Illness finder is a diagnostic medicine tool for educational purpose that looks up your patients' health conditions or symptoms and diagnosis and find diseases or illnesses based on chosen gender, age, risk factors, illness, signs, symptoms and prevalence. Illnessfinder is inspired by Evidence based medicine (EMB) and healthcare that aims to apply the best (most reliable) knowledge that is available at decision time. Illnessfinder aims to free up time for the therapeutic dialogue and ensure quality at the evidence based practice, uniting proven medical findings and clinical evidence with systematised data technology.
Enter a medical term  
Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency DiseaseLegal notice  


Other terms
PDHC Deficiency Disease,Deficiency Disease, PDHC,Deficiency Diseases, PDHC,PDHC Deficiency Diseases,Juvenile Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease, Juvenile,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease, Neonatal,Neonatal Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease,Ataxia with Lactic Acidosis, Type I,Type I Ataxia with Lactic Acidosis,Lactic Acidosis with Ataxia, Type I

Description
Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease: An inherited metabolic disorder caused by deficient enzyme activity in the PYRUVATE DEHYDROGENASE COMPLEX, resulting in deficiency of acetyl CoA and reduced synthesis of acetylcholine. Two clinical forms are recognized: neonatal and juvenile. The neonatal form is a relatively common cause of lactic acidosis in the first weeks of life and may also feature an erythematous rash. The juvenile form presents with lactic acidosis, alopecia, intermittent ATAXIA; SEIZURES; and an erythematous rash. (From J Inherit Metab Dis 1996;19(4):452-62) Autosomal recessive and X-linked forms are caused by mutations in the genes for the three different enzyme components of this multisubunit pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. One of the mutations at Xp22.2-p22.1 in the gene for the E1 alpha component of the complex leads to LEIGH DISEASE.



Pervious tree


Next tree


Other locations in tree


Legal notice
The U.S. National Library of Medicine is the creator, maintainer, and provider of the data above.
The version of the data is 2010 MeSH. Last reviewed April 26, 2010. No modification has been made in the content of the file.
Neither the United States Government, nor any of its agencies, contractors, subcontractors or employees makes any warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to data contained in the database, and, furthermore, assumes no legal liability for any party's use, or the results of such use, of any part of the database.
You will not assert any proprietary rights to any portion of the database, or represent the database or any part thereof to anyone as other than a United States Government database.
The MeSH data carry an international copyright outside the United States, its Territories or Possessions. These terms and conditions are in effect as long as the user retains any of the MeSH data obtained from this site.