Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (gout)
5,192 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is fairly frequent to encounter hyperlipemia on a rheumatic unit. Firstly the symptoms of certain idiopathic hyperlipemias sometimes include rheumatic changes. The latter include firstly, arthritis and tendinitis, above all observed in Type II hyperlipoproteinemia but also mentionned in Type IV, and secondly, exceptional bony lesions (generally of xanthoma type) which seem to occur exclusively in severe hyperglyceridemia. A few bone and joint diseases, such as gout or aseptic necrosis, frequently coexist with dyslipemia. Furthermore, various diseases may be simultaneously responsible for secondary hyperlipemia and involvement of the locomotor apparatus. Finally, the iatrogenic manifestations of the locomotor system appear mainly due to hypolipemic drugs, e.g. the muscle disorders seen in a few patients treated with clofibrate.
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PMID:[Hyperlipemias and their manifestations in the rheumatological sphere]. 19 31

Needle-shaped crystals of 75 to 250 A diameter have been identified by transmission electron microscopy in clumps within synovial fluid mononuclear cell vacuoles in a variety of joint diseases. These crystals, similar to those previously associated with calcific periarthritis, were seen in acute undiagnosed arthritis and in exacerbations of osteoarthritis where they may be inducing a synovitis similar to that seen with urate and pyrophosphate crystals in gout and pseudogout. By light microscopy purple staining cytoplasmic inclusions or extracellular globules can suggest the presence of clumps of these crystals. Apatite clumps can also occasionally appear as small birefringent chunks or rods and thus might mimic urate or calcium pyrophosphate. Ultrastructural appearance, electron probe analysis, and X-ray diffraction pattern were those of apatite. Experimental injection of hydroxyapatite crystals into dog knee joints produces inflammation supporting the potential role for these crystals in joint disease.
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PMID:Arthritis associated with apatite crystals. 19 97

Physiologically superactive phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) synthetase, due to feedback resistance mutation, was found in a family with excessive purine production, gout and uric acid lithiasis. The superactivity of the mutant enzyme was manifest in the propositus' erythrocytes and cultured fibroblasts, in increased generation, content and metabolic availability of PRPP, leading in the fibroblasts to acceleration of the rate of purine synthesis de novo. One of the propositus' two siblings was similarly affected, but the propositus' father, his second brother and four sons, were all clinically and biochemically normal. The mother was clinically normal and normouricemic, but hyperuricosuric. Cultured fibroblasts from her skin exhibited variability in PRPP content and availability and in the rate of purine synthesis de novo. The mother's cultures were found to contain a mosaicism of two cell populations, one with normal and the other with mutant PRPP synthetase, indicating an X-linked pattern of inheritance of the PRPP synthetase abnormality in this gouty family.
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PMID:Overproduction disease in man due to enzyme feedback resistance mutation. Purine overproduction in gout due to excessive activity of mutant feedback-resistant phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase. 20 49

A mutant feedback-resistant, physiologically superactive, phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PP-ribose-P) synthetase was found in a family with purine overproduction, gout and uric acid lithiasis. In haemolysates and cultured fibroblasts from the propositus, the mutant enzyme exhibited resistance to feedback inhibition by normal cell constituents, such as ADP and GDP; normal affinity to substrates and to activator Pi was demonstrated in the haemolysate. In both erythrocytes and cultured fibroblasts, the superactivity of the mutant enzyme was manifest in increased PP-ribose-P content and availability for nucleotide synthesis, leading to an acceleration of the rate of purine synthesis de novo in the fibroblasts. The enzyme abnormality and the resulting increase in PP-ribose-P content and generation were demonstrated in the erythrocytes of one of the propositus' two siblings who was similarly affected but not in the propositus' father, his second brother and four sons, who were all clinically and biochemically normal, nor in the erythrocytes of the clinically normal hyperuricosuric mother. However, cultured fibroblasts from her skin exhibited variability in PP-ribose-P content and availability and in the rate of purine synthesis de novo, these parameters being increased in most cultures. The mother's fibroblast cultures were found to contain two cell populations, one with normal and the other with mutant PP-ribose-P synthetase, indicating an X-linked pattern of inheritance of the synthetase superactivity in this gouty family.
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PMID:Superactivity of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase, due to feedback resistance, causing purine overproduction and gout. 20 60

