Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We investigated the metabolic effects of omega-6 (safflower oil) and omega-3 (fish oil) fatty acid-enriched diets (65% carbohydrate, 20% fat) in two patients with a syndrome of diabetes mellitus, lipodystrophy, acanthosis nigricans, chylomicronemia, and abdominal pain. 3H-glycerol was used to evaluate triglyceride-rich lipoprotein-triglyceride (TRLP-TG) metabolism, and changes in glucose and insulin dynamics were also studied. On the omega-6 diet, both subjects demonstrated four- to five-times normal rates of TRLP-TG production and glycerol biosynthesis, and striking decrements in the fractional catabolic rate (FCR) for TRLP-TG and TRLP-particles. Both subjects had elevations in nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) concentrations. In one patient, the omega-3 diet markedly decreased serum triglycerides and newly synthesized triglyceride glycerol production, in association with a fall in NEFA. In both subjects, plasma glycerol reutilization for triglyceride synthesis, normal on the omega-6 diet, was abolished on the omega-3 regimen. Plasma postheparin lipolytic activity was normal on both diets. On the omega-3 diet, xanthomas and hepatomegaly decreased and, in the patient who had no reduction in serum triglycerides, pancreatitis attacks virtually ceased. Mean 24-hour serum glucose levels were higher, and both basal and peak C-peptide responses to a carbohydrate meal were blunted on the omega-3 diet. One patient became ketonuric. We conclude the cause of hypertriglyceridemia in these patients was due to increased lipid synthesis and hypothesize that this is secondary to high plasma concentrations of NEFA. In addition, an omega-3 diet in these subjects inhibited insulin secretion and worsened glucose tolerance.
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PMID:Lipodystrophic diabetes mellitus. Investigations of lipoprotein metabolism and the effects of omega-3 fatty acid administration in two patients. 305 Mar 65

A girl presented with small stature, obesity, tapetoretinal degeneration, deafness, psychomotor regression, seizures, acanthosis nigricans, hepatomegaly, and chronic tubulointerstitial nephropathy. She died at age ten with renal insufficiency and uncontrolled seizures. Histochemistry showed lipid storage in hepatocytes, histiocytes, smooth muscles and, to a much lesser extent, kidney tubules and cortical neurons. The liver had increased cholesterol esters (5-fold) and triacylglycerols (8-fold), and decreased phospholipids (50%). Methyllumbelliferyl-oleate, oleylcholestrol, trioleylglycerol, and tripalmitylglycerol lipase activities were markedly reduced in the liver, in the range found in Wolman's disease. In cirrhotic fatty livers these activities ranged from 7-87% of the normal mean. The patient's brain had limited neutral lipid storage and normal methyllumbelliferyl-oleate lipase. Trioleylglycerol lipase activity was 14-60% of controls; tripalmitylglycerol lipase activity 14-25% of controls; and oleylcholestrol lipase activity 12-33% of controls.
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PMID:Neutral lipid storage with acid lipase deficiency: a new variant of Wolman's disease with features of the Senior syndrome. 715 65

A 26-year-old woman developed partial lipoatrophy 12 years after juvenile dermatomyositis was diagnosed. Renal function was normal, but she had other features typically associated with partial lipoatrophy, including hepatomegaly, acanthosis nigricans, hypertrichosis, and hyperinsulinemia.
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PMID:Juvenile dermatomyositis associated with partial lipoatrophy. 843 56

Generalized lipodystrophy is a rare condition which can be divided into congenital and acquired types, based on the age at presentation and pattern of inheritance. The congenital type of generalized lipodystrophy or Lawrence-Seip syndrome presents in first two years of life and is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern. The diagnosis is made on the basis of loss of body fat, muscular hypertrophy, acanthosis nigricans, hirsutism, hepatomegaly with fatty liver, hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia with insulin resistance. A 2 1/2-year-old Thai girl with the clinical features of Lawrence-Seip syndrome is reported. Abnormal platelet function was detected in this girl.
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PMID:Congenital generalized lipodystrophy, a case report. 862 39

Congenital generalized lipodystrophy, or Berardinelli-Seip syndrome (BSCL), is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by a near-absence of adipose tissue from birth or early infancy and severe insulin resistance. Other clinical and biological features include acanthosis nigricans, hyperandrogenism, muscular hypertrophy, hepatomegaly, altered glucose tolerance or diabetes mellitus, and hypertriglyceridemia. A locus (BSCL1) has been mapped to 9q34 with evidence of heterogeneity. Here, we report a genome screen of nine BSCL families from two geographical clusters (in Lebanon and Norway). We identified a new disease locus, designated BSCL2, within the 2.5-Mb interval flanked by markers D11S4076 and D11S480 on chromosome 11q13. Analysis of 20 additional families of various ethnic origins led to the identification of 11 families in which the disease cosegregates with the 11q13 locus; the remaining families provide confirmation of linkage to 9q34. Sequence analysis of genes located in the 11q13 interval disclosed mutations in a gene homologous to the murine guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein), gamma3-linked gene (Gng3lg) in all BSCL2-linked families. BSCL2 is most highly expressed in brain and testis and encodes a protein (which we have called seipin) of unknown function. Most of the variants are null mutations and probably result in a severe disruption of the protein. These findings are of general importance for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying regulation of body fat distribution and insulin resistance.
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PMID:Identification of the gene altered in Berardinelli-Seip congenital lipodystrophy on chromosome 11q13. 1147 39

