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Query: UMLS:C0002986 (
Fabry
)
5,646
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A purine degradation study, thermography and near infrared spectroscopy of the extremities were performed on 2 young males with
Fabry disease
and 2 healthy controls. Two-minute semi-ischemic forearm exercise caused a distinct increase in lactate in all subjects, but venous hypoxanthine and ammonia were greatly increased only in the
Fabry
patients, suggesting a relatively hypoxic state of the extremities. Limb thermograms of the patients revealed glove and stocking type disturbance at rest. Poor recovery of the skin temperature of the hands and forearms after exercise was observed in the patients, but the sharp increase in oxygenated hemoglobin after total
ischemia
was found to be normal or near infrared spectroscopy. Neurotropin showed an analgesic effect, i.e. a strong and selective heat-productive action on the painful lesions, and suppressed the hypoxanthine level after exercise in 1 patient. Although the pathophysiology of the pain in
Fabry disease
has not been clearly elucidated, a relatively hypoxic state with peripheral hypothermia might play an important role in triggering of a painful attack or chronic burning paresthesia.
...
PMID:Relative hypoxia of the extremities in Fabry disease. 145 89
It has been reported that coronary diseases in patients with
Fabry's disease
are induced by deposits in endothelial cells and coronary smooth muscle cells. Most of those are
ischemia
due to stenosis. This report describes a case of patient with
Fabry's disease
who showed severe vasospasms without coronary artery stenosis during acetylcholine loaded coronary angiography. In this case, a myocardial biopsy revealed that the deposits in the endothelial cells of the myocardial capillaries were lamellated appearance. Recently, it is reported that endothelial cell damage could be an important cause of coronary vasospasm. This case suggests that the some sort of functional disorder was induced by glyco-sphingolipid deposits in the coronary endothelial cells, and that this might have led to coronary artery spasms without the organic stenosis of coronary arteries.
...
PMID:Vasospastic angina in a patient with Fabry's disease who showed normal coronary angiographic findings. 880 26
In
Fabry disease
, an X-linked alpha-galactosidase A deficiency, painful crises and limb paresthesias are possibly linked to thermal exposure. Small nerve fiber function has not yet been tested after cold challenge. In two
Fabry
patients (15 and 17 years old), their heterozygote mother, their healthy sister, and eight controls, we determined warm and cold perception thresholds at the dorsal foot and the lower medial calf (method of limits, Somedic-Thermotest), before and 1, 5, 10 and 15 min after 30 s immersion of one leg into 5 degrees C water. Discomfort was rated from 0 to 10. At baseline, thermal thresholds of all participants were normal. In contrast to controls, the patients tolerated 30 s cold stimulation only with interruptions. The mother aborted stimulation after 6 s because of pain. The patients and their mother reported intense burning pain and numbness during and after stimulation. After cold exposure, thermal sensation was highly abnormal for 20 min in one and 80 min in the other brother. In controls, thermal thresholds were somewhat elevated after stimulation but normalized within 10.0+/-4.6 min. Discomfort during cold exposure was rated 8-10 by the patients and their mother, but 3-5 by the healthy persons. We assume that glycolipid accumulation in cutaneous and vasa nervorum vessels as well as small nerve axons accounts for skin and small fiber malperfusion during cold induced vasoconstriction. Transitory
ischemia
initiated burning pain and prolonged small fiber dysfunction.
...
PMID:Lower limb cold exposure induces pain and prolonged small fiber dysfunction in Fabry patients. 1066 42
In a 53-year-old woman, admitted to our Department with leg pain, peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) was diagnosed. The absence of cardiovascular risk factors in this middle-aged woman, the unexplained burning pain during both effort and rest of the lower extremities mimicking severe
ischemia
, decreased sweating and cold induced Raynaud's phenomenon raised the suspicion of an underlying predisposing disease. The coexistence of painful acroparesthesias, angiokeratomas, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), corneal opacities and lenticular lesions suggested the diagnosis of
Fabry's disease
, which was confirmed by low serum levels of a-galactosidase-A activity. This case, presented with intermittent claudication due to generalized atherosclerosis, is quite unusual, since
Fabry's disease
rarely produces symptoms in female carriers.
