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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Refsum's disease is a polyneuropathy due to a hereditary error in the metabolism of a fatty acid, phytanic acid, usually leading to cardiac failure only at an advanced stage of the disease. The authors report the case of two brothers with Refsum's disease revealed by a heart failure before the clinical stage of the peripheral neuropathy. In the younger brother, the affection started at the age of 22 years by an acute pulmonary oedema which revealed a dilated, hypokinetic myocardiopathy, associated with retinitis pigmentosa, ptosis, anosmia and biological myolysis. The normal plasma concentration of phytanic acid measured several times led to the conclusion of Kearns-Sayre syndrome even if certain aspects were atypical (moderate conduction disorders, no characteristic aspect in the muscle biopsy). Five years later, the older brother, aged 28, presents a dyspnea on effort which leads to the discovery of a hypokinetic, hypertrophic myocardiopathy, slightly dilated, associated with cardiac conduction disorders, retinitis pigmentosa, anosmia and biological myolysis. The plasma concentration of phytanic acid being very high. Refsum's disease was diagnosed and the diagnosis of younger brother was corrected. From the study of these two cases, the characteristics of the cardiac disorders can be specified: the cardiopathy can reveal the disease and correspond to a dilated or hypertrophic myocardiopathy. The diagnosis of the disease can be difficult because the plasma phytanic acid may remain at normal level, thus requiring the assay of the activity of phytanate oxydase. The existence of ophthalmologic signs (retinitis pigmentosa or progressive ophthalmoplegia externa) associated with a myocardiopathy must systematically lead to a search for Refsum's disease, this diagnosis having fundamental therapeutic implications (died, even plasmapheresis).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Refsum's disease. Apropos of 2 cases disclosed by myocardiopathy]. 169 53

Heredopathia atactica polyneuritiformis (phytanic-acid storage disease, Refsum's disease) is an inborn error of metabolism, in which the body accumulates exogenous phytanic acid. The severe manifestations of this disease, which include pigmentary retinal degeneration, chronic polyneuropathy, ataxia, impaired hearing, and cardiopathy, can be either kept from worsening or reversed by elimination of foods rich in phytanic acid from patients' diets. This is borne out by a 20-year experience with two patients, whose conditions improved markedly once they stopped eating butter, animal fat, and other foods rich in phytanic acid.
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PMID:Heredopathia atactica polyneuritiformis phytanic-acid storage disease, Refsum's disease:" a biochemically well-defined disease with a specific dietary treatment. 617 Feb 81

Phytanic acid storage disease (known also as Refsum's Disease) is caused by inherited defects in the metabolic pathway for phytanic acid, a dietary branched-chain fatty acid. Poorly metabolized phytanic acid accumulates in fatty tissues, including myelin sheaths, and in organs including the liver and kidneys. Over time, affected individuals may develop classical diagnostic features of retinitis pigmentosa, cerebellar ataxia, peripheral polyneuropathy and an elevated protein content in the cerebrospinal fluid. Liver, kidney, and heart disease may also develop. Dietary restriction of phytanic acid is useful in preventing acute attacks and arresting the progression of organ impairment, especially in the peripheral nervous system. Therapeutic plasma exchange has been shown to be particularly useful for rapidly lowering plasma phytanic acid levels during acute attacks and may play a significant role as maintenance therapy as well.
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PMID:Phytanic acid storage disease (Refsum's disease): clinical characteristics, pathophysiology and the role of therapeutic apheresis in its management. 1061 28