Pinar T. Ozand
Yıldız Technical University
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Featured researches published by Pinar T. Ozand.
Pediatric Research | 1995
Mohamed Rashed; Pinar T. Ozand; Martin P. Bucknall; Douglas Little
ABSTRACT: Acylcarnitine profiling from blood or plasma samples by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS) has been recognized recently as a useful tool in the biochemical diagnosis of propionic acidemia, methylmalonic acidemia together with short-chain and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiencies. In the current study, we have investigated the diagnostic capabilities of ESI-MS/MS in other types of organic acidemias and amino acid catabolism disorders. Using multiple scanning functions, we examined the potential for the simultaneous profiling of both acylcarnitines and amino acids, in each of the samples. Our method was found to be specific and accurate; allowing quantification of acylcarnitines and amino acids well below, and significantly above, published normal levels. Complete automation of sample introduction has been achieved, allowing the analysis of up to 200 samples in one injection sequence, at a rate of one sample every 3 min, with excellent separation between successive injections. In our hands, this method permits screening for 20 organic acid and amino acid disorders, using a single sample injection. In our laboratory, more than 2000 blood samples have been analyzed, and 52 new cases were diagnosed by this method. We also confirmed the diagnosis of another 75 previously known cases.
Seminars in Perinatology | 1999
Mohamed S. Rashed; Zuhair Rahbeeni; Pinar T. Ozand
For the past 30 years, neonatal screening programs have been performed largely by using the bacterial inhibition assays developed by Dr Robert Guthrie. These programs focused on a small number of diseases such as phenylketonuria and maple syrup urine disease and involved one test for each disease. During the same period many new diseases were discovered, such as organic acidemias and fatty acid oxidation defects, and they presented a diagnostic challenge to biochemical laboratories. Different mass spectrometric approaches have been the main tools for the diagnosis; however, each has its own limitation. Recently, electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) has provided an alternative automated high throughput, specific, and broad-spectrum approach to screening for a relatively large number of disorders, including those covered by bacterial inhibition assays tests. By using specific scan functions, a large number of amino acids and acylcarnitines in blood spots are quantified in 2 minutes analytical time. A new scan function is described here for quantification and screening for argininosuccinic acid in blood spots, which is a key metabolite in the diagnosis of argininosuccinase deficiency. We describe the results of a 3-year tandem MS/MS-based neonatal study that was performed in our newborn population. We screened 27,624 blood spots and identified 20 cases yielding a frequency of 1:1,381. No false-negative cases were identified, but several false-positive cases were eliminated by repeat analysis by MS/MS of blood or by other means. We also used MS/MS analysis of urine or blood either for confirmation of initial positive results or for follow-up of treatment, such as in glutaric acidemia, citrullinemia, argininosuccinase deficiency, and biopterin-dependent phenylketonuria.
Journal of Child Neurology | 1991
Pinar T. Ozand; Generoso G. Gascon
Organic acidemias are disorders of intermediary metabolism that lead to accumulation of organic acids in biologic fluids, disturb acid-base balance, and derange intracellular biochemical pathways. Their clinical presentation reflects the resultant systemic disease and progressive encephalopathy. While in some organic acidemias, disturbed acid-base metabolism is the predominant presenting feature, in others it is less prominent or even absent. The etiologies of the more than 50 different phenotypes include impaired metabolism of branched-chain amino acids, vitamins, glucose, lipids, glutathione, and γ-aminobutyric acid and defects of oxidative phosphorylation. Most organic acidemias present with neurologic manifestations, which include acutely or subacutely progressive encephalopathy that involves different parts of the nervous system. The age of presentation and the associated systemic, hematologic, and immune findings provide additional guidelines for differential diagnosis. We summarize major organic acidemias, while emphasizing their usual and unusual neurologic presentations. ( J Child Neurol 1991;6:196-219).
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1990
Pinar T. Ozand; Generoso G. Gascon; A. Al Aqeel; G. Roberts; M. Dhalla; S. B. Subramanyam
SummaryThe frequency of different types of lysosomal storage diseases in 125 referred cases, collected over three years, was compared to the occurrence elsewhere. The data suggest that mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) type IVA (Morquio disease), multiple sulphatase deficiency, Niemann-Pick disease type B, GM2 gangliosidosis type ‘0’ (Sandhoff disease), and ceroid lipofuscinosis (Jansky-Bielschowsky and Batten-Spielmeyer-Vogt syndromes) are encountered frequently in Saudi Arabia, as compared to other storage diseases. In contrast, some other diseases such as the adult variant of Gauchers disease were not observed. Half of the GM2 gangliosidosis type ‘0’ cases originated from one large tribe in the country. Other conditions did not show tribal predilection. The ceroid lipofuscinosis cases in Saudi Arabia originated from four large families. Consanguineous marriages taking place within tribal boundaries probably account for the pattern observed.
