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:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a 16-member black kindred with
Fabry's disease
, four hemizygous males had plasma alpha-galactosidase levels less than 6% and seven heterozygous females had plasma alpha-galactosidase levels between 10% and 50% of normal. A 16-year-old index male had
hypertension
with left ventricular hypertrophy, abnormal renal function, tortuous retinal veins, "myelin" inclusions in bone marrow macrophages, and intraepithelial inclusion bodies in the kidney. Scrotal angiectasia developed a year after diagnosis. The three other affected males had left ventricular hypertrophy and retinal vein tortuosity. Of the seven carrier females, five had frequent headaches, four had retinal vessel changes, three had proteinuria with normal renal function, and two had bundle-branch blocks on ECGs. There was no deuteranomalopia in this family, although the inheritance pattern of the
Fabry
gene is X-linked recessive.
...
PMID:Fabry's disease in a black kindred. 22 50
Among many metabolic disorders, porphyrias and
Fabry disease
are known to affect autonomic nervous system. In patients with acute intermittent porphyria, hereditary coproporphyria, and variegate porphyria, autonomic symptoms such as abdominal pain, vomiting,
hypertension
and tachycardia are among the most prominent clinical manifestations.
Fabry disease
is clinically characterized by severe limb pain, hypohidrosis, angiokeratomas and various autonomic symptoms. In both porphyrias and
Fabry disease
, pathological changes in the central and peripheral autonomic nervous system have been documented. In porphyrias, a loss of myelinated fibers, axonal degeneration, and segmental demyelination in peripheral autonomic nerves as well as chromatolysis of several brain stem nuclei have been found. In
Fabry disease
, abnormal amount of the substrates of alpha-galactosidase, i.e. ceramide di- and trihexoside, are found to be accumulated in the central and peripheral autonomic nerves.
...
PMID:[Autonomic dysfunction in metabolic diseases]. 161 65
The present communication describes a 22 year-old male with clinical, biochemical and histopathological signs of
Fabry's disease
(FD). This is the second case of FD reported in Mexico. The main clinical manifestations of this patient were during puberty: intermittent weakness, acroparesthesias and hypohidrosis. At age 21 he developed heavy proteinuria (7-12 g/day)
systemic hypertension
and moderate renal failure. The kidney biopsy showed the typical alterations described in FD. On light microscopy, the renal pathology showed numerous vacuolated epithelial cells in the glomerular wall, giving them a "foamy" appearance; vacuolization was due to the presence of lipid material within these cells and in the interstitium. In electron microscopy, dense, irregularly shaped osmiophilic, laminated bodies with myelinlike configuration, were seen within the glomerular epithelial cells and in the urinary spaces. The low alfa-galactosidase activity in serum (0.18 nmol/h/mL normal values: 12.8) confirmed the diagnosis. Our findings in this case indicate that patients with FD may start with renal symptoms alone, which were full blown nephrotic syndrome,
hypertension
and moderate renal failure.
...
PMID:[Nephropathy in a case of Fabry's disease]. 166 22
Clinical courses and histopathological changes of four patients with
Fabry's disease
were discussed in this report. All of them were male and revealed to have angiokeratomas of the skin and markedly decreased activity of alpha-galactosidase--A in leukocytes. They were from different families. No consanguinity was noted. Two of them, around 40 years of age, showed rapid impairment of renal function with simultaneously development of
hypertension
, progressing to uremia within several months. Their light and electron microscopic findings in renal biopsies were similar: severe degenerative changes in muscle cells of small arteries and arterioles with remarkable swelling of intima, and multiple sclerosing and collaptic lesions in glomeruli. The other 2 patients were about 20 years old and their renal functions were almost normal. No significant changes but fine vacuolization of epithelial cells of glomeruli were observed in renal biopsy specimens. It is concluded that marked degenerative changes in the vessels due to
Fabry's disease
might be the principal etiology of
hypertension
and rapid deterioration of renal function.
...
