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)

Macroscopic and light microscopic features of regional ischemic infarcts of retina in autopsy eyes are described. Lesions were found throughout life span, most patients having significant primary or secondary vascular disease (younger had systemic hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, vasculitis or sickle hemoglobinopathy; most older patients had arteriosclerosis). Diabetes mellitus and infarction of other organs (including brain) also were common. Topographically almost all lesions were found in posterior fundus; most were temporal and involved anatomical macula. Microscopically there was destruction of inner retinal layers with preservation of outermost cells of inner nuclear layer; occasionally ganglion cell layer was relatively spared.
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PMID:Regional ischemic infarcts of the retina. 108 10

A kindred with a familial hemoglobinopathy and familial primary pulmonary hypertension with autosomal dominant transmission has been identified. Affected family members were obvious from their cyanosis due to a reduced affinity for oxygen by the hemoglobin variant. The mother and one child had clinical pulmonary hypertension, whereas two siblings had cyanosis and preclinical pulmonary vascular disease as evidenced by abnormal perfusion lung scans and elevated levels of fibrinopeptide A in the face of normal pulmonary hemodynamics. In one, pulmonary hypertension could be induced with exercise. The studies on this family support the hypothesis that primary pulmonary hypertension may be initiated by abnormalities of the pulmonary vascular bed that predispose to in situ thrombosis. The possible common genetic transmission of the two diseases offers the speculation that the gene that confers predisposition to pulmonary hypertension may be located near the gene responsible for beta globulin.
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PMID:Familial pulmonary hypertension in association with an abnormal hemoglobin. Insights into the pathogenesis of primary pulmonary hypertension. 170 27

Five patients with classic hemophilia were found to have primary pulmonary hypertension, a disorder not previously recognized in this population. All patients had had their coagulation disorder treated for 10 years or more with self-administered lyophilized concentrates of factor VIII, and all had antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Primary pulmonary hypertension was confirmed by histologic means at autopsy in one patient and by lung biopsy findings in another. In the other three patients, the findings are in agreement with this diagnosis. No patient had underlying cardiac or pulmonary disease, or clinical or pathologic evidence of collagen-vascular disease, vasculitis, parasitic disorders, hemoglobinopathy, or exposure to anorexigenic agents. Whether the primary pulmonary hypertension was related to treatment with lyophilized factor VIII, or to the presence of antibodies to HIV, or both, is unknown.
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PMID:Primary pulmonary hypertension in patients with classic hemophilia. 280 26

In an effort to clarify the features of hepatic dysfunction in sickle cell disease, we obtained serial tests of liver function in 100 consecutive patients with sickle cell anemia and in 30 consecutive patients with hemoglobinopathy SC during a five-year period. There were 32 patients with chronic abnormalities in tests of liver function. These abnormal tests were explained by a variety of lesions in 30 cases, and the liver disease remained unexplained in only 2 patients who declined liver biopsy. The diagnoses in these 30 patients included hepatitis, chronic passive congestion, common duct obstruction, alcoholic liver disease, pregnancy, collagen-vascular disease, and sarcoidosis. Evidence for hepatitis B infection was present in 19 of those with sickle cell anemia and in 6 of those with hemoglobinopathy SC. The bilirubin levels in sickle cell anemia appeared to have a trimodal distribution, with six patients exhibiting markedly elevated levels of indirect bilirubin suggesting a difference in bilirubin metabolism. There was no evidence of liver disease in 72 patients with sickle cell anemia, nor in 24 patients with hemoglobinopathy SC, as these patients exhibited only mild elevation of their serum indirect bilirubin levels owing to chronic hemolysis. Intrasinusoidal sickling and Kupffer cell erythrophagocytosis were nearly universal findings at liver biopsy, irrespective of the clinical disorder, and were not related to the degree of liver test abnormalities. Liver and biliary tract dysfunction in sickle cell disease have been attributed to anoxia secondary to sinusoidal obstruction by sickled erythrocytes and Kupffer cell erythrophagocytosis. However, some causes of liver disease in sickle cell patients can be explained by clinical disorders other than the hemoglobinopathy alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Liver involvement in sickle cell disease. 403 12

Although pulmonary hypertension is frequently mentioned as a complication of the sicklemic state, careful review of the medical literature revealed only a single subject in whom cardiac catheterization data substantiated this diagnosis. In two additional patients, both clinical and autopsy findings of pulmonary vascular disease and cor pulmonale were described, although no hemodynamic studies had been performed. We have therefore detailed the clinical history, cardiac catheterization results, and autopsy findings in three previously undescribed patients. These three patients, along with the three case reports culled from the medical literature, from the substance of this review. Pulmonary hypertension should be suspected in patients with sickle hemoglobinopathy in whom either fixed dyspnea or unexplained syncope develops. Early in the course of the disease, right heart catheterization remains the only way to establish the diagnosis with certainty. Noninvasive studies such as chest x-ray, electrocardiography, and echocardiography tend to be nondiagnostic until late in the course of right ventricular failure. Although specific therapy has yet to be defined, the ominous prognosis of this complication of sickle hemoglobinopathy supports the application of experimental modalities such as continuous oxygen therapy, partial exchange transfusion, or even limited phlebotomy.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension and cor pulmonale in the sickle hemoglobinopathies. 714 75

