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)

We present a 6-year-old Chinese boy with Alagille syndrome and an interstitial 20p deletion, with a karyotype of 46,XY,der(20)dir ins(7;20)(q11.23;p11.23p12.2 or p12.2p13)mat. He had a peculiar face and suffered from congenital heart disease, growth retardation, severe cholestasis, hepatosplenomegaly, and impaired renal function. The karyotype of his mother showed a balanced translocation, 46,XX,dir ins(7;20)(q11.23; p11.23p12.2 or p12.2p13), and her phenotype was normal. His dead elder brother was highly suspected as another victim of Alagille syndrome. The findings in the present family suggested that if Alagille syndrome is a single gene defect, the putative gene responsible for the syndrome would not be located at the insertion breakpoints but located within the deletion extent.
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PMID:Alagille syndrome with interstitial 20p deletion derived from maternal ins(7;20). 882 31

In spite of the amazing success during the past half century in diagnosis and treatment of congenital heart disease, very little is known of its cause. However, a genetic cause has been clearly established for many forms of cardiovascular disease, and new understandings in the molecular genetics of congenital heart disease provide further insight. Progress has been quite impressive for some cardiovascular abnormalities, whereas in other areas the findings are more preliminary. For example, the molecular genetic cause of supravalvular aortic stenosis and the heart disease associated with Marfan syndrome has been clearly established. Impressive progress has been made in conotruncal defects, Holt-Oram syndrome, Alagille syndrome, and total anomalous pulmonary venous connection. In other areas, such as patent ductus arteriosus and atrioventricular septal defect, the findings are more preliminary. Taken as a whole, the prospect of understanding the genetic basis of congenital heart disease has never been better. Understanding the cause of congenital heart disease will provide new insights into both normal cardiac development and the pathophysiologic basis of congenital heart defects.
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PMID:New understandings in the genetics of congenital heart disease. 894 32

McKusick-Kaufman syndrome is a human developmental anomaly syndrome comprising mesoaxial or postaxial polydactyly, congenital heart disease and hydrometrocolpos. This syndrome is diagnosed most frequently in the Old Order Amish population and is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern with reduced penetrance and variable expressivity. Homozygosity mapping and linkage analyses were conducted using two pedigrees derived from a larger pedigree published in 1978. The PedHunter software query system was used on the Amish Genealogy Database to correct the previous pedigree, derive a minimal pedigree connecting those affected sibships that are in the database and determine the most recent common ancestors of the affected persons. Whole genome short tandem repeat polymorphism (STRP) screening showed homozygosity in 20p12, between D20S162 and D20S894 , an area that includes the Alagille syndrome critical region. The peak two-point LOD score was 3.33, and the peak three-point LOD score was 5.21. The physical map of this region has been defined, and additional polymorphic markers have been isolated. The region includes several genes and expressed sequence tags (ESTs), including the jagged1 gene that recently has been shown to be haploinsufficient in the Alagille syndrome. Sequencing of jagged1 in two unrelated individuals affected with McKusick-Kaufman syndrome has not revealed any disease-causing mutations.
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PMID:Genetic and physical mapping of the McKusick-Kaufman syndrome. 946 7

We have studied 92 patients with Alagille syndrome (AGS) to determine the frequency of clinical manifestations and to correlate the clinical findings with outcome. Liver biopsy specimens showed paucity of the interlobular ducts in 85% of patients. Cholestasis was seen in 96%, cardiac murmur in 97%, butterfly vertebrae in 51%, posterior embryotoxon in 78%, and characteristic facies in 96% of patients. Renal disease was present in 40% and intracranial bleeding or stroke occurred in 14% of patients. The presence of intracardiac congenital heart disease was the only clinical feature statistically associated with increased mortality (P <.001). Initial measures of hepatic function in infancy including absence of scintiscan excretion were not predictive of risk for transplantation or increased mortality. The hepatic histology of these AGS patients showed a significant increase in the prevalence of bile duct paucity (P =.002) and fibrosis (P <.001) with increasing age. Liver transplantation for hepatic decompensation was necessary in 21% (19 of 92) of patients with 79% survival 1-year posttransplantation. Current mortality is 17% (16 of 92). The factors that contributed significantly to mortality were complex congenital heart disease (15%), intracranial bleeding (25%), and hepatic disease or hepatic transplantation (25%). The 20-year predicted life expectancy is 75% for all patients, 80% for those not requiring liver transplantation, and 60% for those who required liver transplantation.
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PMID:Features of Alagille syndrome in 92 patients: frequency and relation to prognosis. 1005 85

Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) is the most common form of complex congenital heart disease, occurring in approximately 1 in 3000 live births. Evaluation of candidate loci in a large kindred segregating autosomal dominant ToF with reduced penetrance culminated in identification of a missense mutation (G274D) in JAG1, the gene encoding jagged1, a Notch ligand expressed in the developing right heart. Nine of eleven mutation carriers manifested cardiac disease, including classic ToF, ventricular septal defect with aortic dextroposition and isolated peripheral pulmonic stenosis (PPS). All forms of ToF were represented, including variants with pulmonic stenosis, pulmonic atresia and absent pulmonary valve. No individual within this family met diagnostic criteria for any previously described clinical syndrome, including Alagille syndrome (AGS), caused by haploinsufficiency for jagged1. All mutation carriers had characteristic but variable facial features, including long, narrow and upslanting palpebral fissures, prominent nasal bridge, square dental arch and broad, prominent chin. This appearance was distinct from that of unaffected family members and typical AGS patients. The glycine corresponding to position 274 is highly conserved in other epidermal growth factor-like domains of jagged1 and in those of other proteins. Its substitution in other proteins has been associated with mild or atypical variants of disease. These data support either a relative loss-of-function or a gain-of-function pathogenetic mechanism in this family and suggest that JAG1 mutations may contribute significantly to common variants of right heart obstructive disease.
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PMID:Familial Tetralogy of Fallot caused by mutation in the jagged1 gene. 1115 64

