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)

To summarize recent information about acute porphyrias and to provide clinicians with a practical diagnostic and management approach, we reviewed the pertinent literature and our clinical experience. The acute porphyrias are characterized by recurrent attacks of abdominal pain with or without additional manifestations of autonomic dysfunction or neuropsychiatric symptoms. On the basis of the potential of these disorders to affect the skin, they are further subdivided into neuroporphyrias and neurocutaneous porphyrias. During acute attacks, acute porphyria is always associated with increased levels of urinary porphyrin precursors. Between attacks, patients with neurocutaneous porphyrias may have normal urinary porphyrins; therefore, stool porphyrins, which are invariably increased, are the most helpful. Latent disease can be detected by the measurement of either urinary and stool porphyrins or cellular enzyme activity. Specific intravenous therapy with hematin has resulted in biochemical remissions, but its clinical benefit remains controversial. Measurement of urinary and stool porphyrins or porphyrin precursors is critical for the diagnosis of clinically overt acute porphyria. Enzyme assays are helpful in supporting the diagnosis but are best used to identify family members with latent disease. Preventive measures and supportive therapy are the mainstays of current management of patients with porphyria.
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PMID:Acute porphyrias: diagnosis and management. 793 98

A case of polyarteritis nodosa is presented in view of diagnostic difficulties which it caused. In a 47-year-old patient, in the clinical picture the following predominated: paroxysmal abdominal pain, symptoms and signs of polyneuropathy, and paralysis of the left peroneal and left radial nerves. Besides that, hypertension, tachycardia, sub-febrile states, significant body weight loss, and skin lesions were observed. In laboratory investigations high ESR, leucocytosis, HBe antigenaemia with the presence of all antibodies, and significant hypergammaglobulinaemia were found. In the differentiation, apart from polyarteritis nodosa, the following was taken into account: porphyria, neoplastic abdominal diseases with polyneuropathy, neurological diseases. Of decisive importance for making the diagnosis was microscopic examination of calf muscle biopsy specimen.
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PMID:[Diagnostic difficulties in a case of polyarteritis nodosa]. 797 9

A 23-year-old man with epilepsy and a past history of abdominal pain and ileus, developed hypertension and arm and bulbar weakness when valproic acid and carbamazepine were reinitiated. Electrophysiologic studies demonstrated a peripheral neuropathy with features of axonal degeneration and demyelination. Axonal degeneration was documented by sural nerve biopsy. Markedly elevated urinary delta-aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen indicated a diagnosis of acute porphyria. Other laboratory studies were most consistent with hereditary coproporphyria. Motor function improved considerably but incompletely over 1 year. An acute, primarily motor neuropathy can occur in several forms of porphyria, including acute intermittent porphyria, variegate porphyria, and hereditary coproporphyria, sometimes even in the absence of concomitant gastrointestinal symptoms.
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PMID:Acute peripheral neuropathy due to hereditary coproporphyria. 800 8

Galactorrhea as the result of hyperprolactinemia has been described in very rare cases associated to acute outbreaks of intermittent acute porphyria (IAP). In our country, any of such cases have been published or analytically documented. We present the case of a patient admitted in our hospital for the study of abdominal pain and galactorrhea, with latter diagnosis of IAP, supported by the assessment of the activity of the enzyme showing a deficit in the red blood cells.
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PMID:[Hyperprolactinemia associated with acute intermittent porphyria]. 804 27

The porphyrias are a group of disorders of haem metabolism. A knowledge of which anaesthetic can precipitate an acute attack of porphyria is important, since an accumulation of metabolites can result in life threatening symptoms, such as abdominal pain, vomiting, photophobia, neuropathy, bulbar paresis and respiratory failure. Treatment consists primarily of adequate calorie intake e.g. glucose, but is otherwise symptomatic. Anaesthetic drug recommendations are based both on animal experiments and patient experience, primarily case histories. An array of local anaesthetics, hypnotics, sedatives, neuroleptics, analgesics, muscle relaxants, inhalation anaesthetics and some antibiotics are reviewed. Patients with a history of porphyria should be in an optimal condition and maintain a high calorie intake perioperatively. The pre-operative fast should be a minimum and iv-glucose is advisable while fasting. There are anaesthetic agents that are safe for both regional and general anaesthesia.
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PMID:[Anesthesia and porphyria]. 831 98

Severe hepatic porphyrias (acute intermittent porphyria, variegate porphyria and hereditary coproporphyria) are hereditary diseases. Each type of porphyria is the result of a specific decrease in the activity of one of the enzymes of heme biosynthesis. Acute attacks are very serious: the abdominal pains are severe and the neurological manifestations can lead to death or incomplete recovery with irreversible sequelae (usually paralysis). Since 1985, the prognosis of acute attacks has been greatly improved by the introduction of heme-arginate. The 69 acute attacks (30 patients, 4 men and 26 women) that we treated with heme-arginate between 1988 and 1991 are described in this report. All patients were infused with 250 mg/d of heme-arginate for 4 days: the mean duration of abdominal pain was 2.5 days (SD 0.72). For 95 p. 100 of the attacks, the total hospitalization time was 5 days or less; side effects were very minor. In every case, a favorable response was dependent upon the early initiation of heme therapy.
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PMID:[Acute attacks of hepatic porphyria: specific treatment with heme arginate]. 836 99

