Maternal Phenylketonuria
- 1 July 1987
- journal article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Enzyme
- Vol. 38 (1-4) , 312-320
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000469221
Abstract
Maternal phenylketonuria (PKU) refers to fetal damage from PKU in the pregnant woman. The progeny from such pregnancies are almost always microcéphalie and mentally subnormal and have an increased frequency of congenital heart disease and low birth weight. Treatment with a phenylalanine-restricted diet, if begun before conception, seems to protect the fetus. The degree of protection is much less if dietary treatment is delayed until the pregnancy is in progress. The origin of fetal damage in maternal PKU is not known. Due to placental concentration of amino acids, the fetus is exposed to a higher concentration of phenylalanine than that in the mother, but it is not certain that phenylalanine is the toxic agent. Animal models made hyperphenylalaninémie by the administration of phenylalanine, often accompanied by a phenylalanine hydroxylase inhibitor, do not reproduce the full maternal PKU syndrome; but fetuses and newborns from these models have had reduced growth of the body and brain, and offspring later may show evidence of impaired learning ability.Keywords
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