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  • Structure of some aliphatic dicarboxylic acids found in the urine of an infant with congenital lactic acidosis.

Structure of some aliphatic dicarboxylic acids found in the urine of an infant with congenital lactic acidosis.

Clinical chemistry (1976-08-01)
S Lindstedt, K Norberg, G Steen, E Wahl
PMID181179
ABSTRACT

Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry was used to identify a series of acids in urine and serum from a child who died 26 h after birth in severe metabolic acidosis with high lactate excretion. cis-5-Decene-1, 10-dioic acid and cis-5-dodencene-1, 12-dioic acid were synthesized and used as references. The following acids were found: hexane-1,6-dioic acid, octane-1,8-dioic acid, decane-1,10-dioic acid, dodecane-1,12-dioic acid, cis-5-decene-1,10-dioic acid, cis-5-dodecen-1,12-dioic acid, cis-5-tetradecene-1,14-dioic acid, trans-3-decene-1,10-dioic acid, and trans-3-dodecene-1,12-dioic acid. The concentration of C6 to C14 acids in the patient's urine was 3.7 mol/mol of creatinine; it was less than 0.2 mol/mol of creatinine in eight normal newborns and approximately 0.1 mol/mol of creatinine in a case of fructose-1,6-biphosphatase deficiency with lactic acidosis. 5-cis-Dodecenedioic acid was present in highest concentration: 1 mol/mol of creatinine in urine and 61 mumol/liter in serum. We propose that impaired beta-oxidation, probably at the acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase step, resulted in the formation of the observed acids. The parents were consanguineous, and a sibling died with the same clinical picture, which suggests a genetic defect.