Abstract
Of 910 children under the age of 12 years referred to the national center, we were able to assign an etiology to 473 (52%). This group consisted of lysosomal storage diseases (32%), amino acid disorders (14%), organic acid disorders (16%), various chromosome abnormalities and syndromes with dysmorphia or brain dysgenesis (26%), and various other metabolic diseases (12%). While such amino acidemias as branched-chain amino acidemia (MSUD) in classic and intermediate forms (44%) and hyperphenylalaninemia (PKU) due to 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase deficiency (6PTSD) (19%) were common, classic PKU was rare (16%). Methylmalonic acidemia (31%), 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A lyase deficiency (16%), and propionic acidemia (12%) were encountered more frequently than other types of organic acidemias. When compared to the number of referred Down's syndrome patients, the results suggested the birth of at least one infant with neurometabolic disease per 50 births. Five tribes of Saudi Arabia constituted 26% of the diagnosable neurometabolic diseases. Diseases such as MSUD, 6 PTSD, Sanfilippo syndrome type B, methylmalonic acidemia, homocystinuria, GM2 gangliosidosis Sandhoff variant, infantile central nervous system spongy degeneration (Canavan disease), and neuraminidase deficiency showed definite tribal occurrence. In addition, 32% to 42% of the definitely diagnosed, and 25% to 87% of patients with probable neurometabolic disease but without a definable etiology, had more than one sibling affected. It is concluded that the many rare autosomal diseases of Saudi Arabia are due to "founder effect" created by marriages occurring within tribal and extended family boundaries.
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