During the seven years from January 1989 to December 1995, we investigated 2,269 Chinese infants and young children for metabolic disorders in Hong Kong. These young patients, all aged under 4 years and originated from southern China, were ill with no apparent cause and had clinical manifestations suggestive of inherited metabolic diseases. A spot urine and a plasma sample were obtained from each patient for biochemical analysis, including urinary organic acid identification and plasma amino acid analysis. Six cases of mucopolysaccharidosis, four multiple carboxylase deficiency, three 2-methylacetoacetyl CoA thiolase deficiency, two methymalonic aciduria, one glutaric aciduria type I, one glutaric aciduria type II, one a-oxoglutaric aciduria, and one case of orotic aciduria were detected. There were also single suspected cases of medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency and isovaleric aciduria. No primary amino acid disorder, such as phenylketouria and maple syrup urine disease, has been detected. Our results suggest that a different pattern of inherited metabolic diseases exists in the southern Chinese when compared with the Chinese in other regions of China.