...
PMID:Intermittent claudication unmasking underlying Fabry's disease. 1211 Jul 85
In
Fabry disease
, deficiency of alpha-galactosidase A induces glycolipid storage that accounts for neuropathy, renal failure, myocardial infarction and stroke. Vascular crises may be precipitated by stressful conditions. To evaluate pathomechanisms of overall organ versus microvessel perfusion in response to ischemic challenge, we assessed resting and postischemic forearm and skin blood flow in
Fabry
patients. In 14
Fabry
patients and 15 healthy controls, we measured resting and postischemic forearm blood flow by means of venous occlusion plethysmography and superficial index finger skin blood flow using laser Doppler flowmetry. At rest, arterial inflow into the limb was averaged from eight venous occlusion measurements and expressed as % volume change/minute. Postischemic plethysmographic inflow was determined from the peak influx during the first venous occlusion following three minutes of
ischemia
. Transcutaneous oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressures at the forearm were monitored continuously. At rest, plethysmographic forearm perfusion was 15% lower in patients than in controls (p < 0.05) while skin blood flow did not differ between patients and controls. After
ischemia
, forearm hyperperfusion was less pronounced in patients than in controls (p < 0.05), while skin perfusion almost doubled in patients but increased only slightly in controls. Transcutaneous oxygen and carbon dioxide pressures did not differ between both groups. We conclude that the reduced overall limb perfusion at rest and after
ischemia
is likely to be due to lipid deposition with increased rigidity, decreased distensibility and lowered diameter of the vasculature. The exaggerated skin perfusion after
ischemia
might be attributable to the small fiber neuropathy of
Fabry
patients with deficient vasoconstrictor tone and enhanced vasodilatation due to hypersensitivity of denervated intracutaneous nerve fibers towards
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Postischemic cutaneous hyperperfusion in the presence of forearm hypoperfusion suggests sympathetic vasomotor dysfunction in Fabry disease. 1292 18
We report a case of a 21-year-old man with
Fabry's disease
who presented with a sudden decrease in visual acuity to 20/200 in the left eye. Pale areas with a lobular choroidal distribution were seen on fundus examination. No retinal vascular causes were found on further evaluation. With anticoagulation treatment, the patient's subsequent course was good, with visual recovery to 20/25 and normalization of the funduscopic appearance. Recovery of both visual acuity and the pale, lobular areas suggested a choroidal etiology, probably ischemic because of the sudden onset. Choroidian
ischemia
is therefore a cause of visual acuity loss in
Fabry's disease
, so far not described in the literature.
...
PMID:[Loss of visual acuity due to choroidal ischemia in Fabry's disease]. 1458 28
To investigate the pathophysiology of neuropathy in
Fabry disease
, multiple nerve excitability properties of median motor axons in 20 patients with this disorder but without hyperkalemia were compared with 35 age-matched normal controls. In the patients, depolarizing threshold electrotonus was reduced (P < 0.0001) and superexcitability was reduced (P < 0.001), but late subexcitability was normal. These findings indicate that the axons were mildly depolarized, probably due to
ischemia
, and are consistent with the hypothesis that poor nerve perfusion in
Fabry disease
contributes to axonal damage.
...
