Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary type V hyperlipoproteinemia was identified in two preadolescent children. The propositus (kindred N) was a 10-year-old girl with severely creamy plasma, lipemia retinalis, hypertriglyceridemia (triglyceridelevel, 6,800 mg/100 ml), and ypercholesterolemia (cholesterol level, 490 mg/100 ml). Her parents and an 8-year-old sister all had endogenous hypertriglyceridemia (type IV hyperlipoproteinemia). In kindred A, an 11-year-old boy had triglyceride levels as high as 1,100 mg/100 ml and recurrent abdominal pain. His father had type V hyperlipoproteinemia; his mother was normal. All three of his older teenage siblings had type IV hyperlipoproteinemia. The enzymatic activities of lipoprotein lipase (LPL), hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTL), and histaminase (H) were studied in postheparin plasma. The LPL level was low in the children and both parents in kindred N. LPL level in kindred A was normal, except for one child with type IV hyperlipoproteinemia. HTL level was normal to above normal in both kindreds. Most patients had a normal H level, but one parent (kindred N) had no preheparin H and very low levels of postheparin H. There was a strong correlation (r = 0.58, significant at less than 1% level) between release of LPL and H but not between HTL and H (r= 0.22). The mean (+/- 1 S.D.) levels of the enzymes were as follows: LPL, 2.8 +/- 0.7 micronmol/ml/hr in kindred N and 5.4 +/- 2.2 micronmol/ml/hr in kindred A; H, 13.4 +/- 6.8 units/ml in kindred N and 22.0 +/- 11.9 units/ml in kindred A; and HTL, 18.0 +/- 7.1 micronmol/ml/hr in kindred N and 14.9 +/- 6.3 micronmol/ml/hr in kindred A. The enzymatic activities of kindreds N and A were significantly different for LPL (P less than .001) and H (.025 less than P less than .05) but not for HTL. All but one child had at least one high insulin level, which was accompanied by hyperglycemia in two children. The hypertriglyceridemia in all but one child was ameliorated on therapeutic diets. These data suggest that the genetic basis of the hypertriglyceridemia in these two families is different and that hyperchylomicronemia in childhood is not confined to the rara type I hyperliporproteinemia.
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PMID:The clinical, biochemical, and familial presentation of type V hyperlipoproteinemia in childhood. 19 90

We examined 56 French Canadians, aged 1 week to 54 years, from eastern Quebec who were referred to the Laval University Lipid Research Centre and in whom coincidental finding (in 46% of the cases), abdominal pain (in 32%) or family screening (in 22%) led to the diagnosis of primary lipoprotein-lipase-activity deficiency (familial hyperchylomicronemia). Half of the patients had one or more of the following signs: lipemia retinalis, eruptive xanthomas, splenomegaly and hepatomegaly; the plasma triglyceride concentrations were significantly higher (greater than 40 mmol/L) among these patients than among those without clinical signs (mean 21.7 [standard deviation 13.5] mmol/L). The prevalence rate of this disorder was 30 times higher than the previously published rate and was highest in the counties of Charlevoix and Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean (200 and 100 cases per million respectively) because of the distinct demographic history of these areas. Because of a founder effect an autosomal recessive gene involved in lipoprotein-lipase expression or activation has probably been disseminated among this isolated French Canadian population.
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PMID:Primary lipoprotein-lipase-activity deficiency: clinical investigation of a French Canadian population. 291 62

The author reports the case of a patient with an incomplete form of familial lipoprotein lipase deficiency associated with type I hyperlipoproteinemia manifesting an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance. The patient presented with hepatosplenomegaly, abdominal pain, and fasting chylomicronemia. A Western diet elicited a steep increase in plasma triglyceride concentration and the appearance of floating chylomicrons over a clear infranatant in fasting plasma. Postheparin lipoprotein lipase activity was moderately reduced to 38% of control values. Adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase activity was 10% of normal, whereas his muscle enzyme activity was within the reference range. Two-dimensional electrophoresis of plasma apolipoproteins revealed the presence of normal activator (apolipoprotein C-II). These results confirm the importance of the adipose tissue enzyme for the clearance of diet-derived plasma triglycerides.
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PMID:An incomplete form of familial lipoprotein lipase deficiency presenting with type I hyperlipoproteinemia. 363 Sep 77

Metabolic disorders which may mimicry a surgical abdomen are ketoacidosis, acute intermittent porphyria, hyperparathyroid crises, Addisons crises, hyperchylomicronemia, hemolytic crises, abdominal crises in hemochromatosis. Abdominal pain of non-surgical and non-inflammatory origin may be also found in abdominal allergic crises, intestinal wall bleeding due to anticoagulants, thrombocytopenia or acute poisoning. The symptoms may be very similar to those in surgical peritonitis. A careful work-up leads to the right diagnosis.
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PMID:[Abdominal pain in metabolic diseases]. 380 85

