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Biochemical correlates of neuropsychiatric illness in maple syrup urine disease
Emilie R. Muelly, Gregory J. Moore, Scott C. Bunce, Julie Mack, Don C. Bigler, D. Holmes Morton, Kevin A. Strauss
Emilie R. Muelly, Gregory J. Moore, Scott C. Bunce, Julie Mack, Don C. Bigler, D. Holmes Morton, Kevin A. Strauss
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Research Article Neuroscience

Biochemical correlates of neuropsychiatric illness in maple syrup urine disease

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Abstract

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is an inherited disorder of branched chain amino acid metabolism presenting with neonatal encephalopathy, episodic metabolic decompensation, and chronic amino acid imbalances. Dietary management enables survival and reduces risk of acute crises. Liver transplantation has emerged as an effective way to eliminate acute decompensation risk. Psychiatric illness is a reported MSUD complication, but has not been well characterized and remains poorly understood. We report the prevalence and characteristics of neuropsychiatric problems among 37 classical MSUD patients (ages 5–35 years, 26 on dietary therapy, 11 after liver transplantation) and explore their underlying mechanisms. Compared with 26 age-matched controls, MSUD patients were at higher risk for disorders of cognition, attention, and mood. Using quantitative proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we found lower brain glutamate, N-acetylaspartate (NAA), and creatine concentrations in MSUD patients, which correlated with specific neuropsychiatric outcomes. Asymptomatic neonatal course and stringent longitudinal biochemical control proved fundamental to optimizing long-term mental health. Neuropsychiatric morbidity and neurochemistry were similar among transplanted and nontransplanted MSUD patients. In conclusion, amino acid dysregulation results in aberrant neural networks with neurochemical deficiencies that persist after transplant and correlate with neuropsychiatric morbidities. These findings may provide insight into general mechanisms of psychiatric illness.

Authors

Emilie R. Muelly, Gregory J. Moore, Scott C. Bunce, Julie Mack, Don C. Bigler, D. Holmes Morton, Kevin A. Strauss

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Figure 8

MRS methods.

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MRS methods.
Regions of interest for quantitative MRS were placed in the...
Regions of interest for quantitative MRS were placed in the left basal ganglia (A, left), prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortices (middle), and right parietal centrum semiovale white matter (right). Sample resulting MRS spectra from the anterior cingulated cortex of a control (B, left) and MSUD patient (B, right) demonstrate a relative decrease in glutamate (Glu), creatine (Cre), and NAA peaks. The choline peak (Cho) is also labeled in the spectra from the MSUD patient.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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