Abstract

It has been suggested that quantitative analysis of urinary bile acids may help to distinguish primary 3-oxo-delta 4-steroid 5 beta-reductase deficiency from the excretion of 3-oxo-delta 4 bile acids that occurs as a result of liver damage. Urinary bile acids were quantitatively analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in four Japanese patients with severe neonatal cholestasis associated with hypertyrosinemia without urinary succinylacetone (i.e. tyrosinemia type I-like disease). These four patients represented sporadic cases. Large amounts of 3-oxo-delta 4 bile acids were detected, which comprised greater than 80% of the total urinary bile acids. Small amounts of allo-bile acids and primary bile acids were also detected, comprising less than 1% and 15% of the total urinary bile acids, respectively. It was suspected that these four patients had a primary 3-oxo-delta 4-steroid 5 beta-reductase deficiency. However, it is possible that some patients in this study may have had a secondary 3-oxo-delta 4-steroid 5 beta-reductase deficiency, caused by idiopathic neonatal cholestatic liver failure.

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