Severe hyperchylomicronemia due to defects of lipoprotein lipase or apoC-II is a rare cause for acute pancreatitis. Food with a high content of fat, as well as alcoholic or hormonal influences, can lead to excessive hypertriglyceridemia. Especially hyperchylomicronemia due to hormonal influences during pregnancy are troublesome. Here, we are confronted with both the risk to the mother as well as the vital risk to the unborn. Conventional plasma apheresis has been used to successfully eliminate chylomicrons and, thus, the primary cause of chylomicron-induced pancreatitis. Most recently, we reported the use of selective LDL-apheresis in a 24-year-old pregnant woman (thirteenth week of pregnancy), who was admitted with the signs of acute pancreatitis to our hospital. The patient was known to have a history of severe hyperchylomicronemia and she had also been treated several years before for acute pancreatitis by LDL-apheresis. Her triglycerides were severely elevated (11500 mg/dl) and, in order to achieve a rapid decrease of chylomicrons, we decided to treat her by selective LDL-apheresis utilizing HELP-apheresis. The treatment was well tolerated and within half an hour the patient was free of any abdominal pain. However, due to the enormous triglyceride load, we needed to change the precipitate filters several times and at the end of the treatment triglyceride levels were 6600 mg/dl. Under a low-fat diet (<30 gram fat per day), the follow-up was uneventful and the patient delivered a healthy baby at the end of week 39. We conclude that LDL-apheresis is a safe and rapid procedure to eliminate chylomicrons in chylomicron-induced pancreatitis.
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PMID:[LDL-Apheresis for the treatment of hyperchylomicronemia-induced pancreatitis]. 1466 5

Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics BV is developing alipogene tiparvovec (Glybera, AMT-011, AAV1-LPLS447X), a Ser(447)X variant of the human lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene (LPLSer(447)X) in an adeno-associated virus vector, as a potential intramuscular gene therapy for the treatment of LPL deficiency. Familial LPL deficiency is a rare, autosomal-recessive disorder of lipoprotein metabolism that is characterized by severe hypertriglyceridemia with episodes of abdominal pain, acute pancreatitis and eruptive cutaneous xanthomatosis. The lack of functional LPL in patients with LPL deficiency causes an accumulation of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins in the plasma. The LPLSer(447)X variant is associated with decreased levels of plasma TGs and increased HDL cholesterol concentrations compared with wild-type LPL. Preclinical studies evaluating alipogene tiparvovec in a mouse model of LPL deficiency demonstrated a long-term, dose-dependent correction of the lipid abnormalities. The first clinical trials in patients with LPL deficiency appear promising, with a significant decrease in the levels of plasma TGs observed in the first 3 months following the administration of alipogene tiparvovec, and an increase in local LPL activity and protein levels observed after 6 months. In addition, a decrease in pancreatitis frequency was observed during a 3-year follow-up period. At the time of publication, a phase II/III trial in patients with LPL deficiency, being conducted to further support the submission of an MAA to the EMEA for alipogene tiparvovec, was ongoing. The compound is also under investigation for the treatment of type V hyperlipoproteinemia, Syndrome X and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis.
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PMID:Alipogene tiparvovec, an adeno-associated virus encoding the Ser(447)X variant of the human lipoprotein lipase gene for the treatment of patients with lipoprotein lipase deficiency. 2007 45

Rare monogenic hyperchylomicronemia is caused by loss-of-function mutations in genes involved in the catabolism of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, including the lipoprotein lipase gene, LPL. Clinical hallmarks of this condition are eruptive xanthomas, recurrent pancreatitis and abdominal pain. Patients with LPL deficiency and severe or recurrent pancreatitis are eligible for the first gene therapy treatment approved by the European Union. Therefore the precise molecular diagnosis of familial hyperchylomicronemia may affect treatment decisions. We present a 57-year-old male patient with excessive hypertriglyceridemia despite intensive lipid-lowering therapy. Abdominal sonography showed signs of chronic pancreatitis. Direct DNA sequencing and cloning revealed two novel missense variants, c.1302A>T and c.1306G>A, in exon 8 of the LPL gene coexisting on the same allele. The variants result in the amino-acid exchanges p.(Lys434Asn) and p.(Gly436Arg). They are located in the carboxy-terminal domain of lipoprotein lipase that interacts with the glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored HDL-binding protein (GPIHBP1) and are likely of functional relevance. No further relevant mutations were found by direct sequencing of the genes for APOA5, APOC2, LMF1 and GPIHBP1. We conclude that heterozygosity for damaging mutations of LPL may be sufficient to produce severe hypertriglyceridemia and that chylomicronemia may be transmitted in a dominant manner, at least in some families.
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PMID:Severe hypertriglyceridemia in a patient heterozygous for a lipoprotein lipase gene allele with two novel missense variants. 2558 2