Blue diaper syndrome

From WikiMD's WELLNESSPEDIA

Editor-In-Chief: Prab R Tumpati, MD
Obesity, Sleep & Internal medicine
Founder, WikiMD Wellnesspedia &
W8MD's weight loss doctor NYC
Philadelphia GLP-1 weight loss and GLP-1 clinic NYC

Blue diaper syndrome
File:Autorecessive.svg
Synonyms Drummond's syndrome
Pronounce N/A
Specialty N/A
Symptoms Blue discoloration of urine in diapers, failure to thrive, hypercalcemia, nephrocalcinosis
Complications Kidney stones, renal failure
Onset Infancy
Duration Lifelong
Types N/A
Causes Mutations in the LAT2 gene
Risks Family history of the condition
Diagnosis Urinalysis, genetic testing
Differential diagnosis Hartnup disease, cystinuria
Prevention N/A
Treatment Dietary management, antibiotics for infections
Medication Antibiotics
Prognosis Variable, depends on severity
Frequency Rare
Deaths N/A


Other Names: Hypercalcemia, familial, with nephrocalcinosis and indicanuria Blue diaper syndrome is a rare metabolic disorder characterized by problems in the absorption of the aminoacid tryptophan and blue urine stains on diapers.

Cause[edit]

The defect in tryptophan absorption may be associated with mutations in the LAT2 and TAT1 genes.

Inheritance[edit]

Inheritance is autosomal recessive or X-linked recessive.

Signs and symptoms[edit]

Symptoms typically include digestive problems, fever, irritability, failure to thrive, and visual problems. The abnormally high levels of calcium in the blood (hypercalcemia) may result in accumulation of calcium in the kidneys (nephrocalcinosis) leading to impaired kidney function and possible kidney failure. The bluish urine-stained diapers occur when intestinal bacteria break down excessive amounts of tryptophan, a nutrient of the diet, leading to increase of indican and related compounds in the urine (indicanuria). Although the exact nature of the biochemical defect remains uncertain, it is believed to be related to a defect in the intestinal absorption and transport of tryptophan.

Diagnosis[edit]

A diagnosis is usually made through clinical evaluation, observing detailed patient history then identifying the possible characteristic symptoms and testing fresh urine samples to enhance such evidence.

Treatment[edit]

Children with blue diaper syndrome may be put on a diet that restricts their intake of calcium, protein, vitamin D, and tryptophan. Antibiotics may also be used to control intestinal infections. Genetic counseling can also be beneficial, as well as taking part in clinical trials.

NIH genetic and rare disease info[edit]

Blue diaper syndrome is a rare disease.