PMID:[Clinico-pathological features in four patients with Fabry's disease. The possible role of degenerative lesions in the interstitial vessels in renal dysfunction]. 211 57
A case of clinically apparent
angiokeratoma corporis diffusum
(
Fabry's disease
) in an adult female carrier is presented. The patient had biochemical evidence of the disease, and showed multiple cutaneous lesions, in the absence of other major organ involvement. Ultrastructural examination of tissue fragments obtained by skin biopsies demonstrated the presence of a few typical electron-dense lamellar structures in endothelial cells, but not in smooth muscle cells. Electron microscopy proved to be the only effective way of detecting the intracytoplasmic inclusions, since light-microscopic histochemistry failed to reveal small amounts of the stored glycolipid. The exclusive involvement of endothelial cells suggests that they are more prone to store glycolipid than are all other types of cells usually involved in the disease. The abundance of intermediate filaments in the cytoplasm of endothelial cells is related exclusively to the
high blood pressure
in angiomatous arteriovenous shunts.
...
PMID:Angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Fabry's disease) with unusual features in a female patient. Light- and electron-microscopic investigation. 284 64
Clinical and experimental data indicate that glomerular function and morphology may be influenced by plasma lipids. In familial lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase (LCAT) deficiency and in
Fabry's disease
, lipids accumulate in glomeruli and are assumed to induce sclerosis. The present study was undertaken to examine if dietary lipids could exert effects on the glomeruli of normal, unilaterally nephrectomized rats, and of rats with two-kidney, one clip (2-K,1C)
hypertension
. In rats with two kidneys on a diet rich in fat and cholesterol, cholesterol concentrations in very low density lipoproteins increased. In these rats the number of glomeruli with sclerotic foci was significantly higher than in rats on a low fat, cholesterol free diet. After 6 months on the diet the percentage of glomeruli with sclerosis (SC) was 13.2 +/- 4.1 (N = 9) in rats with a cholesterol diet and 1.8 +/- 0.6 (N = 11) in control rats (p less than 0.05). The fat and cholesterol diet exacerbated glomerular lesions in the remnant kidney model of uninephrectomized rats. The sclerosis in rats with only one kidney was 38.2 +/- 9.5 (N = 6) on a cholesterol diet compared with 8.7 +/- 3.0 (N = 6) in control rats after 6 months (p less than 0.05). After 3 to 4 months on a fat rich diet cholesterylester was increased in isolated glomeruli. The composition of the dietary lipids influenced the development of glomerular lesions. A linseed oil diet that is rich in unsaturated fatty acids, especially linolenic acid, did not cause major plasma lipid abnormalities and was accompanied by a low sclerosis (1.2 +/- 0.3; N = 9) for rats with two kidneys. In rats with chronic 2-K, 1C
hypertension
the percentage of glomeruli with partially sclerosed tufts in the unclipped kidney was significantly higher on a fat and cholesterol diet (F) than on a control diet (N) (SC: diet F 31.0 +/- 4.0, N = 13; diet N 12.2 +/- 2.6, N = 12; P less than 0.05). In the clipped kidney, protected against the arterial
hypertension
, only an increased number of glomeruli with mesangial expansion was noted in rats with the cholesterol diet. Glomerular hemodynamic factors seem to play an important pathogenetic role in the induction of glomerular sclerosis by a lipid rich diet. The fact that dietary lipids can aggravate glomerular lesions in states of arterial
hypertension
and nephron loss may have implications for the progression of renal disease in humans.
...