PMID:Evidence for motor axon depolarization in Fabry disease. 1600 64
Fabry disease
, an X-linked recessive glycolipid storage disease, is caused by a deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A), which cleaves a fatty substance called globotriaosylceramide (GL3). The abnormal storage of GL3 in blood vessel walls leads to
ischemia
and necrosis, particularly in blood vessels of the skin, kidneys, heart, brain, and nervous system. The aim of our study was to present the results of cadaveric kidney transplantation with enzyme alpha-Gal A therapy in a patient with
Fabry disease
. The patient was diagnosed with
Fabry disease
at the age of 33 years, based on enzymatic tests. Renal manifestations occurred a year later as proteinuria. At the age of 35 years, the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was within the normal range. The patient received supplemental enzyme treatment with alpha-Gal (1 mg/kg every 2 weeks). At 3 months after starting supplementation, renal function worsened with serum creatinine levels at 1.7 to 1.8 mg/dL. The following months of supplementation (alpha-Gal 1 mg/kg) concurred with progressive renal dysfunction. After 27 months of supplementation at 37 years, with a creatinine value of 5.5 mg/dL, hemodialysis began and months later the patient received a cadaveric kidney graft. The patient no longer required dialysis. On postoperative day 5 the serum creatinine was 3.9 mg/dL; on day 7, 2.2 mg/dL; on day 14, 1.5 mg/dL. Enzyme supplementation began on posttransplant day 13. Renal graft function has been good during 5 months of observation with creatinine levels at 1.2 to 1.3 mg/dL. The treatment does not interfere with tacrolimus metabolism. Simultaneous chronic enzyme supplementation is the optimal treatment in the fifth stage of end-stage renal disease in
Fabry disease
.
...
PMID:Kidney transplantation and enzyme alpha-galactosidase A therapy in patient with Fabry disease: a case report. 1802 18
The pathogenesis of dementia associated with
Fabry disease
was examined neuropathologically in an autopsy case. The patient was a 47-year-old computer programmer who developed renal failure at the age of 36, necessitating peritoneal dialysis, and thereafter suffered in succession episodic pulmonary congestion, bradyacusia, heart failure, and dementia, before dying of acute myocardial infarction. MRI of the brain demonstrated leuko-araiosis. The CNS parenchyma showed widespread segmental hydropic swelling of axons in the bilateral cerebral and cerebellar deep white matter in addition to neuronal ballooning due to glycolipid storage in a few restricted nuclei and multiple tiny lacunae. Hydropic axonal swelling was also sparsely distributed in the pyramidal tract, pedunculus cerebellaris superior and brachium colliculi inferioris, but wallerian degeneration of these tracts was absent. Additional features included angiopathy of the subarachnoidal arteries due to
Fabry disease
, such as medial thickening resulting from glycolipid deposition in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and adventitial fibrosis with lymphocytic infiltration, together with widespread subtotal or total replacement of medial SMCs by fibrosis, associated with prominent intimal fibrous thickening and undulation of the internal elastic membrane of medium-sized (1000-100 microm diameter) arteries. The findings in this case suggest that axonopathic leukoencephalopathy due to multisegmental hydropic swelling of axons in the bilateral cerebral deep white matter is responsible for the dementia associated with
Fabry disease
, and may be caused by
ischemia
resulting from widespread narrowing and stiffening of medium-sized subarachnoidal arteries and progressive heart failure.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of Fabry disease with neuropathological investigation of the pathogenesis of associated dementia. 1841 Feb 73
The kidney is one of the most important organs that play a crucial role in homeostasis and, therefore, congenital or acquired renal dysfunction causes refractory diseases, i.e., Alport's syndrome,
Fabry's disease
, diabetic nephropathy, IgA nephropathy, kidney cancer, transplant glomerulopathy. Nucleic acid transfection technology to the kidney is indispensable for the progress of biomedical research and the realization of gene therapy and nucleic acid drug for renal diseases. Control of renal nucleic acid transfection was difficult because of the structural complexity; however, the study of recombinant virus, synthetic carrier and physical force-mediated nucleic acid transfection to the kidney has advanced. Recombinant virus and synthetic carrier-mediated methods require long-term block of the blood or urinary flow for efficient transfection of nucleic acid because of the rich blood flow of the kidney. In contrast, physical force-mediated methods that transfect with nucleic acid via transient membrane permeability do not apprehend
ischemia
-reperfusion injury and, therefore, may be beneficial for nucleic acid transfection to the kidney. In this article, we collect the information of therapeutic gene, target molecule of the nucleic acid drug and target cells for renal diseases and structural property of the kidney from the point of view of nucleic acid transfection. Additively, current status of nucleic acid transfection technology to the kidney is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Development of nucleic acid transfection technology to the kidney]. 1898 92
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