Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We describe a family in which two males and seven females have brown pigmentation of the skin. In the females, the type and distribution of the pigmentation mimicked incontinentia pigmenti; in the males, the pattern was reticulate. The histological appearance was the same in both sexes with amyloid deposits in the papillary dermis, melanin in the basal layer, and slight hyperkeratosis. The females were otherwise normal. Both males had thrived poorly as infants but had survived. One had severe gastroenteritis with blood in the stools starting at the age of three weeks followed by seizures, hemiplegia, and developmental delay; the other had recurrent pneumonia throughout life, a urethral stricture, inguinal herniae, and near-blindness from amyloid deposition in the cornea. Five other males in the family had had severe illnesses. Two died of pneumonia by three months. One died at three months from colitis. Both remaining boys had colitis as infants, failed to thrive, and developed recurrent pneumonia from which one died at three years. We think all of these relatives had the same disease carried by a single gene with pleiotropic effects. The most likely form of inheritance is X-linked.
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PMID:Familial cutaneous amyloidosis with systemic manifestations in males. 679 69

Fabry's disease is a rare familial disorder of glycolipid metabolism which is caused by a deficiency of a lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase. A Finnish family is described in which cornea verticillata was found in the father and 2 daughters. In all cases, there were symptoms suggesting Fabry's disease: febrile episodes the origin of which was not clear, limb pains and, in the case of the father, 20 years of proteinuria with elevated ESR, and hemiplegia and aphasia following a cerebral thrombosis at the age of 43. The diagnosis was confirmed by demonstration of an alpha-galactosidase deficit in the serum and urine of all patients. Deficiency of this enzyme leads to abnormally high urinary tri- and dihexosyl ceramide levels, and this was observed in the father and the elder daughter. At the age of 12, the daughter had loss of vision in her right eye as a result of occlusion of the central retinal artery. Electron microscopic (EM) examination of the father's dermal angioma suggested Fabry's disease. Computerized cranial tomography of the father revealed not only the cerebrovascular condition but also a disease affecting the white matter of the brain.
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PMID:Fabry's disease and cornea verticillata. A report of 3 cases. 679 29