Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain dominates the lives of many patients with hyperlaxity syndromes, most commonly the Benign
Joint Hypermobility
Syndrome (BJHS/EDS). As a result they may experience psychosocial problems, which in many cases severely affects their healthy functioning. Above all is the overriding chronic pain in joints, muscles and ligaments, which arises from an inherent predisposition to the effects of everyday trauma, but other factors such as associated osteoarthritis or fibromyalgia are also important. There may also be neurophysiological factors at play producing nociceptive enhancement. Pain and distress of visceral origin can result from laxity of connective tissue within or providing support for the abdominal, thoracic or pelvic viscera leading to
hernia
, uterine and/or rectal prolapse, mitral valve prolapse or spontaneous pneumothorax. In children joint hyperlaxity is an important (and often unrecognised) source of rheumatic symptoms, which may be ignored or erroneously ascribed to juvenile idiopathic arthritis. The management of pain and distress in the hyperlaxity syndromes requires skill, patience, compassion and understanding. Often the results of conventional anti-rheumatic therapy (including anti-rheumatic drugs and surgery) as applied to other rheumatic diseases are disappointing and innovative approaches are required. Amongst these, for which evidence of efficacy is available, are physiotherapeutic and orthotic stabilisation of hyperlax joints, proprioceptive enhancement and the newer pain management techniques including cognitive behavioural therapy.
...
PMID:Pain, distress and joint hyperlaxity. 1087 11
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) dermatosparaxis type (type VIIC) and the related disease of cattle dermatosparaxis, are recessively inherited connective tissue disorders, caused by a deficient activity of procollagen I N-proteinase, the enzyme that excises the N-terminal propeptide in procollagen type I, type II, and type III. Although well documented in cattle, to date only seven human cases have been recorded, most of them aged under 2 years. We document the natural history of three patients with EDS dermatosparaxis type, two of whom have been reported before the age of 2 years, and one new patient. The phenotype of the patients, and especially the facial resemblance, is striking, making this a clinically recognizable condition. The most consistent anomalies during the first years of life are premature rupture of the membranes, extreme skin fragility and easy bruising, large fontanels, blue sclerae, puffy eyelids, micrognathia, umbilical
hernia
, and short fingers.
Joint hypermobility
becomes more important with age. The children are at risk for rupture of internal organs due to soft tissue fragility, as is illustrated by different internal events in two of the three patients described here. Orofacial features include micrognathia, a frontal open bite, and gingival hyperplasia with varying degrees of hyperkeratosis. The deciduous dentition shows abnormal morphology of the molars, obliteration of the tooth pulp, and severe enamel attrition. The permanent dentition shows agenesis and microdontia of several teeth. Tooth discoloration, dysplastic roots, and tooth pulp obliteration are present in a restricted number of permanent teeth.
...
PMID:The natural history, including orofacial features of three patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, dermatosparaxis type (EDS type VIIC). 1538 1
We report recessive mutations in the gene for the latent transforming growth factor-beta binding protein 4 (LTBP4) in four unrelated patients with a human syndrome disrupting pulmonary, gastrointestinal, urinary, musculoskeletal, craniofacial, and dermal development. All patients had severe respiratory distress, with cystic and atelectatic changes in the lungs complicated by tracheomalacia and diaphragmatic
hernia
. Three of the four patients died of respiratory failure. Cardiovascular lesions were mild, limited to pulmonary artery stenosis and patent foramen ovale. Gastrointestinal malformations included diverticulosis, enlargement, tortuosity, and stenosis at various levels of the intestinal tract. The urinary tract was affected by diverticulosis and hydronephrosis.
Joint laxity
and low muscle tone contributed to musculoskeletal problems compounded by postnatal growth delay. Craniofacial features included microretrognathia, flat midface, receding forehead, and wide fontanelles. All patients had cutis laxa. Four of the five identified LTBP4 mutations led to premature termination of translation and destabilization of the LTBP4 mRNA. Impaired synthesis and lack of deposition of LTBP4 into the extracellular matrix (ECM) caused increased transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) activity in cultured fibroblasts and defective elastic fiber assembly in all tissues affected by the disease. These molecular defects were associated with blocked alveolarization and airway collapse in the lung. Our results show that coupling of TGF-beta signaling and ECM assembly is essential for proper development and is achieved in multiple human organ systems by multifunctional proteins such as LTBP4.
...
PMID:Mutations in LTBP4 cause a syndrome of impaired pulmonary, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, musculoskeletal, and dermal development. 1983 10