Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Iron overload diseases are due to a progressive increase in total body iron stores that leads to deposition of iron in parenchymal organs and to subsequent damage to these organs. The commonest inherited form of iron overload is hereditary hemochromatosis (HH), an autosomal recessive disorder affecting the white population. Although in the western world and in northern Europe the majority of cases of HH are associated with an HFE gene mutation (C282Y and H63D), there are families with a familial iron overload disorder in whom neither the C282Y nor the H63D mutations were found. Recently, other forms of HH that are not related to HFE, but are due to mutations in genes coding iron transport proteins (ferroportin-1, TfR2, hepcidin) have been described. The clinical presentation of the disorder is highly variable, depending on the severity of iron overload. In fact, the inappropriate absorption and deposition of dietary iron may result in the development of hepatic and non-hepatic end-organ injury, leading to liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, diabetes, arthritis, skin pigmentation and cardiac diseases. HH and its sequelae are preventable with an early diagnosis and treatment. Patients with evidence of iron overload, a family history of HH or other risk factors should be screened by genotype testing for the HFE mutation. Nowadays, HH is recognized as being a complex genetic disease with probable significant environmental and genetic modifying factors, such as hepatitis C virus infection and alcohol abuse, and it has been shown that HFE mutations represent an independent risk factor for fibrosis and cirrhosis in chronic hepatitis C.
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PMID:[Iron overload disease: recent findings]. 1552 41

Since the discovery of HFE gene in 1996, considerable progress has been made concerning the iron-metabolism and its major abnormalities. Five types of hereditary hemochromatosis are actually known: type 1 (HFE gene), type 2A (HJV gene), type 2B (HAMP gene), type 3 (TfR2 gene), type 4 (SLC40A1 gene). The HFE C282Y +/+ mutation is responsible for the most frequent type of hemochromatosis in France. Various secondary causes can lead to iron-overload: associated genetic diseases, exogenous iron intake, thalassaemia and refractory anaemia, hepatic siderosis, alcoholic hepatitis, cutaneous porphyria and cirrhosis. The deleterious consequences of iron-overload are due to the interactions of the environmental factors. The role of HFE heterozygote mutations is still discussed. In clinical practice, the interpretation of a serum ferritin increase is a frequent problem that needs a careful evaluation based on the tranferrin saturation measurement. Significant increase of both these factors is in favour of an HFE C282Y +/+ hemochromatosis, after exclusion of a hepatocellular insufficiency or a refractory anaemia. Nevertheless, high ferritin is not always a marker of iron-overload. Thus, there are many disorders increasing the serum ferritin levels without iron overload : cytolysis (hepatic...), inflammatory or infectious syndromes, high alcohol intake, neoplasia... Looking for HFE mutations help to separate type 1 hemochromatosis from other conditions mainly hepatic siderosis (metabolic disorders). The identification of rare types of hemochromatosis (types 2-4) is only required in particular cases. The evaluation of the iron overload is now based on hepatic MRI determination rather than liver biopsy. Repeated phlebotomies remain the essential way to decrease the iron overload in HFE hemochromatosis and to prevent the occurrence of severe and irreversible complications (cirrhosis, arthropathies, cardiac failure, and diabetes). Because of the link established between the amount of iron-overload and the occurrence of complications and the mortality over-risk in HFE C282Y +/+ hemochromatosis, venesections must be started when serum ferritin is higher than 300 microg/l in man and 200 microg/l in woman, whatever the clinical manifestations are and obviously before the symptomatic phase of the disease.
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PMID:[Hereditary and acquired iron overload]. 1737 75