PMID:Induction of glomerulosclerosis by dietary lipids. A functional and morphologic study in the rat. 292 82
Cardiovascular manifestations of
Fabry's disease
were studied clinically in 10 hemizygous males and 13 heterozygous females. Mitral valve prolapse was found in 5 of 9 hemizygotes and in 5 of 13 heterozygotes examined by echocardiography. Ordinary medical examinations revealed cardiomyopathy in some asymptomatic females, and the diagnosis of the
Fabry
heterozygote was established by demonstration of specific inclusion bodies in the biopsied myocardium and low alpha-galactosidase activity in leukocytes. Renovascular hypertension of juvenile onset and thromboembolism were also found in 7 patients. It was concluded that
Fabry's disease
should always be considered in cases of mitral valve prolapse, cardiomyopathy, renovascular
hypertension
and thrombosis of unknown etiology, and that the
Fabry
patients should be followed carefully for the early detection of cardiovascular involvements in this disease.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular manifestations in Fabry's disease. A high incidence of mitral valve prolapse in hemizygotes and heterozygotes. 308 63
A patient is described, admitted to the clinic on the occasion of proteinuria, edemas and arterial
hypertension
. The clinical and paraclinical data formed the picture of a renal involvement of mainly glomerular type with proteinuria to 5 gr%0, nonselective type, edemas,
hypertension
and data of chronic renal insufficiency I degree (serum creatinine to 3.8%, blood urea to 112 mg%). What impresses are the extrarenal manifestations as paresthesia of the lower limbs, with a sense of numbness to acute burning pain, a rich psychonervous symptomatics. The skin efflorescence, followed up and observed at the clinic of dermatology and the puncture biopsy material from the kidney revealed specific signs of
Fabry
syndrome.
...
PMID:[Case of Fabry's disease]. 681 15
This report concerns an 18-year-old boy who is hemizygote for
Fabry's disease
. Varying degrees of nonpulsating headache crises, lasting from a few hours to several days, began when he was 16 years of age. Painful crises in the extremities, characteristic of
Fabry's disease
, were not present. Although only occasional, he had several episodes of throbbing headache with vomiting without aura. The meningeal signs were equivocal, although the patient had noninfectious pleocytosis, intracranial
hypertension
, delayed radioisotope clearance on cisternography, and multiple old cerebral infarcts. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antidepressants, carbamazepine, and glycerol were of no benefit for his headache. Although its mode of action remains obscure, prednisolone was effective for treating the headache and the aseptic meningeal reaction.
...
PMID:Headache associated with aseptic meningeal reaction as clinical onset of Fabry's disease. 759 47
Hyperlipidemia and lipoprotein abnormalities are often encountered in patients with nephrotic syndrome or chronic renal disease and also in those undergoing haemodialysis and with renal transplant. Even though the significance of lipid deposition in renal tissue and the role of lipoproteins in the pathogenesis of renal disease in man is unclear, experimental and clinical data indicate a possible damaging effect of a disturbed lipid metabolism on the kidney. In humans, glomerular lipid deposition is observed in genetic diseases such as
Fabry's disease
, lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity (LCAT) deficiency and arteriohepatic dysplasia, and in diseases with acquired disturbance of lipid metabolism such as nephrotic syndrome and cholestatic liver disease. Studies on animals with lupus nephritis, aminonucleoside nephrosis, reduced renal mass, diabetes mellitus or
systemic hypertension
have shown that cholesterol can increase the incidence of glomerulosclerosis. As most of these studies have been performed in the rat, which has a different lipoprotein profile to that of man, these results should be carefully interpreted with regard to their relevance for humans. In vitro cell culture studies on human glomerular cells have given some preliminary insights into the cellular mechanisms of lipid induced glomerular damage. Apo E-containing lipoproteins, which are pathologically elevated in many renal diseases, are avidly taken up by human mesangial cells. These cells seem to play a central role in the initiation of glomerulosclerosis by inducing proliferation and production of excess extracellular matrix. Lipoproteins are able to stimulate DNA synthesis in these cells, and increase the synthesis of mitogens and extracellular matrix protein. The pathogenic role of oxidized lipoproteins has not yet been defined. Human mesangial cells do not seem to take up these modified lipoproteins. However, macrophages infiltrate glomeruli and may constitute the stimulus for the generation of minimally modified lipoproteins and their cellular uptake. The data from animal experiments suggest that treatment that corrects hyperlipidemia may have an ameliorative effect on renal function. Thus, there are strong indications that lipoproteins may play a critical role in mediating the development of glomerulosclerosis.
...
PMID:The role of lipids in nephrosclerosis and glomerulosclerosis. 794 52
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>