Brain & Development | 1994
Pinar T. Ozand; M. Rashed; Generoso G. Gascon; N.G. Youssef; H. Harfi; Z. Rahbeeni; S. Al Garawi; A. Al Aqeel
The files of 25 patients with propionic acidemia (PA), followed by the Inborn Errors of Metabolism Service (IEMS) at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH & RC) from 1990 to 1993, were studied retrospectively. In 14 patients PA presented acutely with acidosis, hyperammonemia and thrombocytopenia, while in 11 patients the presentation of the disease was unusual. In the latter group, two neonates with PA initially appeared as a primarily hyperammonemic metabolic disease. In two other neonates the vomiting was so severe that they were diagnosed as intestinal obstruction in referral hospitals. The presentation in three infants was primarily as an immune disorder. In four infants, PA appeared as an acute or chronic encephalopathy, i.e. as a silent organic acidemia, with few other findings of the disease. The clinical picture of PA includes facial and nipple dysmorphia, severe hypotonia and vomiting. Severe thrombocytopenia is the hallmark of the metabolic crisis. In one patient it was noticed late and caused intracranial hemorrhage, while in three others intracranial bleeding caused death. The prognosis in PA remained grave despite rigorous treatment. Only seven of the 25 PA patients remained to have a normal life-style, while eight patients expired. The diagnosis is readily achieved by urine gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS), by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), or by enzyme analysis of fibroblasts. While there may be both examiner- and patient-related reasons for the variations in the presentation of PA, one other reason may be the heterogeneity of the molecular defect in propionyl-CoA carboxylase.
Brain & Development | 1994
Generoso G. Gascon; Pinar T. Ozand; J. Brismar
Over the last 5 years the Pediatric Neurology service at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH&RC) has seen 131 infants and children with movement disorders. Forty-nine (37%) had identifiable biochemical defects, 25 of which were organic acidemias. Nineteen of 29 patients with dystonia had organic acidemias, primarily glutaric aciduria type 1 (7 patients), bilateral striatal necrosis (4 patients), and 3-methyl glutaconic aciduria (3 patients). All patients with parkinsonian rigidity (n = 11) had organic acidemias; again, the greatest number accounted for by glutaric aciduria type 1 (7 patients), who had both parkinsonian rigidity combined with dystonia. Myoclonus occurred in only 1 of 25 and chorea in 7 of 25 patients with organic acidemias. At the least all patients had bilateral lesions of putamen and head of caudate, seen best in MRI brain scans as increased T2 signal intensities with normal volume, and later with volume loss.
Journal of Perinatology | 2000
Mohammed Al-Essa; Mohamed S. Rashed; Siema M. Bakheet; Zoltan Patay; Pinar T. Ozand
The clinical, biochemical, and neuroradiologic findings and clinical follow-up of seven patients with glutaric aciduria type II are reported.Three phenotypes of the disease are encountered: neonatal-onset form with congenital anomalies (two patients) or without congenital anomalies (three patients) and late-onset form (two patients). The neonatal-onset form presents as an overwhelming illness, with severe hypoglycemia and metabolic acidosis leading to rapid death. Frequently it is associated with perinatal energy deprivation, a neonate with low birth weight and prematurity. The late-onset form presents with intermittent episodes of vomiting, hypoglycemia, and acidosis especially after meals rich in fat and/or proteins. All parents are consanguineous and have a first- or second-degree relationship.Initially, in the two phenotypes with neonatal onset and during crisis in the late-onset phenotype, routine laboratory evaluation showed severe metabolic acidosis, with an increased anion gap, hypoglycemia without ketonuria, and disturbed liver function tests. In the majority of patients with neonatal-onset forms, the kidneys, liver, and at times the spleen are enlarged with an increased echogenic pattern; however, no hepatic or renal cysts are detected. Cardiomegaly is observed in most patients. The diagnosis can be easily and rapidly reached through tandem mass spectrometry study of the blood and can further be confirmed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis of the urine organic acids.In this report, the magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography brain studies showed brain atrophy, white matter disease, and in one patient, fluid-filled cavities in the periventricular area and putamina. Fluorine-18-labeled 2-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomographic (FDG PET) brain studies in two patients with late-onset disease showed slightly decreased activity in the cerebral cortex in one and in the caudate nuclei in the other. Brain FDG PET scan and magneticresonance spectroscopy were normal in one patient with neonatal-onset disease.All patients were treated with a diet low in fat and protein, oral riboflavin, and carnitine. The results were promising for the late-onset disease. Intravenous carnitine gave rewarding results in one patient with neonatal-onset disease.