Seventeen children with congenital generalized lipodystrophy or Berardinelli-Seip Congenital Lipodystrophy (BSCL) from 12 consanguineous sibships were observed in Oman. All children had widespread absence of adipose tissue from infancy together with apparent muscle hypertrophy and hepatomegaly. They did not appear to represent a single homogenous entity, and it was possible to subclassify the cases into two distinct groups. In the first group of seven cases, the features were similar to other published cases with acanthosis nigricans, raised insulin levels, and insulin resistance. In this group, there was an association between the degree of acanthosis nigricans and the severity of the disorder. Molecular analysis of these cases showed homozygosity at the BSCL2 locus on chromosome 11q13 in four of the seven cases. In the second group of ten cases, there were striking abnormalities in both skeletal and nonskeletal muscle. Reduced exercise tolerance and percussion myoxedema were observed in skeletal muscle, while infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis, prominent veins (phlebomegaly), disturbance of cardiac rhythm, and cardiomyopathy were observed in nonskeletal muscle. There was evidence against homozygosity in some cases for the known loci for BSCL, and this group may represent a new clinical syndrome with lipodystrophy at a different genetic location.
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PMID:Heterogeneity for congenital generalized lipodystrophy in seventeen patients from Oman. 1211 29

We present clinical descriptions, metabolic features, and patterns of body fat loss of 16 patients with acquired generalized lipodystrophy (AGL) seen by us over the last 10 years. In addition, we review 63 cases of AGL reported in the literature. Based on these data, we propose new diagnostic criteria for AGL, the essential criterion being selective loss of body fat from large regions of the body occurring after birth. We also propose a subclassification of AGL into 3 varieties, type 1, the panniculitis variety; type 2, the autoimmune disease variety; and type 3, the idiopathic variety, which affect nearly 25%, 25%, and 50% of patients, respectively. Most of the patients presented in childhood and adolescence. Females were affected approximately 3 times more than males. Subcutaneous fat loss was severe and usually affected the face, trunk, abdomen, and extremities. In some patients, fat loss also involved the palms and soles and intraabdominal region; however, the bone marrow and retroorbital fat were preserved in all patients. Clinically, patients may have voracious appetite, fatigue, and acanthosis nigricans. Hepatomegaly was common, mostly due to hepatic steatosis. Most AGL patients had fasting and/or postprandial hyperinsulinemia, diabetes mellitus, hypertriglyceridemia, and low serum levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, leptin, and adiponectin. Diabetes mellitus and hypertriglyceridemia were less prevalent in the panniculitis variety compared with the idiopathic and autoimmune varieties. The management of AGL includes cosmetic surgery for loss of fat. Severe hypertriglyceridemia should be treated with a very low-fat diet and omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation from fish oils. Management of diabetes is difficult and may necessitate insulin therapy in large doses. Insulin sensitizers such as metformin and thiazolidinediones have been used, although their long-term efficacy and safety remain unknown. Subcutaneous administration of recombinant leptin in AGL patients with hypoleptinemia effectively improves hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and hepatic steatosis. Leptin therapy, however, remains investigational. Fibrates alone or in combination with statins may be used to treat hypertriglyceridemia.
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PMID:Clinical features and metabolic derangements in acquired generalized lipodystrophy: case reports and review of the literature. 1264 Jan 89

Lipodystrophies represent a group of diseases characterized by altered body fat repartition and major metabolic alterations with insulin resistance. Genetic forms of partial lipodystrophy are currently recognized as two syndromes with subcutaneous lipoatrophy but preserved or increased fat at the level of face and neck (Dunnigan syndrome or FPLD due to LMNA mutations) and/or abdomen (PPARgamma-linked forms) and are both transmitted as dominant diseases. FPLD is further characterized by muscular hypertrophy, hyperandrogenism, acanthosis nigricans, hepatomegaly with steatosis and at the biological level, marked hypertriglyceridaemia, low HDL cholesterol, insulin resistance and altered glucose tolerance or diabetes. These signs occur after puberty and their prevalence and severity are more marked in female than in male patients. At the genetic level, LMNA mutations concern in most cases the type-A lamin C-terminal domain and more than 80% are heterozygous substitutions located at position 482 (R482W/Q/L). The other locations are G465D, K486N, R582H and R584H. The presence of signs evocative of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy has been reported in patients with typical forms of FPLD. In addition, forms presenting with lipodystrophy and myopathy have been reported for patients with mutations at position R28W, R60G, R62G or R527P. In addition, lipodystrophy, either partial or generalized, can be associated with syndromes of premature ageing like Hutchinson-Gilford progeria or acromandibular dysplasia, but also with other phenotypes, as we described in a patient bearing the LMNA R133L heterozygous substitution.
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PMID:A-type lamin-linked lipodystrophies. 1577 53

Congenital generalized lipodystrophy (CGL) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by near complete absence of adipose tissue since birth and insulin resistance. The diagnosis is made on the basis of lack of body fat, muscular hypertrophy, acanthosis nigricans, hirsutism, hepatomegaly with fatty liver, hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia with insulin resistance. We describe a 4-year-old Chinese girl with the clinical features of CGL.
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PMID:Congenital generalized lipodystrophy in a 4 year old Chinese girl. 1626 43

Generalized congenital lipodystrophy or Berardinelli-Seip Syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive condition characterized by the absence of adipose tissue and eventually a defect in leptin synthesis. Affected subjects tend to show a classical phenotype with acromegaloid appearance, generalized atrophy of subcutaneous adipose tissue with muscular hypertrophy, acanthosis nigricans, hepatomegaly and prominent abdomen. From metabolic point of view and as a consequence of leptin absence, hypertriglyceridemia leading to hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance may appear. Two cases of unrelated subjects affected of generalized congenital lipodystrophy are presented. Both developed difficult-to-manage diabetes mellitus and were treated with high doses of insulin. In both cases early microvascular complications were present. A mutation for LMNA gene was found in one of the subjects.
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PMID:[Difficult to manage diabetes mellitus associated with generalized congenital lipodystrophy. Report of two cases]. 2142 30


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