemia requires rigorous management before conception and throughout pregnancy to prevent fetal brain damage, congenital heart disease, and microcephaly.
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Galactosaemia This rare, recessively inherited carbohydrate metabolic disorder results from deficiency of the enzyme galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase, which is essential for galactose metabolism. The neonatal screening test must have a rapid because affected infants may die in the first week of life.
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Presentation: Manifestations are most striking in a neonate who, when fed milk, generally exhibits evidence of: liver failure: liver failure: (hyperbilirubinemia, coagulation defect, and hypoglycemia) Disordered renal tubular function Disordered renal tubular function (acidosis, glycosuria, and aminoaciduria) Cataracts. Cataracts. neonatal Escherichia coli sepsis. Affected infants are at increased risk for severe neonatal Escherichia coli sepsis. learning disorders. older children have learning disorders.
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Lab. Manifestation: Depend on dietary galactose intake. When galactose is ingested (as lactose): levels of plasma galactose increase. Erythrocyte galactose-1-phosphate are elevated. Hypoglycemia is frequent. Albuminuria is present. Galactose frequently is present in the urine (Clinitest +ve). DNA testing DNA testing for the mutations in galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase confirms the diagnosis. Renal tubular dysfunction may be evidenced by a normal anion gap hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis.
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Treatment Management is with a lactose- and galactose-free diet for life. Even if treated early, there are usually moderate learning difficulties (adult IQ 60-80).
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Glycogen Storage Disorders AR inherited carbohydrate disorders have specific enzyme defects which prevent mobilisation of glucose from glycogen, resulting in an abnormal storage of glycogen in liver and/or muscle. There are nine main enzyme defects. Glycogen storage diseases fall into the following four categories: liverglucose 1.Diseases that predominantly affect the liver and have a direct influence on blood glucose (types I, VI, and VIII) muscles 2.Diseases that predominantly involve muscles and affect the ability to do anaerobic work (types V and VII) liver and muscles 3.Diseases that can affect the liver and muscles and directly influence blood glucose and muscle metabolism (type III) various tissues 4.Diseases that affect various tissues but have no direct effect on blood glucose or on the ability to do anaerobic work (types II and IV). type II (Pompe's disease) The heart is severely affected, leading to death from cardiomyopathy.
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Treatment: Aim is to maintain satisfactory blood glucose level by frequent feeds or by carbohydrate infusion via a gastrostomy or nasogastric tube in infancy. In older children, glucose levels can be maintained using slow-release oligosaccharides (corn starch).
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