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Pathway Description
Sulfite Oxidase Deficiency
Rattus norvegicus
Disease Pathway
Sulfite oxidase deficiency (SOD) is a disorder, an autosomal recessive disease. In classic SOD, it is usually identified a few days after the birth of an affected individual, and is recognizable through characteristic dysmorphic features, seizures, and other signs of progressive encephalopathy. Patients also have ocular lenses that are dislocated, and usually die within a few months of being born. In late- onset SOD, the disorder is identified only in the later months, usually 6-18 months, of the child’s life by a delay or regression of neurological progress. This disorder is very rare, but the actual prevalence is not known. It can be diagnosed through a sulfite test strip in urine or by a skin fibroblast culture, which will indicate an absence of sulfite oxidase.
References
Sulfite Oxidase Deficiency References
Crawhall JC: A review of the clinical presentation and laboratory findings in two uncommon hereditary disorders of sulfur amino acid metabolism, beta-mercaptolactate cysteine disulfideuria and sulfite oxidase deficiency. Clin Biochem. 1985 Jun;18(3):139-42.
Pubmed: 3888441
Bindu PS, Nagappa M, Bharath RD, Taly AB: Isolated Sulfite Oxidase Deficiency
Pubmed: 28933809
Sulfate/Sulfite Metabolism References
This pathway was propagated using PathWhiz -
Pon, A. et al. Pathways with PathWhiz (2015) Nucleic Acids Res. 43(Web Server issue): W552–W559.
Propagated from PW000508
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