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Ammonia metabolism and hyperammonemic disorders.
- Source :
-
Advances in clinical chemistry [Adv Clin Chem] 2014; Vol. 67, pp. 73-150. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Nov 04. - Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Human adults produce around 1000 mmol of ammonia daily. Some is reutilized in biosynthesis. The remainder is waste and neurotoxic. Eventually most is excreted in urine as urea, together with ammonia used as a buffer. In extrahepatic tissues, ammonia is incorporated into nontoxic glutamine and released into blood. Large amounts are metabolized by the kidneys and small intestine. In the intestine, this yields ammonia, which is sequestered in portal blood and transported to the liver for ureagenesis, and citrulline, which is converted to arginine by the kidneys. The amazing developments in NMR imaging and spectroscopy and molecular biology have confirmed concepts derived from early studies in animals and cell cultures. The processes involved are exquisitely tuned. When they are faulty, ammonia accumulates. Severe acute hyperammonemia causes a rapidly progressive, often fatal, encephalopathy with brain edema. Chronic milder hyperammonemia causes a neuropsychiatric illness. Survivors of severe neonatal hyperammonemia have structural brain damage. Proposed explanations for brain edema are an increase in astrocyte osmolality, generally attributed to glutamine accumulation, and cytotoxic oxidative/nitrosative damage. However, ammonia neurotoxicity is multifactorial, with disturbances also in neurotransmitters, energy production, anaplerosis, cerebral blood flow, potassium, and sodium. Around 90% of hyperammonemic patients have liver disease. Inherited defects are rare. They are being recognized increasingly in adults. Deficiencies of urea cycle enzymes, citrin, and pyruvate carboxylase demonstrate the roles of isolated pathways in ammonia metabolism. Phenylbutyrate is used routinely to treat inherited urea cycle disorders, and its use for hepatic encephalopathy is under investigation.<br /> (© 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Subjects :
- Ammonia toxicity
Animals
Arginine metabolism
Biological Transport
Brain metabolism
Cell Membrane metabolism
Humans
Hyperinsulinism genetics
Hyperinsulinism metabolism
Liver metabolism
Liver Diseases metabolism
Pyruvate Carboxylase Deficiency Disease etiology
Syndrome
Urea metabolism
Urologic Diseases metabolism
Urologic Diseases microbiology
Valproic Acid adverse effects
Ammonia metabolism
Hyperammonemia etiology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0065-2423
- Volume :
- 67
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Advances in clinical chemistry
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 25735860
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.acc.2014.09.002