Acute intermittent porphyria mimics a variety of commonly occurring disorders and thus poses a diagnostic quagmire. Psychiatric manifestations include hysteria, anxiety, depression, phobias, psychosis, organic disorders, agitation, delirium, and altered consciousness ranging from somnolence to coma. Some patients develop psychosis similar to schizophrenia. Psychiatric hospitals have a disproportionate number of patients with this disorder as only difficult and resistant patients accumulate there. Presence of photosensitive porphyrins in the urine is diagnostic. When porphyrins are absent, excess of alpha aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen are present in the urine. The definitive test is to measure monopyrrole porphobilinogen deaminase in RBCs. This diagnosis should be entertained in the following situations: (a) unexplained leukocytosis; (b) unexplained neuropathy; (c) etiologically obscure neurosis or psychosis; (d) 'idiopathic' seizure disorder; (e) unexplained abdominal pain; (f) conversion hysteria, and (g) susceptibility to stress. Porphyria is important in psychiatry as it may present with only psychiatric symptoms; it may masquerade as a psychosis and the patient may be treated as a schizophrenic person for years; the only manifestation may be histrionic personality disorder which may not receive much attention. Diagnosis is based on a high index of suspicion and appropriate investigation. Various psychotropic drugs exacerbate acute attacks. While it is important not to use the unsafe drugs in porphyric patients, it is also imperative to look for this diagnosis in cases where these drugs produce unprecedented drug reactions.
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PMID:Porphyria: reexamination of psychiatric implications. 865 42

A case of an acute attack of porphyria acuta intermittens is presented. A patient was admitted with severe abdominal pain and hypertension. He had excessive excretion of porphobilinogen (PBG) and aminolaevulinicacid (ALA) in the urine and a reduced activity of ery-PBG deaminase (PBGD). The patient was not aware that he was a member of a large "porphyria-family". DNA-analysis showed that he had a hitherto underscribed G to A mutation. This paper shows: 1) The importance of family studies: 2) The risk of developing neurogenic attacks among gene carriers if exposed to precipitating factors. 3) The significance of having the diagnosis of porphyria in mind in every uncertain case of abdominal pain, progressive paresis and psychiatric disease.
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PMID:[A case of acute intermittent porphyria]. 905 89

Hepatic porphyrias are characterized by neurological symptoms manifested by abdominal pain, neuropathies and mental aberrations. Porphyrins are ubiquitous and essential biochemical constituents of living beings acting as mediators of oxidation reaction in the metabolism of the steroid, drugs, environmental chemicals or as a mean of exchanging gases, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide between the environment and the tissue of the body using endogenous polypeptide properties. The different porphyrins arising from the arrangement of normal heme synthesis are characterized by an accumulation and excretion of specific intermediate porphyrins and/or of precursors exerting toxic effect, initiating cascades of generations of polypeptides, neurotransmitters and gut-brain axis peptide responsible for the symptoms of clinical status. We studied polypeptide levels in 27 patients (19 females, 8 males) presenting acute attack of hepatic porphyria: 2 with ALA dehydratase-deficient porphyria; 9 with acute intermittent porphyria; 12 with porphyria cutanea tarda and 4 with variegate porphyria. During acute attacks of porphyria, polypeptides were found to be constantly increased: vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP); neurotensin (NT); substance P; pancreatic polypeptide; gastrin-releasing peptide; gastrin and motilin. Administration of the somatostatin (antagonizing polypeptide), which was undetectable or low before treatment, apparently alleviated the acute symptomatology. Elevated levels of polypeptides, at least partly, contribute to appearance of acute symptoms in porphyria patients.
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PMID:Polypeptide levels increase during acute onset of hepatic porphyrias. 907 85

A distressingly common occurrence is the erroneous diagnosis of hepatic porphyria in patients with chronic abdominal pain in which either urinary porphyrins are elevated and/or Watson-Schwarz test is positive. This work investigates a characteristic case and points at possible pitfalls in establishing a diagnosis. In the patient described, spot urine analysis showed positive Watson-Schwarz test and increased porphyrins at three separate occasions, while normal values of precursors and porphyrins were recorded in 24-hrs. urinary collections during four hospitalization periods for acute abdominal pain. Various colorimetric and HPLC methods employed excluded the diagnosis of porphyria and led to resolving the discrepancy between home and hospital results. It was found that the false increase in porphyrins in the spot samples emerged from a substance present in yeast tablets which the patient was consuming. The positive Watson-Schwarz test obtained was probably the result of the fact that the urine samples were concentrated with creatinine values exceeding 400 mg%. The case reported above, as well as studies carried out in three healthy volunteers and in an AIP patient, led to the conclusion that in order to obtain reliable result, 24-hrs. urinary collections should be examined, rather than spot urine samples.
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PMID:Yeast, creatinine and false diagnosis of porphyria. 907 92


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