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Menkes’ Disease

Menkes’ Disease

Also indexed as: Menkes’ Syndrome

Illustration

Early diagnosis is the key to treating this rare but serious hereditary disorder. According to research or other evidence, the following self-care steps may be helpful:

What you need to know

Get tested during pregnancy
Improve the chances of successful early treatment by having your healthcare provider perform a genetic test on your baby
Talk to your healthcare provider
Ask about copper injections and if they are appropriate for you or your child’s condition

These recommendations are not comprehensive and are not intended to replace the advice of your doctor or pharmacist. Continue reading the full Menkes’ disease article for more in-depth, fully-referenced information on medicines, vitamins, herbs, and dietary and lifestyle changes that may be helpful.

Skip to:

  • About
  • Product ratings
  • Symptoms
  • Medicines & therapies
  • Vitamins
  • References

About Menkes’ disease

Menkes’ disease is a rare hereditary disorder caused by an abnormality of copper utilization.1

Until recently, Menkes’ disease was considered universally fatal.2 However, it now appears that the severity of the disease varies from person to person.3 4 Medical doctors often use genetic analysis5 to diagnose this disorder, even before birth.6 7 In cases where the genetic defect appears responsive to copper therapy, early treatment is needed to minimize the severity of the physical defects that will develop later.8 Treatment can even begin before birth; while still pregnant, mothers of babies identified with Menkes’ disease can receive injections of copper histidine under the skin. Healthcare professionals, including geneticists (specialists in hereditary diseases), should be consulted in the treatment of Menkes’ disease.

Product ratings for Menkes’ disease

Science Rating Nutritional Supplements Herbs
2Stars Copper (injectable)  
3Stars Reliable and relatively consistent scientific data showing a substantial health benefit.
2Stars Contradictory, insufficient, or preliminary studies suggesting a health benefit or minimal health benefit.
1Star For an herb, supported by traditional use but minimal or no scientific evidence. For a supplement, little scientific support and/or minimal health benefit.

What are the symptoms?

Menkes’ disease can lead to growth retardation, white hair that has a kinky texture, and mental deterioration.

Medical options

There is no effective common treatment known.

Vitamins that may be helpful

Copper injections are used to treat Menkes’ disease. The success of this treatment often depends on the severity of the disease.

Some studies have shown favorable effects of injectable copper on brain and nerve development in people with Menkes’ disease when the degree of genetic defect was mild and treatment was begun early.9 However, copper therapy does not benefit Menkes’ patients if the genetic defects are severe, or if therapy is begun after the physical defects manifest.10 Some researchers have observed that damaging levels of copper can build up in the tissues of some copper-treated people with Menkes’ disease.11 For example, in one study a boy developed low blood pressure in response to changing body position (called orthostatic hypotension), an enlarged spleen, and ballooning of an artery in his abdomen. However, whether these anomalies resulted from therapy or from the Menkes’ disease itself remains unclear. As a result, copper therapy is still considered experimental12 and potentially dangerous. People with Menkes’ disease should consult a healthcare professional before supplementing with copper.

In 1989, one researcher suggested that Menkes’ disease is caused by a defect in zinc metabolism that reduces copper availability.13 The possibility of this zinc-copper interaction in Menkes’ disease has since been investigated in preliminary test tube research.14 15 16 17 These studies have shown that supplementation with zinc does not alter the way cells from people with Menkes’ disease use copper. Therefore, zinc supplementation is unlikely to be beneficial in Menkes’ disease.

Are there any side effects or interactions?
Refer to the individual supplement for information about any side effects or interactions.

References

1. Danks DM. Inborn errors of trace element metabolism. Clin Endocrinol Metab 1985;14:591–615.

2. Scheinberg IH, Collins JC. Menke’s disease: a disorder of zinc metabolism? Lancet 1989;1(8638):619.

3. Kaler SG, Buist NR, Holmes CS, et al. Early copper therapy in classic Menkes disease patients with a novel splicing mutation. Ann Neurol 1995;38:921–8.

4. Cordano A. Clinical manifestations of nutritional copper deficiency in infants and children. Am J Clin Nutr 1998;67:1012S–6S.

5. Tumer Z, Moller LB, Horn N. Mutation spectrum of APTP7A, the gene defective in Menkes disease. Adv Exp Med Biol 1999;448:83–95.

6. Kaler SG. Diagnosis and therapy of Menkes syndrome, a genetic form of copper deficiency. Am J Clin Nutr1998;67:1029S–34S.

7. Tumer Z, Tonneson T, Bohmann J, et al. First trimester prenatal diagnosis of Menkes disease by DNA analysis. J Med Genet 1994;31:615–7.

8. Sarkar B, Lingertat-Walsh K, Clarke JT. Copper-histidine therapy for Menkes disease. J Pediatr 1993;123:828–30.

9. Ambrosini L, Mercer JF. Defective copper-induced trafficking and localization of the Menkes protein in patients with mild and copper-treated classical Menkes disease. Hum Mol Genet 1999;8:1547–55.

10. Daish P, Wheeler EM, Roberts PF, Jones RD. Menkes’s syndrome. Report of a patient treated from 21 days of age with parenteral copper. Arch Dis Child 1978;53:956–8.

11. Garnica AD. The failure of parenteral copper therapy in Menkes Kinky hair syndrome. Eur J Pediatr 1984;142:98–102.

12. Christodoulou J, Danks DM, Sarkar B, et al. Early treatment of Menkes disease with parenteral copper-histidine: long-term follow-up of four treated patients. Am J Med Genet 1998;76:154–64.

13. Scheinberg IH, Collins JC. Menkes’ disease: a disorder of zinc metabolism? Lancet 1989;1(8638):619 [letter].

14. Sone T, Yamaoka K, Minami Y, Tsunoo H. Induction of metallothionein synthesis in Menkes’ and normal lyphoblastoid cells is controlled by the level of intracellular copper. J Biol Chem 1987;262:5878–85.

15. Herd SM, Camakaris J, Christofferson R, et al. Uptake and efflux of copper-64 in Menkes’-disease and normal continuous lymphoid cell lines. Biochem J 1987;247:341–7.

16. Van den Berg GJ, Kroon JJ, Wijburg FA, et al. Muscle cell cultures in Menkes’ disease: copper accumulation in myotubules. J Inhert Metab Dis 1990;13:207–11.

17. Rayner MH, Suzuki KT. Effect of medium copper concentration on the growth, uptake and intracellular balance of copper and zinc in Menkes’s and normal control cells. Biometals 1994;7:253–60.



Copyright 2007, Healthnotes, Inc., 1505 S.E. Gideon St., Suite 200, Portland, Oregon 97202, www.Healthnotes.com.

2006-09-07

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