Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

GH exerts direct effects on myocardial growth and function. Evidence from laboratory models shows that GH (or IGF-I) induces mRNA expression for specific contractile proteins and myocyte hypertrophy. Furthermore, GH increases the force of contraction and determines myosin phenoconversion toward the low ATPase activity V3 isoform. These data provide plausible explanations for the cardiac abnormalities observed in clinical settings of excessive or defective GH production. In acromegaly, the functional consequences of GH excess initially prevail (hyperkinetic syndrome), followed by alterations of cardiac function when myocardial hypertrophy develops. This involves both ventricles and is purposeless because it occurs without increased wall stress. Hypertrophy also entails proliferation of the myocardial fibrous tissue that leads to interstitial remodeling. The functional consequence is an impaired ventricular relaxation that causes a diastolic dysfunction, followed by impairment of systolic function. In untreated disease, cardiac performance slowly but inexorably deteriorates and heart failure eventually develops. Several lines of evidence support the specificity of heart disease in acromegaly. Particularly demonstrative are the recent studies in which GH production was suppressed by octreotide, with a consequent significant regression of hypertrophy and improvement of cardiac dysfunction. It is not yet established whether full recovery of normal cardiac morphology and function is possible after correction of GH excess. The point is not a minor one since the possibility to revert, albeit partially, myocardial fibrosis is of great relevance to the control of cardiac hypertrophy in general. GHD leads to a reduced mass of both ventricles and to impaired cardiac performance with low heart rate (hypokinetic syndrome). These alterations are particularly evident during physical exercise and might provide an important contribution to the reduced exercise capacity of GHD patients, in addition to the reduced muscle mass and strength. The data also support a role of GH in the maintenance of a normal cardiac structure and performance. The hypokinetic syndrome is well documented in young patients in whom GHD began very early in their childhood. In contrast, the data in adult-onset GHD are less consistent. This suggests that the consequences of GHD are more relevant if the disorder starts during early heart development. As observed with other abnormalities associated with GHD, cardiac dysfunction is also susceptible to marked improvement by hrGH. This observation lends further support to the proposal to treat these patients with replacement therapy.
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PMID:Growth hormone and the heart. 784 68

Growth hormone (GH), probably acting indirectly through locally produced insulin-like growth factor I, stimulates myocardial hypertrophy and increases myocyte contractility. In experimental models insulin-like growth factor I appears to be a key regulator of ventricular hypertrophy. Many adults with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) have reduced left ventricular mass, a lower ejection fraction, and reduced exercise tolerance. Elevated serum lipid levels, increased visceral fat, and early atheroma formation may contribute to an increased mortality rate from cardiovascular disease in these persons, but GH replacement therapy appears to correct many of these abnormalities. GH excess (acromegaly) results in cardiac hypertrophy that can progress to cardiac failure. Treatment with octreotide at least partially reverses cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction. GH treatment may induce beneficial cardiac hypertrophy in adults without GHD who have dilated cardiomyopathy. Significant cardiac dysfunction has not been reported in children with GHD who are treated with GH, nor have adverse cardiac effects been reported with GH in short children without GHD, including those with Turner syndrome. We now have extensive experience with the therapeutic use of GH in children with cardiac structural abnormalities (e.g., Turner and Noonan syndromes, congenital heart disease), and such use appears to be safe. Furthermore, cardiac complications of GH in children without cardiac disease are rare. Continued observation to ensure that GH therapy has no long-term effects on cardiac anatomy or function in children is necessary.
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PMID:Is growth hormone good for the heart? 925 33

It has been reported that growth hormone (GH) deficiency induced cardiomyopathy responds to growth hormone replacement therapy. We describe the case of a middle-aged male with cardiomyopathic heart failure and growth hormone deficiency of the adult secondary to surgical panhypopituitarism. We demonstrate clinical and hemodynamic improvement of cardiac function with growth hormone replacement therapy despite underlying structural heart disease.
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PMID:The role of growth hormone replacement in a growth hormone deficient patient with underlying cardiomyopathy and severe congestive heart failure. 1565 91

