Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (hemoglobinopathies)
2,704 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anastomoses between vessels of the fundus may occur as congenital malformations or secondary to vascular diseases affecting the eye. Congenital anastomoses can be of the racemose hemangioma type, with severe malformation of the retinal vessels, ocular complications, and neurologic manifestations, or as simple A-V shunts with visual impairment but limited tendency to show other ocular or neurologic involvement. These anastomoses must be distinguished from other vascular malformations like telangiectasis (Leber, Coats) or the angiomatous lesions of von Hippel's disease. Secondary anastomoses may be confined to the retinal vessels or involve chorioretinal connections. Retinal anastomoses occur in vascular disorders like retinal vein occlusions, diabetes, periphlebitis and hemoglobinopathies. They are often amenable to treatment by light coagulation. Chorioretinal anastomoses occur whenever Bruch's membrane is destroyed by traumatic, inflammatory, degenerative or physical (light coagulation) influences. Light coagulation may be the appropriate treatment, although complications are not rare.
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PMID:[Vascular anastomoses at the posterior pole of the eye (author's transl)]. 54 20

The various etiologies of spontaneous hemarthrosis in adolescents and adults are reviewed: they include systemic diseases and local or regional disorders of the bones or joints. Among systemic diseases, the two main causes are coagulation disorders and hemoglobinopathies. Coagulation disorders may be either acquired (leukemia, thrombopenia, and hypoprothrombinemia induced by anticoagulant drugs with hemarthrosis being one of the major complications) or inherited (hemophilia which is not considered here, von Willebrand disease, and congenital thrombopathies). Hemoglobinopathies, particularly sickle-cell disease, are responsible for hemarthrosis in a few patients. Among local or regional disorders of the bones or joints, tumors such as hemangioma or synovial sarcoma are uncommon causes. Hemarthrosis is the main feature of pigmented villonodular synovitis. Hemarthrosis may occur in degenerative and metabolic diseases: while it is extremely rare in arthritis, it is frequently encountered in articular chondrocalcinosis which is the first diagnosis to consider when hemarthrosis occurs in an elderly patient. The search for an etiology, which is often difficult, should include a review of prior illnesses, a study of coagulation, and local clinical, radiological and biological investigations, with a study of the synovial fluid; in some instances, arthroscopy, synovial biopsy and even surgical exploration are required. Management includes rest, analgesics, antiinflammatory drugs and, above all, arthrocentesis which is essential for the prevention of articular damage and functional sequellae. Specific therapy is dependent on the etiology. In recurrent hemarthrosis, isotopic synoviorthesis may ensure lasting resolution of the effusion.
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PMID:[Spontaneous hemarthrosis in adolescents and adults, excluding hemophilia]. 629 20

Our experience at the Ramathibodi Hospital with 20 infants and children who had Aeromonas septicemia is reviewed. Their ages were from 1 day to 14 years. Eighteen patients had underlying diseases: leukemia, 5; aplastic anemia, 4; cirrhosis, 2; thalassemia/hemoglobinopathy, 3; renal failure, 1; ileal perforation, 1; marasmus, 1; and cavernous hemangioma with thrombocytopenia, 1. Blood cultures yielded Aeromonas hydrophila in all patients, and four patients had polymicrobial bacteremia. Fifteen episodes of septicemia were community-acquired and five were hospital-acquired. The clinical manifestations of these patients were similar to septicemia due to other Gram-negative enteric bacilli. Two patients each had ecthyma gangrenosum, necrotizing fasciitis and meningitis. Antibiotic treatment included penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim. The overall case fatality rate was 50%; eight of the nine patients with acute leukemia or aplastic anemia died. With the exception of one child the blood cultures were sterile in all patients before death. Aeromonas septicemia is an uncommon but severe infection which occurs predominantly in compromised hosts.
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PMID:Aeromonas septicemia in infants and children. 672 2

Leg ulcers of juvenile onset are uncommon. The infectious origin is fairly frequent but the presence of leg ulcers in children should prompt an investigation into possible underlying causes especially hemangioma, vasculitis, inborn errors of metabolism (i.e. prolidase deficiency), hemoglobinopathies, occult spinal dysraphism and immunodeficiencies. Bacteriological investigations are essential and a skin biopsy specimen may be able to differentiate some of these disorders.
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PMID:[Particular aspects of ulcers in children]. 941 52