Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hyperlipoproteinaemia, notably types II and IV, may give rise to various musculoskeletal disorders. Mono-, oligo- or polyarthritis, or even simple arthralgias, are often encountered in patients with severe type IIa hyperlipoproteinaemia, the most satisfactory tentative explanation for this being a microcrystalline pathology. Tendinitis is also frequent, particularly in children. The same manifestations have also been reported, although more occasionally, in type IV hyperlipoproteinaemia. Skeletal lesions, such as xanthoma or lipoma ossificans, are extremely rare. Other musculoskeletal disorders, including gout and aseptic osteonecrosis, are often associated with hyperlipidaemia. Some diseases may induce secondary hyperlipidaemia but have their own rheumatological manifestations. Finally, lipid-lowering drugs, such as fibrates and statines, sometimes induce disabling myalgias.
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PMID:[Hyperlipidemia and osteoarticular manifestations]. 185 98

The painting Mona Lisa in the Louvre, Paris, by Leonardo da Vinci (1503-1506), shows skin alterations at the inner end of the left upper eyelid similar to xanthelasma, and a swelling of the dorsum of the right hand suggestive of a subcutaneous lipoma. These findings in a 25-30 year old woman, who died at the age of 37, may be indicative of essential hyperlipidemia, a strong risk factor for ischemic heart disease in middle age. As far as is known, this portrait of Mona Lisa painted in 1506 is the first evidence that xanthelasma and lipoma were prevalent in the sixteenth century, long before the first description by Addison and Gall in 1851.
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PMID:Xanthelasma and lipoma in Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. 1532 39