Growth hormone (GH), secreted by the anterior pituitary into the circulation, binds to membrane receptors in target tissues to stimulate body growth; most of its effects is mediated by the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). In addition to promoting growth, GH has important metabolic actions. The syndrome of GH insensitivity (GHI) was first identified in 1966 by Laron et al. in three children with clinical phenotype characteristic of growth hormone deficiency but associated with elevated serum concentration of GH. Direct evidence of a GH receptor (GHR) abnormality was provided in 1989. More recently, molecular abnormalities in the postreceptor signalling mechanism were found. Mutations of signal transducer and activator of transcription 5b (Stat5b) were reported in patients with growth retardation and primary immunodeficiency. Mutations of the tyrosin phosphatase Shp2 were identified in patients affected by Noonan syndrome characterized by short stature, cardiopathy and increased risk of leukaemia. The unmasking of the molecular bases for these defects will contribute greatly to our future understanding of both normal and aberrant growth. Moreover, this knowledge should bring insight on cancerogenesis or immunodeficiency caused by cytokines resistance.
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PMID:[New molecular mechanisms of growth hormone insensitivity]. 1820 12

Providing clinically relevant prognoses and treatment information for people with a chromsome18q deletion is particularly challenging because every unrelated person has a unique region of hemizygosity. The hemizygous region can involve almost any region of 18q including between 1 and 101 genes (30 Mb of DNA). Most individuals have terminal deletions, but in our cohort of over 350 individuals 23% have interstitial deletions. Because of this heterogeneity, we take a gene by gene approach to understanding the clinical consequences. There are 196 genes on 18q. We classified 133 of them as dosage insensitive, 15 (8%) as dosage sensitive leading to haploinsufficiency while another 10 (5%) have effects that are conditionally haploinsufficient and are dependent on another factor, genetic or environmental in order to cause an abnormal phenotype. Thirty-seven genes (19%) have insufficient information to classify their dosage effect. Phenotypes attributed to single genes include: congenital heart disease, minor bone morphology changes, central nervous system dysmyelination, expressive speech delay, vesicouretreral reflux, polyposis, Pitt-Hopkins syndrome, intellectual disability, executive function impairment, male infertility, aural atresia, and high frequency sensorineural hearing loss. Additionally, identified critical regions for other phenotypes include: adolescent idiopathic scoliosis and pectus excavatum, Virchow-Robin perivascular spaces, small corpus callosum, strabismus, atopic disorders, mood disorder, IgA deficiency, nystagmus, congenital heart disease, kidney malformation, vertical talus, CNS dysmyelination growth hormone deficiency and cleft palate. Together these findings make it increasingly feasible to compile an individualized syndrome description based on each person's individuated genotype. Future work will focus on understanding molecular mechanisms leading to treatment.
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PMID:Consequences of chromsome18q deletions. 2623 40

A 26-year-old man presented with a combination of permanent neonatal diabetes due to pancreatic aplasia, complex congenital heart disease, central hypogonadism and growth hormone deficiency, structural renal abnormalities with proteinuria, umbilical hernia, neurocognitive impairment and dysmorphic features. His older brother had diabetes mellitus due to pancreatic hypoplasia, complex congenital heart disease, hypospadias and umbilical hernia. Their father had an atrial septal defect, umbilical hernia and diabetes mellitus diagnosed incidentally in adulthood on employment screening. The proband's paternal grandmother had a congenital heart defect. Genetic testing of the proband revealed a novel heterozygous missense variant (Chr18:g.19761441T>C, c.1330T>C, p.Cys444Arg) in exon 4 of GATA6, which is class 5 (pathogenic) using American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines and is likely to account for his multisystem disorder. The same variant was detected in his brother and father, but not his paternal grandmother. This novel variant of GATA6 likely occurred de novo in the father with autosomal dominant inheritance in the proband and his brother. The case is exceptional as very few families with monogenic diabetes due to GATA6 mutations have been reported to date and we describe a new link between GATA6 and renal pathology. Learning points: Monogenic diabetes should be suspected in patients presenting with syndromic features, multisystem congenital disease, neonatal-onset diabetes and/or a suggestive family history. Recognition and identification of genetic diabetes may improve patient understanding and empowerment and allow for better tailored management. Identification of a genetic disorder may have important implications for family planning.
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PMID:Familial GATA6 mutation causing variably expressed diabetes mellitus and cardiac and renal abnormalities. 3105 68