1. Hypophosphatasia is a disorder characterized by low serum levels of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and a range of skeletal deformities. The levels of a number of phosphorylated metabolites, namely phosphoethanolamine and pyrophosphate, are characteristically raised. Levels of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP) have also been reported to be raised. 2. Hypophosphatasia is a rare disease and experience of measuring PLP in patients is lacking. We have had the chance to look at PLP levels in four families with hypophosphatasia, specifically to examine the quantitative relationship between ALP and PLP which has not been described before. 3. We confirmed that PLP levels are raised in hypophosphatasia and related to the disease severity. A significant negative linear relationship was found between the log PLP and log ALP (log PLP = 5.99-2.76 log ALP; r = -0.85, P < 0.001). 4. Measurement of PLP is simpler than some of the phosphorylated compounds, e.g. pyrophosphate. PLP may be a useful measure in patients with a suspected diagnosis of hypophosphatasia or for screening family members to detect potential heterozygotes and to monitor any response to therapy. 5. There did not appear to be any adverse clinical effects in relation to disturbed vitamin B6 metabolism in hypophosphatasia. 6. Vitamin B6 is used therapeutically in a number of conditions with monitoring of PLP levels. In these conditions PLP levels should be interpreted in conjunction with the prevailing serum ALP levels as the metabolism of these compounds is closely inter-related.
Two cases of lactic acidosis are described in which the time sequence of events made it certain that phenformin was the precipitating cause. In one patient the condition arose because of self administration of an overdose; in the other, phenformin had been administered to a patient on maintenance dialysis. After recovery, and in the absence of phenformin therapy the second patient was able to clear an intravenous lactate load at a rate similar to that observed in other patients on Chronic dialysis.-A review of the literature re-emphasizes the possible danger of phenformin in the presence of diminished renal or hepatic function, which should be shown to be normal before starting the drug and assessed periodically during therapy.
Age- and method-dependent plasma TSH reference intervals are essential for the diagnosis and management of congenital hypothyroidism. However, accurate reference intervals for plasma TSH have not been adequately defined due to the difficulties in obtaining samples from a healthy paediatric population. To overcome the difficulties in generating such intervals we estimated method-dependent plasma TSH upper-reference intervals by determining the blood spot TSH upper-reference interval from newborn blood spot TSH screening data (N = 10,697) and then derived method-dependent conversion factors for blood spot TSH to plasma TSH concentration from paired-blood spot and plasma TSH measurements. The upper reference interval for blood spot TSH of 3.04 mU/L was obtained from the 97.5th centile of the selected data. Using experimentally-derived conversion factors, estimates of plasma TSH upper reference intervals of 7.6, 6.3, 7.3, 8.3 and 6.5 mU/L were obtained for the Siemens Centaur, Abbott Architect, Roche Elecsys E170, Siemens Immulite 2000 and Beckman access HYPERsensitive TSH assays respectively. These estimated method-dependent plasma TSH upper reference intervals will be of great practical use to clinicians to diagnose and to follow up infants found to have increased blood spot TSH concentrations identified by Newborn Screening programmes.
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