In a large five‐generation Polish family, late‐onset ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency in males segregated with the missense mutation Ala208Thr (A208T), and all heterozygous females were asymptomatic. No other mutations were found in the coding sequences and intron‐exon boundaries of the OTC gene. Surprisingly, the mutation originated from the great‐grandfather of the index patient who died at age 59 of liver carcinoma. He never had dietary restrictions or hyperammonemic spells throughout life and appears to be the oldest male reported with OTC deficiency. The index patient had a severe OTC deficiency (3% of normal). Eight males died suddenly at ages 4 months to 23 years (average 14 years) after a foudroyant episode triggered by a common infection. The patients remained undiagnosed for 28 years because a metabolic defect was not considered to be the cause of the acute episodes. Recognition of the familial pattern of inheritance was initially unnoticed since the patients were admitted to eight different hospitals. DNA analysis predicted that two ‘healthy’ boys also had OTC deficiency, which was confirmed by abnormal results of allopurinol challenge tests. Initial suspicion of OTC deficiency in such families is complicated, since symptoms can develop at any age, or even remain absent. This obscures the typical pattern of X‐linked inheritance in small families.
Three neuropathologically confirmed cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in young people (19, 23, and 27 years of age) are described. None had received pituitary hormone therapy. At the onset of illness all patients were suspected of having SSPE or other viral encephalitis, because of the similarity of clinical symptomatology and the shift towards older age of SSPE onsets observed in Poland in recent years.
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