Find information on thousands of medical conditions and prescription drugs.

Biotinidase deficiency

Biotinidase deficiency is an inherited disorder in which the body is not able to process the vitamin biotin properly. Biotin, sometimes called vitamin H, is an important water-soluble vitamin that aids in the metabolism of fats, carbohydrates and proteins. more...

Home
Diseases
A
B
Babesiosis
Bacterial endocarditis
Bacterial food poisoning
Bacterial meningitis
Bacterial pneumonia
Balantidiasis
Bangstad syndrome
Bardet-Biedl syndrome
Bardet-Biedl syndrome
Bardet-Biedl syndrome
Bardet-Biedl syndrome
Barrett syndrome
Barth syndrome
Basal cell carcinoma
Bathophobia
Batrachophobia
Batten disease
Becker's muscular dystrophy
Becker's nevus
Behcet syndrome
Behr syndrome
Bejel
Bell's palsy
Benign congenital hypotonia
Benign essential tremor...
Benign fasciculation...
Benign paroxysmal...
Berdon syndrome
Berger disease
Beriberi
Berylliosis
Besnier-Boeck-Schaumann...
Bibliophobia
Bicuspid aortic valve
Biliary atresia
Binswanger's disease
Biotinidase deficiency
Bipolar disorder
Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome
Blastoma
Blastomycosis
Blepharitis
Blepharospasm
Bloom syndrome
Blue diaper syndrome
Blue rubber bleb nevus
Body dysmorphic disorder
Boil
Borreliosis
Botulism
Bourneville's disease
Bowen's disease
Brachydactyly
Brachydactyly type a1
Bradykinesia
Bright's disease
Brittle bone disease
Bromidrosiphobia
Bronchiectasis
Bronchiolotis obliterans...
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
Brown-Sequard syndrome
Brucellosis
Brugada syndrome
Bubonic plague
Budd-Chiari syndrome
Buerger's disease
Bulimia nervosa
Bullous pemphigoid
Burkitt's lymphoma
Byssinosis
Cavernous angioma
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Medicines

Epidemiology

Approximately 1 in 60,000 newborns are affected by profound (less than 10 percent of normal enzyme activity) or partial (10-30 percent of normal enzyme activity) biotinidase deficiency.

Genetics

Mutations in the BTD gene cause biotinidase deficiency. Biotinidase is the enzyme that is made by the BTD gene. Many mutations that cause the enzyme to be nonfunctional or to be made at extremely low levels have been identified. Biotin is a vitamin that is chemically bound to proteins. (Most vitamins are only loosely associated with proteins.) Without biotinidase activity, the vitamin biotin cannot be separated from foods and therefore cannot be used by the body. Another function of the biotinidase enzyme is to recycle biotin from enzymes that are important in metabolism (processing of substances in cells). When biotin is lacking, specific enzymes called carboxylases cannot process proteins, fats, or carbohydrates. Individuals lacking biotinidase activity can still have normal carboxylases if they ingest small amounts of biotin.

This condition is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern, which means two copies of the gene in each cell must be altered for a person to be affected by the disorder. Most often, the parents of a child with an autosomal recessive disorder are not affected but are carriers of one copy of the altered gene.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


[List your site here Free!]


Newborns are missing critical tests
From Fit Pregnancy, 10/1/04 by Kim Schworm Acosta

YOUR BABY MAY BE missing out on screening for nine rare but potentially fatal or severely disabling metabolic disorders, according to the March of Dimes (MOD). About 70 percent of babies are born in states that don't routinely offer tests for disorders that, if diagnosed early, often can be managed through diet or medication.

For example, a deficiency of an enzyme called biotinidase, which occurs in one in 60,000 babies, can cause hearing loss, seizures, mental retardation and sometimes death but is easily avoided by giving an affected newborn the B vitamin biotin.

Screening involves simply testing a few drops of a newborn's blood before he is discharged from the hospital. "We have an easy and inexpensive solution to a potentially devastating problem, and it's time for all states to make newborn screening a top priority," says MOD president Jennifer L. Howse, M.D., Ph.D.

The MOD recommends testing for the nine disorders; 15 states, including Texas, California and Florida, screen for five or fewer, while Mississippi and Ohio test for more than 40. But 21 states now screen for the MOD-recommended list, up from just nine states last year. To learn more, including which tests your state offers, visit www.modimes.org. If your state is not up to par, contact your elected representatives, Howse urges.

In the meantime, testing by a private lab can be arranged through your baby's pediatrician. Insurance may cover it, but if not, the cost should not exceed about $60.

COPYRIGHT 2004 Weider Publications
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

Return to Biotinidase deficiency
Home Contact Resources Exchange Links ebay