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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.
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PMID:Relative hypoxia of the extremities in Fabry disease. 145 89

Heterozygous Fabry's disease has an inconstant expression and very few complications. The theory of X-chromosome inactivation which, according to Lyon, occurs hazardly, is illustrated by the fact that the disease is expressed even in hemizygous women. Ophthalmic manifestations, as detected by the slit lamp method, are almost constant, 80 p. 100 of women with the disease having a verticillate cornea. Angiokeratoma is present in 20 p. 100 of the cases. Episodes of paraesthesia of the hands and feet are less common; in most cases they are attributed to the disease retrospectively, during family investigations. In two girls aged 10 and 11 years respectively and without history of Fabry's disease the only symptom suggestive of the diagnosis was paroxysmal acroparaesthesia. In one of the girls acroparaesthesia was associated with acrocyanosis, livedo and acro-osteolysis, but concordance was the only argument in favour of a link with Fabry's disease. Alterations of the extremities have been reported in this disease, including palmar erythema and a bluish discoloration of the palms due to dilatation of the superficial veins. Only two cases of livedo have been published. Acrosteolysis has never been documented in Fabry's disease, and its presence must be confirmed in further cases. The diagnosis of heterozygous Fabry's disease in these 2 girls was confirmed by the finding of ceramide trihexoside in urine and by leucocyte alpha-galactosidase levels that were 25 to 30 p. 100 of values obtained in controls. A study of the family of one of the girls showed that the father was involved; this hemizygous type of the disease with a 10 p. 100 alphagalactosidase level was totally asymptomatic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Early acroparesthesia in females: a sign disclosing heterozygote Fabry disease]. 164 27

A patient is described, admitted to the clinic on the occasion of proteinuria, edemas and arterial hypertension. The clinical and paraclinical data formed the picture of a renal involvement of mainly glomerular type with proteinuria to 5 gr%0, nonselective type, edemas, hypertension and data of chronic renal insufficiency I degree (serum creatinine to 3.8%, blood urea to 112 mg%). What impresses are the extrarenal manifestations as paresthesia of the lower limbs, with a sense of numbness to acute burning pain, a rich psychonervous symptomatics. The skin efflorescence, followed up and observed at the clinic of dermatology and the puncture biopsy material from the kidney revealed specific signs of Fabry syndrome.
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PMID:[Case of Fabry's disease]. 681 15

Fabry's disease (Angiokeratoma corporis diffusum) is a rare X-chromosome linked recessive disorder belonging to the group of sphingolipoidoses. The basic defect involves the gene encoding alpha-galactosidase. Because this enzyme is responsible for decomposition of glycosphingolipids, its deficiency results in their accumulation in endothelial and smooth muscle cells. With time, generalized angiokeratomas, paresthesias, renal and cardiac insufficiency and cerebrovascular complications develop. We report a patient who in addition to the well-described findings also showed unique nail fold capillary changes not described so far. Analysis of serum concentration of alpha-galactosidase identified three female heterozygous carriers in the patient's family.
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PMID:[Angiokeratoma corporis diffusum universale (Fabry disease)]. 933 33

We investigated 16 patients with Fabry's disease (eight hemizygous men and eight heterozygous women) in one family. We used constant current perception threshold (CPT) testing, which evaluated three major sensory nerve fiber populations, to assess subjective complaints of pain and paresthesias. We also examined clinical and biochemical features and compared the values of CPTs and nerve conduction studies (NCS) in detecting the sensory neuropathy. Our results showed that CPT testing at low frequencies (5 and 250 Hz) was significantly more sensitive than at a higher frequency (2 kHz) and NCS in detecting sensory neuropathy in patients with Fabry's disease. However, there was no correlation between CPT testing and clinical symptom scores, duration of disease, creatinine clearance (Ccr) values or alpha-galactosidase A (AGA) activities in either hemizygous or heterozygous patients. Hemizygous patients clinically demonstrated more severe symptom scores, poorer renal function, and higher prevalence of hypohidrosis and corpora angiokeratomas than did heterozygous patients, which indicates that detailed clinical examinations can differentiate the clinical status of hemizygous men from heterozygous women. There were no associations between the biochemical levels of serum AGA activity and renal function (Ccr values) or the symptom scores (grading of acroparesthesia), indicating that biochemical parameters do not predict clinical severity.
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PMID:Current perception threshold testing in Fabry's disease. 1051 30

