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Query: UMLS:C0002986 (
Fabry
)
5,646
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 45-year-old man with
Fabry's disease
is presented. 27 relatives are examined. Among the different examinations (serum activity of
alpha-galactosidase
, urinary excretion of trihexosyl ceramide, renal function, ocular examination) ocular examination remains the easiest and cheapest test for detection of heterozygotes. The ocular manifestations of this enzymatic defect are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Value of the ophthalmologic examination in diagnosing patients with Anderson-Fabry disease and in heterozygote detection]. 188 55
Two sisters, one with a long history of proteinuria and the other of hematuria, came for examination. Physical examination and routine laboratory workups did not show any significant abnormalities. The renal ultrastructural changes in case 1 showed marked enlargement and foamy vacuolation of all the glomerular capillary visceral epithelial cells, which was not found in other glomerular cells. The renal changes in case 2 showed similar lesions but with fewer cells involved and also with less severity, but the involved cells showed marked lamellation within the vacuoles. The serum
alpha-galactosidase
activity was 4.9 and 3.0 nmol/h/mL serum, respectively (normal values, 12.1 +/- 1.6 nmol/h/mL serum, mean +/- SD, n = 11), thus confirming the heterozygous variety of
Fabry's disease
. Our findings in these two cases reveal that patients with heterozygous
Fabry's disease
may present with renal symptoms only, which may be either proteinuria or hematuria.
...
PMID:Renal changes in heterozygous Fabry's disease--a family study. 210 40
Clinical courses and histopathological changes of four patients with
Fabry's disease
were discussed in this report. All of them were male and revealed to have angiokeratomas of the skin and markedly decreased activity of
alpha-galactosidase
--A in leukocytes. They were from different families. No consanguinity was noted. Two of them, around 40 years of age, showed rapid impairment of renal function with simultaneously development of hypertension, progressing to uremia within several months. Their light and electron microscopic findings in renal biopsies were similar: severe degenerative changes in muscle cells of small arteries and arterioles with remarkable swelling of intima, and multiple sclerosing and collaptic lesions in glomeruli. The other 2 patients were about 20 years old and their renal functions were almost normal. No significant changes but fine vacuolization of epithelial cells of glomeruli were observed in renal biopsy specimens. It is concluded that marked degenerative changes in the vessels due to
Fabry's disease
might be the principal etiology of hypertension and rapid deterioration of renal function.
...
PMID:[Clinico-pathological features in four patients with Fabry's disease. The possible role of degenerative lesions in the interstitial vessels in renal dysfunction]. 211 57
We present a rare case of priapism in a child, ten years old, in association with
Fabry's disease
. The child had a history of disseminated nodular enlargement, crises of fever, intermittent pain in the extremities and ten hours persistent painful erection of the penis. We don't obtain pain or erection relief with sedation, epidural block and irrigation of the corporal bodies. A saphenous-cavernous shunt, in the Grayhack fashion made, being results satisfactory. In the follow-up, the child had sporadic pain in the extremities and no erection of the penis. The cavernosography showed the shunt open.
Fabry's disease
was confirmed by nodular biopsy and the demonstration of deficient
alpha-galactosidase
.
...
PMID:[Priapism associated with Fabry's disease]. 212 72
A female case of
angiokeratoma corporis diffusum
without systemic involvement, with
alpha-galactosidase A
activity in the normal range, alpha-L-fucosidase in the lower levels of the normal range, and a few amount of urinary sialic acid is reported. Some problem about differential diagnosis with inherited disorders as
Fabry's disease
, fucosidosis, sialidosis is discussed. Although cases of
angiokeratoma corporis diffusum
without any underlying enzyme defect have been reported, we believe that
angiokeratoma corporis diffusum
is always related to known or unknown enzymatic defect, which activities could result in the normal range probably in relation to enzymatic polymorphism.
...
PMID:Angiocheratoma corporis diffusum with normal enzyme activities. 212 69
We analyzed a male patient with
Fabry's disease
who had no activity of the lysosomal hydrolase
alpha-galactosidase A
(
alpha-GalA
) and female members of his family. We cloned a cDNA that encoded the mutant
alpha-GalA
, determined its nucleotide sequence, and found two nucleotide differences between the mutant and the wild-type cDNAs. Although one difference was silent, the other difference, a C-to-T transition at nucleotide number 118, resulted in an amino acid substitution of Pro-40 by Ser. A transient expression assay demonstrated that this missense mutation was the cause of the deficiency of
alpha-GalA
activity in the patient. In vitro mutagenesis experiments demonstrated that Pro-40 is critical for the appearance of
alpha-GalA
activity.
...
