Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Elastic fibers form a network that contributes to the elasticity and resilience of tissues such as the skin. Histopathologic and ultrastructural abnormalities in the elastic fibers have been observed in several diseases of the skin and other tissues. Recent cloning of several genes involved in elastic fiber architecture has lead to the approach of the study of elastic fiber genodermatoses through molecular analysis. However, in genodermatoses, such as pseudoxanthoma elasticum, many of the genes encoding elastic fiber components have been excluded by genetic linkage analysis. In recent years, mutations in several of the genes encoding elastic fiber proteins have been demonstrated in other diseases. These include mutations in the fibrillin 1 gene in the Marfan syndrome, and genetic linkage of congenital contractural arachnodactyly to fibrillin 2, and, most recently, demonstration of abnormalities in the Menkes syndrome gene in X-linked cutis laxa. The first disorders to involve mutations in the elastin gene itself are, surprisingly, cardiovascular and neurobehavioral disorders, such as supravalvular aortic stenosis and Williams syndrome. These findings suggest that additional, as yet undiscovered, components of the elastic fiber network in the skin may hold the key to unraveling the molecular basis of the elastin-related genodermatoses.
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PMID:Molecular pathology of the elastic fibers. 796 85

We report on the case of a child who presented with recurrent, multiple, and voluminous bladder diverticula. Bladder diverticula are defined as a herniation of the mucosa through the bladder muscle or the detrusor. Causes are numerous and diverticula can be classified into primary congenital diverticula (para-ureteral - or Hutch diverticula - and posterolateral diverticula); secondary diverticula (resulting from chronic mechanical obstruction or from neurological disease; and diverticula secondary to connective tissue or muscle fragility. The latter is seen in disease entities such as prune belly syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, cutis laxa syndrome, OHS (occipital horn syndrome), Menkes disease, and Williams-Beuren syndrome. In this patient, the cause of these diverticula was OHS, a genetic, recessive X-chromosome-linked syndrome, responsible for abnormal tissue caused by a disorder in copper metabolism. This case reminds us of the importance of pushing the diagnostic workup when presented with multiple and/or large bladder diverticula, and in particular to search for rare malformation syndromes after exclusion of an obstacle.
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PMID:[Multiple bladder diverticula caused by occipital horn syndrome]. 2638 12