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Elevated urinary bile alcohol level

MedGen UID:
1052809
Concept ID:
CN378359
Finding
HPO: HP:6001007

Definition

The amount of bile alcohol in the urine, normalized for urine concentration, is above the upper limit of normal. [from HPO]

Term Hierarchy

Conditions with this feature

Cholestanol storage disease
MedGen UID:
116041
Concept ID:
C0238052
Disease or Syndrome
Cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis (CTX) is a lipid storage disease characterized by infantile-onset diarrhea, childhood-onset cataract, adolescent- to young adult-onset tendon xanthomas, and adult-onset progressive neurologic dysfunction (dementia, psychiatric disturbances, pyramidal and/or cerebellar signs, dystonia, atypical parkinsonism, peripheral neuropathy, and seizures). Chronic diarrhea from infancy and/or neonatal cholestasis may be the earliest clinical manifestation. In approximately 75% of affected individuals, cataracts are the first finding, often appearing in the first decade of life. Xanthomas appear in the second or third decade; they occur on the Achilles tendon, the extensor tendons of the elbow and hand, the patellar tendon, and the neck tendons. Xanthomas have been reported in the lung, bones, and central nervous system. Some individuals show cognitive impairment from early infancy, whereas the majority have normal or only slightly impaired intellectual function until puberty; dementia with slow deterioration in intellectual abilities occurs in the third decade in more than 50% of individuals. Neuropsychiatric symptoms such as behavioral changes, hallucinations, agitation, aggression, depression, and suicide attempts may be prominent. Pyramidal signs (i.e., spasticity) and/or cerebellar signs almost invariably become evident between ages 20 and 30 years. The biochemical abnormalities that distinguish CTX from other conditions with xanthomas include high plasma and tissue cholestanol concentration, normal-to-low plasma cholesterol concentration, decreased chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), increased concentration of bile alcohols and their glyconjugates, and increased concentrations of cholestanol and apolipoprotein B in cerebrospinal fluid.

Recent clinical studies

Etiology

O'connor T, Ireland LS, Harrison DJ, Hayes JD
Biochem J 1999 Oct 15;343 Pt 2(Pt 2):487-504. PMID: 10510318Free PMC Article

Diagnosis

Freedman SF, Del Monte MA, Diva U, Donahue SP, Drack AV, Dutta R, Fung SSM, Imperiale M, Jordan CO, Lenhart PD, Lim ME, McCourt EA, Nihalani BR, Sabahi T, Stahl ED, Miraldi Utz VA, Wilson ME Jr, Yen KG, VanderVeen DK
J AAPOS 2023 Aug;27(4):208-211. Epub 2023 Jun 14 doi: 10.1016/j.jaapos.2023.04.013. PMID: 37321343

Clinical prediction guides

O'connor T, Ireland LS, Harrison DJ, Hayes JD
Biochem J 1999 Oct 15;343 Pt 2(Pt 2):487-504. PMID: 10510318Free PMC Article

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