PMID:A case of Fabry's disease in a patient with no alpha-galactosidase A activity caused by a single amino acid substitution of Pro-40 by Ser. 215 85
Angiokeratoma corporis diffusum
(
Fabry's disease
) is an X-linked disorder of glycosphingolipid catabolism. Heterozygous females, although usually asymptomatic, are occasionally as severely afflicted as hemizygous males; recently we identified a heterozygous patient with cardiomyopathy and severe pain in the extremities. In order to elucidate the difference of the clinical features, we analyzed the glycolipid composition of the heart, liver, and kidney obtained from the patient and from a hemizygote. Gas-liquid chromatography revealed that globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) was markedly increased in the heart (32.4 times higher than control) and increased to a lesser extent in the liver and kidney (3.74 and 6.79 times, respectively). The pattern of Gb3 accumulation in the heterozygote, where the highest increases were seen in the heart, was distinct from that in the hemizygote, where elevated levels of Gb3 and Ga2 were found in the kidney. Furthermore, the
alpha-galactosidase
activity in the heart, liver, and kidney of the heterozygote was 17%, 26%, and 36%, respectively, of normal controls, which correlated well with the accumulation of glycosphingolipid in the heart and with the disease's clinical manifestations. Two other hemizygotic patients, who were identified by low
alpha-galactosidase
activities, demonstrated the cardiac involvement.
...
PMID:Biochemical and clinical analysis of accumulated glycolipids in symptomatic heterozygotes of angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Fabry's disease) in comparison with hemizygotes. 215 88
Activities and multiple forms of
alpha-D-galactosidase
of human kidney and liver in the normal and in
Fabry's disease
were comparatively studied using alpha-D-galactoside and alpha-D-fucoside as substrates. By isoelectric focusing
alpha-D-galactosidase
was shown to exist in multiple forms, one of which possesses both
alpha-D-galactosidase
and alpha-D-fucosidase activity. In
Fabry's disease
, caused by a deficiency of alpha-D-galactosidase A, we found only one form of
alpha-D-galactosidase
, which corresponded to form B (alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase) and was also able to split alpha-D-fucoside. Thus, in
Fabry's disease
the alpha-D-fucosidase profile was virtually unchanged, as compared with the normal. The results obtained indicate that the alpha-D-fucosidase activity is due to the action of
alpha-D-galactosidase
B, encoded for by an autosomal gene of chromosome 22. We suppose these data could be confirmed by revealing the significant reduction of the alpha-D-fucosidase activity in patients with alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase deficiency.
...
PMID:Relationship of the multiple forms of human alpha-D-galactosidase and alpha-D-fucosidase in the normal and in Fabry's disease. 216 Feb 80
Fabry disease
, an inborn error of glycosphingolipid catabolism, results from mutations in the X-linked gene encoding the lysosomal enzyme,
alpha-galactosidase A
(
EC 3.2.1.22
). Six
alpha-galactosidase A
gene rearrangements that cause
Fabry disease
were investigated to assess the role of Alu repetitive elements and short direct and/or inverted repeats in the generation of these germinal mutations. The breakpoints of five partial gene deletions and one partial gene duplication were determined by either cloning and sequencing the mutant gene from an affected hemizygote, or by polymerase chain reaction amplifying and sequencing the genomic region containing the novel junction. Although the
alpha-galactosidase A
gene contains 12 Alu repetitive elements (representing approximately 30% of the 12-kilobase (kb) gene or approximately 1 Alu/1.0 kb), only one deletion resulted from an Alu-Alu recombination. The remaining five rearrangements involved illegitimate recombinational events between short direct repeats of 2 to 6 base pairs (bp) at the deletion or duplication breakpoints. Of these rearrangements, one had a 3' short direct repeat within an Alu element, while another was unusual having two deletions of 1.7 kb and 14 bp separated by a 151-bp inverted sequence. These findings suggested that slipped mispairing or intrachromosomal exchanges involving short direct repeats were responsible for the generation of most of these gene rearrangements. There were no inverted repeat sequences or alternating purine-pyrimidine regions which may have predisposed the gene to these rearrangements. Intriguingly, the tetranucleotide CCAG and the trinucleotide CAG (or their respective complements, CTGG and CTG) occurred within or adjacent to the direct repeats at the 5' breakpoints in three and four of the five
alpha-galactosidase A
gene rearrangements, respectively, suggesting a possible functional role in these illegitimate recombinational events. These studies indicate that short direct repeats are important in the formation of gene rearrangements, even in human genes like
alpha-galactosidase A
that are rich in Alu repetitive elements.
...
PMID:Alpha-galactosidase A gene rearrangements causing Fabry disease. Identification of short direct repeats at breakpoints in an Alu-rich gene. 216 Sep 73
A 10-year-old boy presented with priapism of 10 h duration which after unsuccessful conservative measures, was relieved by a saphenocorporeal shunt. A 4-year history of intermittent vague aching of fingers and toes accompanied by low-grade fever was reported.
Fabry disease
was confirmed by the lack
alpha-galactosidase
activity in serum and leucocytes. Other characteristic features of
Fabry disease
were not present. The condition was also diagnosed in his 14-year-old brother and suspected in his maternal grandfather who died at the age of 49 from renal failure of unknown aetiology.
...
PMID:Priapism and Fabry disease: a case report. 216 40
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