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in Western countries, with an enormous increase in death rate and involvement of younger age groups during the last decades. This applies especially to coronary heart disease and is mainly caused by first-degree risk factors: hypertension, hyperlipoproteinemia, cigarette smoking, gout, obesity, polycythemia, lack of physical activity, and stress. These risk factors are discussed with special reference to overnutrition and increased cholesterol levels. Recent resuults of research concerning lipids and their relation to atherosclerosis are reviewed.
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PMID:[Etiology and pathogenesis of arteriosclerosis]. 20 5

The effect of chenodeoxycholic acid on the fasting serum triglycerides was studied in 30 patients with type IV hyperlipemia and in 20 patients with primary gout and associated endogenous hypertriglyceridemia, the triglycerides being determined before treatment and at monthly intervals for three months. Chenodeoxycholic acid treatment resulted in a significant lowering of the serum triglycerides in both groups of patients. The drug was well tolerated and there were no undesirable side-effects. Although the mechanism of action is still not known, the drug is thought to reduce triglyceride synthesis in the liver. Chenodeoxycholic acid appears to be electively indicated in type IV hyperlipemia treatment.
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PMID:The hypotriglyceridemic effect of chenodeoxycholic acid in type IV hyperlipemia. 21 33

Type V hyperlipemia is not very common. The series of 54 cases descrubed here is the largest reported to date. Our observations were recorded when lipidograms showed the presence of chylomicrons and a large pre-beta-lipoprotein spot in the serum of fasting subjects. Type V hyperlipemia was often combined with other metabolic syndromes such as diabetes, hyperuricemia or gout, or obesity. Chronic alcoholism was also noted in half our subjects, in whom hyperlipemia quickly regressed after alcohol consumption ceased. Ischemic arterial complications, chiefly coronary, were found in one third of our cases, and the vascular risks accompanying this type of hyperlipemia rose considerably in patients with high blood pressure. Various type of treatment were administered, but all subjects were put on a special diet, comprising either the elimination of alcoholic drinks only, or, in addition to this, reduced carbohydrate or calorie intake. As a rule, these measures resulted in a distinct regression of lipid anomalies. Clofibrate or derivatives proved effective in cases where hyperlipemia failed to respond to dietary measures.
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PMID:[Type V hyperlipemia. 54 cases (author's transl)]. 22 80

On the basis of a study of the action of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) synthetase (EC 2.7.6.1.) in 22 hyperuricemic and 9 normal subjects, the authors report two cases of gout with anomalies of the kinetics of this enzyme. The anomaly consists of an increase in affinity for inorganic phosphate (iP) in the absence of inhibitors, and a decrease in inhibition by low concentrations of ADP in the presence of iP. These patients show no other anomaly of intraerythrocyte PRPP (dosage and production "in vitro"), hypoxanthine-guanine-phosphoribosyl-transferase and APRTase (overall activity and apparent Km). These two cases of gout are characterized clinically by their early occurrence, appearing in one case in a pre-menopausal woman, their family character and their normal sensitivity to allopurinol.
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PMID:[Phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase anomalies in 2 cases of gout beginning at an early age]. 22 83

Articular chondrocalcinosis results from the deposits of calcium pyrophosphate microcrystals in the articular hyalin and fibrocartilages, the synovium and at times the tendons. In our area it is seen most frequently as isolated cases in the elderly and may be asymptomatic. When the affected joints present clinical manifestations, they vary from acute to subacute or chronic recurrent arthritis. A marked articular destruction can be observed in some cases. There is a classical radiological picture: linear opacities are most frequently seen localized in the mid-zone layer of the hyalin cartilage running parallel to but at a certain distance from the bone cortex. A part of our research has shown that in contrast to urate gout, articular chondrocalcinosis results from a metabolic disturbance of the calcium pyrophosphate localized almost exclusively in the same articular structures. Precise information is lacking at the present time to explain why calcium pyrophosphate mycrocrystals accumulate in the cartilage, the synovium and at times at the tendons; nor do we understand the precise role played by the pyrophosphate in bone and cartilage destruction.
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PMID:[Arthropathies due to calcium pyrophosphates]. 23 70

Rapid progress in the study of learning disabilities requires a common context within which investigators and professionals with very diverse backgrounds can work towards common goals. Much evidence points to the heterogeneity of origin and clinical expression of learning disabilities as well as to many other ways in which they resemble such multifactorial conditions as mental retardation, gout and hypertension. In these conditions, genetic and epidemiological methods have been used to sort out the constitutional and environmental factors which precipitate disease in susceptible persons. Such an approach to learning disabilities can be expected to be rewarding.
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PMID:The genetics of learning disabilities. 25 73


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