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.
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PMID:Lower limb cold exposure induces pain and prolonged small fiber dysfunction in Fabry patients. 1066 42

We report a case of Fabry's disease, diagnosed in a 39-year-old patient treated for 4 years because of glomerulonephritis. The disease manifested itself by the presence of typical petechiae-like skin lesions in the bathing trunk area (angiokeratoma), eye changes, paresthesia, and--in additional investigations--mild proteinuria, lowered creatinine clearance, along with changes in the central nervous system. A biopsy of the kidney revealed the presence of foamy cells in all glomeruli, and in electron microscopy multilamellar bodies (zebra bodies). The diagnose of the disease was confirmed by a marked decrease in leucocyte alpha-galactosidase activity. An early diagnosis of non-inflammatory character of Fabry's disease allows to avoid an unnecessary immunosuppressive treatment.
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PMID:[Fabry's disease--late diagnosis in men with chronic nephropathy and skin changes]. 1074 Apr 22

The authors present a patient with Fabry syndrome that remained undiagnosed for several years. Fabry syndrome is a genetic disease related to changes on the X chromosome. Its complex clinical presentation and diverse symptomatology is caused by deficient activity of lysosomal hydrolase alpha-galactosidase enzyme. Defect in the basic alpha-galactosidase molecule implies genetic change, which can be a predisposing factor for the development of atypical and typical forms of this genetic disease. In the presented case, clinical manifestation and hemizygous symptomatology were the evidence of metabolic and genetic irregularity, typical clinical presentation of Fabry disease. Many authors report generalized vasculopathy as a basic characteristic of Fabry disease and a causative factor of multiorgan changes. Some authors indicate that persons with diagnosed asymmetric hypertrophy of the left ventricle have decreased alpha-galactosidase. Cardiac complications, coronary disease, and acute myocardial ischemia are often present in cases of Fabry disease, frequently causing death in such patients. Characteristic central nervous system symptoms with skin-burning sensation and paresthesia were also present in our case. Cerebrovascular complications were caused by changes on small blood vessels. Clinical signs of renal failure were nonspecific, and the diagnosis was based on extrarenal symptoms. Initial renal manifestations were insignificant as asymptomatic proteinuria and microhematuria, due to which our patient was referred to further examination. The level of alpha-galactosidase was significantly decreased. The severity and progression of this disease depends on the level of alpha-galactosidase enzyme in serum and its catabolic effect. More recent studies have showed that deficient enzyme can be synthetic zed and, accordingly our patient has been successfully enrolled in the replacement therapy program.
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PMID:Fabry disease--a diagnostic and therapeutic problem. 1635 Aug 34

A 38-year-old male Caucasian with Fabry disease presented with angiokeratomas and tortuous conjunctival and retinal vessels. Additionally, the patient showed characteristic skin lesions of psoriasis and seborrheic dermatitis. His past medical history revealed anhidrosis, acral paresthesias, myocardial infarction, phlebothrombosis, hypertension, antithrombin III deficiency, factor V Leiden disease, chronic obstructive lung disease, tinnitus, diarrhea, recurrent abdominal pain, headache, and depressive mood. He was treated with intravenous substitution of the deficient enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. Possible future options in treatment of Fabry disease are discussed.
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PMID:Fabry disease: case report with emphasis on enzyme replacement therapy and possible future therapeutic options. 1761 Jun 10

We present the case of a 36-year-old woman affected with Fabry disease (FD), with neuroradiologic and laboratory tests suggestive of a coexistent inflammatory demyelinating disease. Since the age of 23, she presented recurrent neurologic deficits, such as right limb paresthesias, diplopia, and right leg weakness. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed multiple demyelinating lesions in periventricular areas, corpus callosum, and spinal cord. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis showed the presence of oligoclonal bands, while visual-evoked potentials were delayed with preserved morphology. FD is usually considered as a differential diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, but we think that the best explanation of all pathological features in this case is the coexistence of the two diseases.
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PMID:A case of Fabry disease with central nervous system (CNS) demyelinating lesions: a double trouble? 1863 84


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