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Teratogenic phenylketonuria-related embryopathy

Publication at Second Faculty of Medicine |
2007

Abstract

Newborn screening of inborn errors of metabolism leads to the early diagnosis of autosomal recessive phenylketonuria and normal development of affected homozygotes due to dietary therapy. Patients with classic symptomatology of phenylketonuria are nowadays forty years old and older.

The treated patients show normal mental development, are married and have children. The children of female patients develop normally if the women return to the strong low phenylalanine diet at least 3 months before the conception, and their serum level of phenylalanine is regularly controlled in pregnancy.

The case of a boy with severe congenital microcephaly, etiology of which was recognized only at the age of 10 months, shows that teratogenic phenylketonuria-related embryopathy should be kept in mind, especially because it is fully preventable.