Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Eight patients with hemochromatosis (HC) were followed up. For a long time HC ran a latent course. Throughout many years, the symptoms occurred at varying succession. In many cases, the first manifest symptoms included skin itch, arthropathy, and diabetes mellitus. They may be dominant in the clinical picture for a long time, masking the genuine cause of the disease. The correct diagnosis was established, as a rule, at the pronounced stage of HC. Before that event the patients were followed up and treated by the endocrinologist (3 persons), by the infectionist (2 persons), dermatologist and traumatologist (2 persons), and by the internist (1 person). Appearance of one of the symptoms of the classical triad can be regarded as the onset of HC. The cardinal symptoms that determine the clinical picture progressed for the most part: liver cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, and melanoderma. The first two require appropriate correction. Melanoderma presents a cosmetic and social and psychological problem. In HC patients, disorders occurring by the type of liver porphyria are recordable. They are of secondary nature, being an unfavourable prognostic sign. Investigation of iron metabolism in patients suffering from chronic liver diseases should be carried out by all means, since it can be regarded a specific enough test in the diagnosis of HC. Emphasis is laid on the importance of early diagnosis of HC.
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PMID:[The clinical characteristics of the course of hemochromatosis]. 178 14

The possibility of a metabolic chronic liver disease must always be borne in mind since in certain cases treatment can prevent the lesions from getting worse. The clinical and biochemical context should suggest either (1) genetic haemochromatosis when faced with high serum iron and ferritin levels and elevated transferrin saturation or with a suggestive clinical context (melanoderma, diabetes, hypogonadism, arthropathy, myocardiopathy); or (2) Wilson's disease in young subjects, especially in the presence of neurological and ocular signs or of haemolytic anaemia; or (3) porphyria in case of cutaneous manifestations caused by exposure to sun light. Hence the importance of full clinical examination in patients with chronic liver disease.
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PMID:[Metabolic cirrhosis (hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, erythropoietic protoporphyria)]. 206 17

Hemochromatosis is a syndrome which, when fully expressed, is manifested by melanoderma , diabetes mellitus, and liver cirrhosis, with iron overload involving parenchymal and reticuloendothelial cells in many organ systems. This clinical presentation may arise as a consequence of either hereditary or acquired abnormalities of iron overload, although the mechanisms are quite different. In hereditary hemochromatosis (also known as primary, or idiopathic, hemochromatosis), increased intestinal iron absorption leads to excessive accumulations of iron, throughout the body, particularly in parenchymal cells. In secondary forms of iron overload including transfusional hemosiderosis, alcoholic cirrhosis, thalassemia, sideroblastic anemia, and porphyria cutanea tarda, iron accumulates in the reticuloendothelial system initially, but with increasing amounts of total body iron, excessive iron deposits eventually accumulate in parenchymal cells throughout the body producing a picture indistinguishable from hereditary hemochromatosis. In this article, the course, prognosis, and therapy of iron overload will be reviewed in detail. Clinical and experimental data concerning the pathogenesis of the different forms of iron overload will be examined critically. In particular, information relating to possible abnormalities of reticuloendothelial function, intestinal mucosal iron transport, and alterations in serum and tissue isoferritin patterns in hereditary hemochromatosis will be analyzed, and possible directions for future research will be suggested. The mode of inheritance and linkage with the major histocompatibility (HLA) complex will be discussed. Theories on the pathogenesis of tissue damage by excess iron will be evaluated. Methods for measuring the extent of iron overload in clinical practice will be described, including measurements of serum iron, serum ferritin, iron absorption, cobalt excretion, desferrioxamine excretion, liver biopsy and tissue iron determinations, and HLA typing. Finally, unresolved problems in the understanding of the disease process, diagnosis, and therapy will be delineated.
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PMID:Iron overload disorders: natural history, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and therapy. 637 41

A 24-yo female was admitted for acute renal failure, melanoderma, hyponatremia and hyperkalemia. The clinical suspicion of Addison's disease was confirmed by laboratory test and the appropriate replacement therapy with corticosteroids and fludrocortisone was started. In the mean-time primary hypothyroidism and diabetes mellitus type 1 were disclosed and treated, thus fulfilling a diagnosis of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 2. Eighteen months later she was admitted for right sided heart failure. The work-up allowed to diagnose pulmonary arterial hypertension. Here we report the clinical course and discuss the putative link between these two rare diseases.
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PMID:Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome complicated by Pulmonary Hypertension. 3274 53