Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 9-year-old girl with juvenile Gaucher disease underwent splenectomy and allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Her HLA-identical brother with normal cerebroside-
beta-glucosidase
activity served as donor. One month after transplantation, cerebroside-
beta-glucosidase
activity in the lymphocytes were normal. Plasma glucosylceramide normalized already after splenectomy and further decreased after marrow transplantation. Glucosylceramide in the erythrocytes was normal around a year after transplantation. The
enlarged liver
normalized in size by 2 years. Gaucher cells were still present in the bone marrow 1 year after transplantation but had completely disappeared at 3 years. The patient has grown 29 cm during the 5 years that have passed after transplantation compared to 1 cm/year during 3 years before. The patient has a slight obstructive ventilatory impairment, and chest deformities have appeared. Wechsler intelligence scale performance has slowly decreased after transplantation. This may be caused by continued neuronal storage of glucosylceramide. Otherwise, this patient is active and healthy 5 years after bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of the first successful bone marrow transplantation in Gaucher disease. 313 56
Gaucher disease, a condition transmitted by autosomal recessive inheritance, results from a genetic defect in
beta-glucosidase
, an enzyme which degrades sphingolipids. Deficiency in
beta-glucosidase
leads to accumulation of its substrate, glycosylceramide, in macrophages and, in the more severe cases, in neurons. Clinically, splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
, bone destruction, cytopenia, and in some cases, central neurological lesions develop. Three phenotypes have been described according to the absence (type 1) or presence of neurological involvement (type 2: severe, type 3: intermediate severity). The disease occurs in patients of all ethnic origins but type 1 is particularly well known in Ashkenese Jews and type 3 is found in the Swedish province of Norrbottnie. About forty mutations of the
beta-glucosidase
gene have been identified. Four account for 80% of the known mutations (1226G, 1448C, 84GG, IVS2+1). Residual enzyme activity of mutant
beta-glucosidase
explains some of the phenotypic variations. The phenotype resulting from the 1226G mutation has sufficient enzyme activity for degradation of gangliosides in the brain, explaining the absence of neurological involvement in patients with this allele. Treatment is based on enzyme supplemention: blood parameters return to normal and the volume of the spleen and liver are greatly reduced after 6 months. In infants with very severe disease, bone marrow graft may be used.
...
PMID:[Gaucher disease]. 874 84
The non-random association of Gaucher disease with polyclonal and monoclonal gammopathy has been known since 1950. The effect of treatment on monoclonal gammopathy is not well documented. We report on the long-term evolution of a biclonal gammopathy in a patient with type I Gaucher disease who was treated with splenectomy and enzyme replacement therapy. A 44-year-old man presented with
hepatomegaly
and massive splenomegaly. Bone marrow aspirate contained typical Gaucher cells and
beta-glucosidase
was low in peripheral blood leukocytes. Mutations N370S and R120W were detected. Serum protein electrophoresis disclosed two spikes in gammaglobulins. Immunofixation identified two monoclonal components: IgG kappa and IgA kappa. Gammaglobulin concentration was 31.6 g/L. A splenectomy was performed on September 2003 because of massive splenomegaly (9500 g). Two months after the splenectomy, gammaglobulin concentration was 25.2 g/L. Enzyme replacement therapy (Cerezyme 45 UI/kg every two weeks) was prescribed from April 2004 because of significant
hepatomegaly
and cholestasis. In April 2007 (3 years after the beginning of treatment), serum electrophoresis showed the persistence of two spikes with gammaglobulin concentration at 20.5 g/L. Simultaneously, chitotriosidase activity decreased from 6181 to 2877 nkat/L. Our observation and previous reports suggest that enzyme replacement therapy is more effective in polyclonal hypergammaglobulinaemia than in monoclonal gammopathy.
...
PMID:Effect of treatment on biclonal gammopathy associated with Gaucher disease. 1787 46