Brain & Development | 1994
Z. Rahbeeni; Pinar T. Ozand; M. Rashed; Generoso G. Gascon; M.N. Al Nasser; A. Al Odaib; M. Amoudi; M. Nester; S. Al Garawi; J. Brismar
The clinical findings in six patients from three families with 4-hydroxybutyric aciduria are described. The onset of disease was in early infancy in all cases. All infants presented with severe global delay and severe hypotonia, and all patients had seizure disorder. Eye findings included optic atrophy in two patients, and retinitis pigmentosa in one. Three patients had choreoathetosis, two had myoclonus and one had severe dystonia. The urine 4-hydroxybutyric acid was 300-1000 times that of normal, and other organic acids related to its further metabolism or to its inhibitory effect on beta-oxidation were also increased. The administration of vigabatrine rapidly reduced the excretion of 4-hydroxybutyric acid promptly, and in the long-term its excretion could be kept at 80-200 times that of normal. However, the clinical course of the disease improved in only two, remained the same in two, and worsened in the remaining two patients.
Brain & Development | 1994
Pinar T. Ozand; M. Rashed; David S. Millington; Nadia Sakati; S. Hazzaa; Z. Rahbeeni; A. Al Odaib; N. Youssef; A. Mazrou; G.G. Gascon; J. Brismar
Five infants from 3 families, one Egyptian, two Yemeni, are described with a progressive encephalopathy, four of whom have been studied in detail. All patients showed vascular lesions of the skin, characterized by waxing and waning petechiae and ecchymoses. Acrocyanosis was present in three patients. All patients showed retinal lesions characterized by tortuous veins. Protracted diarrhea was not a consistent finding, although they had metabolic crisis in association with diarrhea. They did not show failure to thrive. The neurologic symptoms were indicative of a progressive pyramidal tract disease. Three patients died following sudden emergence of severe basal ganglia, putaminal and head of caudate lesions. In one patient the CT changes in brain were suggestive of infarction. The patients who died manifested pulmonary congestion, or wet lung, and respiratory difficulties during the terminal stage of the disease. In all patients before and during the terminal event, mild-to-moderate hematuria, and in two RBC in CSF, was observed. In one patient there was mild hemoperitoneum at the terminal event. The urine organic acids indicated increased excretion of ethylmalonic, methylsuccinic, glutaric, and adipic acids. The patients invariably showed lactic acidosis, but no ketosis, during and in between the acidotic attacks of the disease. The acylcarnitine profile in blood of two patients showed a pronounced increase in C4 and C5 carnitine esters. In three patients, biopsies from petechiae indicated absence of an immune event, showing only fresh hemorrhage. An immunologic study in one patient was normal for the suppressor:cytotoxic lymphocyte ratio and concentration of interleukin-2 receptor during and in between hemorrhagic attacks. The cytochrome c oxidase activity in fibroblasts was normal. The rate of oxidation of glucose, leucine, isoleucine, valine, propionate and butyrate by fibroblasts was normal. The disease is not responsive to treatment with riboflavin, ascorbic acid, vitamin E, glycine, or carnitine. One patient remained stable on prolonged large doses of methylprednisolone. The biochemical defect leading to ethylmalonic aciduria in this disease remains unknown.
Brain & Development | 1994
Pinar T. Ozand; M. Rashed; Generoso G. Gascon; A. Al Odaib; A. Shums; M. Nester; J. Brismar
3-Ketothiolase deficiency (3KTD) manifests with intermittent acidosis and is due to deficiency of mitochondrial 2-methylacetoacetate thiolase. Only 22 patients have been previously reported. Although its variable clinical presentation is recognized, the associated neurological findings have not been detailed. We report four new patients all with significant neurological symptoms. Three patients were examined with MRI of the brain which showed increased T2 intensity within the posterior lateral part of the putamen bilaterally. In two the MRI was otherwise normal; in one delayed myelination was also seen. These MRI putaminal findings may be typical enough to suggest the diagnosis of 3KTD. Two of the three had abnormal EEGs; one had an abnormal VEP. 3KTD can thus occur as an organic acidemia associated with encephalopathy.