Cerebral infarction before the age of 45 years accounts for 4-6% of all strokes. The etiology remains unexplained in a significant proportion of patients even after extensive investigations. The reported risk factors of this age group are cardiopathies, hypertension, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, reduction of anticoagulant proteins, hypercoagulable states, antiphospholipid antibodies primary syndrome, antiphospholipid antibodies secondary syndrome, some hemoglobinopathies, hyperviscosity syndromes, vasculitis, collagen vascular diseases, fibromuscular dysplasia, arterial dissections, migraine, myopathy encephalopathy lactic acidosis stroke like episodes, homocystinuria, familial amyloid angiopathy, microangiopathy with retinopathy encephalopathy and deafness, systemic lupus erythematosus, use of cocaine, traumas or manipulations of neck, AIDS. From 1/1/94 to 04/30/95 we observed 19 patients with cerebral infarctions and 9 patients with transitory ischemic attacks in young people. The aim of our study was to apply a diagnostic protocol by sequential tests of first level and second level. According to this protocol we found that the more common risk factors were ischemic cardiopathy, hypertension, smoking and hypercholesterolemia. Moreover we observed other independent risk factors, although less frequent, like the antiphospholipid antibodies, neurolupus, AIDS, deficit of protein S.
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PMID:[The application of a new diagnostic protocol for stroke in the young]. 876 46

Thrombo-embolic events, which can be increased after splenectomy in hemoglobin disorders, can cause potentially lethal complications. Although venous thrombosis has been reported, arterial strokes are rarely reported. A case of stroke in a 52-year-old patient with a previously performed splenectomy for known hemoglobin Madrid, an extremely unstable hemoglobinopathy, led us to investigate the possible causal role of splenectomy. The patient had no history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, smoking, or other vascular risk factors--but upon autopsy, thrombotic angiopathy was observed in multiple organs, including the lung, liver, kidney, coronary artery and brain. Bone marrow hyperplasia was also observed. A thrombotic middle cerebral artery territory infarction appears to have been caused by chronic recurrent thrombosis, which may have been a result of the splenectomy for unstable hemoglobinopathy. This case supports that splenectomy be strongly considered as an uncommon risk factor for stroke.
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PMID:Stroke induced by splenectomy in hemoglobin Madrid: autopsy clues to the underlying mechanism. 1574 2

Moyamoya angiopathy is a well-known complication of sickle cell disease but has rarely been observed in other hemoglobinopathies. The authors describe a previously unreported association of hemolytic anemia due to a rare unstable hemoglobinopathy with abnormal oxygen affinity (Hb Alesha) and moyamoya syndrome in a 10-year-old girl. At age 4 she had recurrent migraine-with-aura-like symptoms. Cranial MRI, Doppler, and EEG examinations were not conclusive. Deterioration of her neurologic symptoms prompted a renewed EEG examination at 10 years of age, which revealed a re-buildup phenomenon. MRI and MR angiography now showed moyamoya angiopathy with stenotic and occlusive lesions of both internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries. Conventional angiography confirmed these findings. Reperfusion with three extra-intracranial bypasses terminated the transient ischemic attacks. The authors suggest that chronic hypoxemia may be the cause of occlusive moyamoya angiopathy in Hb Alesha and possibly other unstable hemoglobinopathies with altered oxygen affinity.
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PMID:Moyamoya syndrome associated with hemolytic anemia due to Hb Alesha. 1609 27

Modern health care has greatly increased longevity for patients with congenital hemolytic anemias (such as sickle cell disease and thalassemia) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. It is estimated that 10% of patients with hemoglobinopathies and 0.5% of patients with HIV infection develop moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension. Pulmonary hypertension is a relentlessly progressive disease leading to right heart failure and death. Worldwide, there are an estimated 30 million patients with sickle cell disease or thalassemia and 40 million patients with HIV disease. Considering the prevalence of pulmonary vascular disease in these populations, sickle cell disease and HIV disease may be the most common causes of pulmonary hypertension worldwide. In this review, the available data on epidemiology, hemodynamics, mechanisms, and therapeutic strategies for these diseases are summarized. Because therapy is likely to reduce morbidity and prolong survival, efforts to screen, diagnose, and treat these patients represent a global health opportunity.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension: an increasingly recognized complication of hereditary hemolytic anemias and HIV infection. 1846 Jun 61

Pulmonary vascular disease (PVD) is a significant global health problem and accounts for a substantial portion of cardiovascular disease in the developing world. Although there have been considerable advances in therapeutics for pulmonary arterial hypertension, over 97% of the disease burden lies within the developing world where there is limited access to health care and pharmaceuticals. The causes of pulmonary arterial hypertension differ between industrialized and developing nations. Infectious diseases-including schistosomiasis human immunodeficiency virus, and rheumatic fever-are common causes of PVD, as are hemoglobinopathies, and untreated congenital heart disease. High altitude and exposure to household air pollutants also contribute to a significant portion of PVD cases. Although diagnosis of pulmonary arterial hypertension requires the use of imaging and invasive hemodynamics, access to equipment may be limited. PVD therapies may be prohibitively expensive and limited to a select few. Prevention is therefore important in limiting the global PVD burden.
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PMID:The burden of pulmonary hypertension in resource-limited settings. 2566 81


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