Alagille syndrome (AGS; OMIM 118450) is a complex dominantly inherited multisystem disorder involving the liver, heart, eyes, facies, skeleton, and other systems. Criteria for the clinical diagnosis have been established as the presence of bile duct paucity on liver biopsy in association with three of five major clinical findings (cholestasis, butterfly vertebrae, posterior embryotoxon, congenital heart disease, and facial features). Jagged1 has been identified as the AGS disease gene. Jagged1 is a large gene, with no mutational hot spots, making molecular testing difficult at this time. Other clinical features would prove helpful in establishing the diagnosis in the absence of molecular confirmation. Supernumerary digital flexion creases have been identified in 16/46 (35%) of AGS probands examined through the Alagille Syndrome Diagnostic Center at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Although digital abnormalities have been noted in AGS in the past, including short distal phalanges and fifth finger clinodactyly, digital crease abnormalities have never before been reported. Supernumerary digital creases have been reported in less than 1% of the general population. The presence of extra and missing digital creases in individuals with normal joint anatomy, their occurrence in several syndromes, and mouse in situ expression studies indicate that genetic factors contribute to digital crease formation. However, these factors are poorly understood. Hypotheses regarding the origin of flexion creases are discussed. The identification of supernumerary digital creases in one-third of AGS probands provides another diagnostic aid and allows for speculation of the role of Jagged1 in the molecular development of digital crease patterns.
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PMID:Supernumerary digital flexion creases: an additional clinical manifestation of Alagille syndrome. 1290 Sep 11

Alagille syndrome (AGS) was described more than 35 years ago as a genetic entity characterised by five major features: chronic cholestasis owing to paucity of interlobular bile ducts; peripheral pulmonary stenosis; butterfly like vertebral arch defect; posterior embryotoxon and peculiar facies. AGS has long been said to have a relative good prognosis but overall survival at twenty years averages 70%. Complex congenital heart disease and hepatic disease with or without liver transplantation contribute significantly to mortality. JAGGED1 has been identified as a responsible gene by demonstration of mutations in AGS patients. Studies of JAGGED1 expression pattern demonstrate that minor features and almost all the elements in the long list of manifestations described in AGS patients are not coincidental. This suggests that Alagille syndrome definition may be revisited in the light of JAGGED1 mutations.
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PMID:Alagille syndrome. 1242 Sep 16

We report on a 4-kg infant with Alagille syndrome and congenital heart disease consisting of atrial septal defect (ASD), patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), and severe peripheral pulmonic stenosis. He underwent successful orthotopic liver transplant along with catheter closure of the ASD and PDA using the Amplatzer device and placement of Palmaz stents in both pulmonary arteries.
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PMID:Successful combined orthotopic liver transplant and transcatheter management of atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, and peripheral pulmonic stenosis in a small infant with Alagille syndrome. 1253 May

Alagille syndrome (AGS) is an autosomal dominant genetic disorder characterized by chronic cholestasis, congenital heart disease, peculiar facies, butterfly-like vertebrae, and posterior embryotoxon. Liver dysfunction is the common presentation of AGS, and liver transplantation may be indicated. This study examines the outcome of living-related liver transplantation (LRLT) for AGS. Twenty patients with AGS (median age 5.0 years, range 0.6-12.9) underwent LRLT at Kyoto University Hospital between June 1990 and February 2002. Five potential donors were excluded because of paucity of intrahepatic bile ducts diagnosed by preoperative liver biopsy and one because of a hepatic vascular anomaly. The overall 5-year patient survival was 80.4%. Three patients died as the result of the following: complications related to surgery, heart failure caused by progressive pulmonary artery stenosis, and a graft with unsuspected bile duct paucity. Liver dysfunction was improved in all successful cases, and catch-up growth occurred in 90% of patients. LRLT is an efficacious treatment modality for AGS if donors are selected by cautious evaluation to rule out unsuspected bile duct paucity.
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PMID:Living-related liver transplantation for Alagille syndrome. 1282 28

The Alagille syndrome is one of the most common inherited disorders causing chronic liver disease during childhood. During the 1990s, 38 children with Alagille syndrome were evaluated at two pediatric centers in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Characteristic clinical, humoral, and cutaneous features were analyzed. The average age of diagnosis was 29 months old (range of between 2 months and 15 years). Cholestasis was evident in 92% of patients during the neonatal period. Family antecedents related to the syndrome were found in 18.5% of the patients. Peculiar facies developed in 85% of patients. Chronic cholestasis and pruritus were observed in all of the patients and jaundice was evident in 78%. Eighty-four percent of the patients had heart disease (pulmonary stenosis, intraauricular communication, intraventricular communication), 76% of them showed growth retardation, and vertebrae abnormalities were found in 63%. Embryotoxon appeared in 76% of patients, and renal disturbances in 21%. Eleven children (28%) had xanthomas, in the neck, elbows, palms, helixes, inguinal area, gluteus, and knees. The earliest findings appeared in the first months of life, and the latest at 5 years of age. The xanthomas located in the folds had a stony aspect. Cholesterol levels ranging from 220 to 1600 mg percentage (mg%) were demonstrated in all of the children with xanthomas. Liver transplantation was performed in seven of the patients (18.4%). Two of them died after this operation. The disappearance of xanthomas after transplantation was remarkable in all of the patients.
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PMID:Alagille syndrome: cutaneous manifestations in 38 children. 1566 Aug 89


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