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In the United States, about 1 in 10,000 to 15,000 babies is born with PKU each year. The illness happens in all ethnic groups. But it’s more common in people who are Native American and Northern European than those who are African-American, Ashkenazi Jewish or Japanese.
What causes PKU?
PKU is inherited. This means it’s passed from parent to child through genes. A gene is a part of your body’s cells that stores instructions for the way your body grows and works. Genes come in pairs—you get one of each pair from each parent.
Sometimes the instructions in genes change. This is called a gene change or a mutation. Parents can pass gene changes to their children. Sometimes a gene change can cause a gene to not work correctly. Sometimes it can cause birth defects or other health conditions. A birth defect is a health condition that is present in a baby at birth.
Your baby has to inherit a gene change for PKU from both parents to have PKU. If she inherits the gene from just one parent, she has the gene change for PKU, but she doesn’t have PKU. When this happens, your baby is called a PKU carrier. A PKU carrier has the gene change but doesn’t have PKU.
How do you know if your baby has PKU?
All babies have a newborn screening test for PKU. Newborn screening checks for serious but rare conditions at birth. It includes blood, hearing and heart screening. With newborn screening, PKU can be found and treated early so babies can grow up healthy.
Before your baby leaves the hospital, his health care provider takes a few drops of blood from his heel. The blood is collected on a special paper and sent to a lab for testing. The lab then sends the results back to your baby’s provider.
If newborn screening results aren’t normal, it simply means your baby needs more testing. Your baby’s provider can recommend another kind of test, called a diagnostic test. This test can check to see if your baby has PKU or if there is some other cause for abnormal test results.
If your baby is tested before he’s a full day old, it’s possible for the test to miss PKU. Some experts recommend that if your baby was tested within the first 24 hours of life, he should be tested again at 1 to 2 weeks of age.
What problems can PKU cause?
Babies born with PKU seem normal for the first few months of life. But without treatment, they begin to have signs and symptoms of the illness at about 6 months of age. These include:
If your baby has PKU, what kind of treatment does he need?
If your baby has PKU, he may need testing as often as once a week or more often for the first year of life to check his phenylalanine levels. After that, he may have testing once or twice a month throughout childhood.
Your baby needs to follow a special meal plan that is low in phenylalanine. It’s best to start this meal plan as soon as possible, ideally within the first 7 to 10 days of life.
At first, your baby gets a special protein formula that has reduced phenylalanine. Protein is important to help your baby grow and develop. The amount of phylalanine in the formula is controlled to meet you baby’s individual needs. Your baby also can have some breast milk. Your breast milk has phenylalanine in it, so talk to your baby’s provider to find out how much breast milk your baby can have.
When your baby is ready to eat solid foods, she can eat vegetables, fruits, some grains (like low-protein cereals, breads and pasta) and other low-phenylalanine foods. If your baby has PKU, she should not eat:
PKU meal plans are different for each baby and can vary over time depending on how much phenylalanine your baby can take. Health care providers at a medical center or clinic that has a special program to treat PKU can help you create a PKU meal plan for your baby. Ask your baby’s health care provider for information on a medical center or clinic that treats PKU.
Your child follows the PKU meal plan through her whole life. If she eventually gets pregnant, she follows her meal plan throughout pregnancy. Most pregnant women who have PKU can have healthy pregnancies and healthy babies.
The medicine Kuvan® (sapropterin dihydrochloride) can help some people with PKU. The medicine is more likely to work in people with mild or special forms of PKU. Children who take Kuvan® must follow a special meal plan, but it may not be as strict as one for those not taking the drug. They still need regular blood tests to check phenylalanine levels.
For more information
National PKU News
Serum phenylalanine screening
Genetics Home Reference: PKU
MedlinePlus: PKU
Last reviewed February 2013
See also: Genetic counseling, Newborn screening
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