Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0002986 (Fabry)
5,646 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We describe the postmortem findings of a 47-year-old man with Fabry disease, an X-linked glycolipid storage disorder, who was on enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant alpha-galactosidase A for more than 2 years. The patient had widespread atherosclerotic coronary artery disease that culminated in a massive acute myocardial infarction. Atherosclerotic lesions were seen in the right and left coronary systems, aorta, and the basilar artery. Typical Fabry cardiomyopathy and glomerular nephropathy were found. With the exception of vascular endothelial cells, extensive glycolipid storage deposits were seen in all vascular and nonvascular cells and organ systems. We conclude that, at least in this patient, repeated infusions with alpha-galactosidase A over a prolonged period did not appreciably clear storage material in cells other than vascular endothelial cells. These findings also illustrate accelerated atherosclerosis in susceptible patients with Fabry disease.
...
PMID:Pathological findings in a patient with Fabry disease who died after 2.5 years of enzyme replacement. 1660 5

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

A 45-year-old man with heterozygous Factor V Leiden presented with his third cerebrovascular accident despite being on warfarin at a therapeutic international normalized ratio. Subsequent investigation revealed a second genetic diagnosis of Fabry disease. He then had an acute myocardial infarction whilst on aspirin and warfarin.
...
PMID:Fabry disease and Factor V Leiden: a potent vascular risk combination. 2315 26