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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycogen storage disease type IV due to
branching enzyme
deficiency was found in an inbred family of Norwegian forest cats, an uncommon breed of domestic cats. Skeletal muscle, heart, and CNS degeneration were clinically apparent and histologically evident in affected cats older than 5 mo of age, but
cirrhosis
and hepatic failure, hallmarks of the human disorder, were absent. Beginning at or before birth, affected cats accumulated an abnormal glycogen in many tissues that was determined by histochemical, enzymatic, and spectral analysis to be a poorly branched alpha-1,4-D-glucan. Branching enzyme activity was less than 0.1 of normal in liver and muscle of affected cats and partially deficient (0.17-0.75 of normal) in muscle and leukocytes of the parents of affected cats. These data and pedigree analysis indicate that
branching enzyme
deficiency is a simple autosomal recessive trait in this family. This is the first reported animal model of human glycogen storage disease type IV. A breeding colony derived from a relative of the affected cats has been established.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage disease type IV: inherited deficiency of branching enzyme activity in cats. 133 88
Type IV glycogenosis is due to
branching enzyme
deficiency and is usually manifested clinically by progressive liver disease with
cirrhosis
and hepatic failure between the second and fourth years of life. We describe a 5-year-old boy who, following an acute febrile illness at 2 years of age, was first noted to have hepatomegaly with mildly elevated serum transaminase levels. Liver biopsy revealed hepatic fibrosis with periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions in hepatocytes and fibrillar inclusions characteristic of amylopectin by electron microscopy. Enzymatic assay revealed deficient hepatic
branching enzyme
activity with normal activity of glucose-6-phosphatase, debranching enzyme and phosphorylase activities. During the succeeding 3 years, he grew and developed normally with apparent resolution of any clinical evidence of liver disease and only intermittent elevation in serum transaminase levels associated with fever and prolonged fasting. Repeat liver biopsy at 4 years of age showed persistence of scattered hepatocellular periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions, but no progression of hepatic fibrosis in spite of persistent deficiency of hepatic
branching enzyme
activity. Skeletal muscle and skin fibroblasts from the patient also showed deficient enzyme activity. Skin fibroblasts from both parents exhibited half the normal control activity, suggesting a heterozygote state. This is the first documented patient with deficiency of
branching enzyme
but without evidence of progressive hepatic disease. This patient, coupled with reports of other patients with late onset hepatic or muscle disease with
branching enzyme
deficiency, suggests that the defect resulting in Type IV glycogen storage disease is more heterogenous and possibly more common than previously suspected.
...
PMID:A new variant of type IV glycogenosis: deficiency of branching enzyme activity without apparent progressive liver disease. 316 25
A neonate with deficiency of
branching enzyme
(glycogenosis type IV) presented symptoms of severe hypotonia pre- and postnatally, and dilated cardiomyopathy in early infancy. The classical clinical manifestation of
liver cirrhosis
was not present, although amylopectin-like inclusions were found in the hepatocytes. In contrast to a previous report, the neurons in the brain stem and spinal anterior horns contained PAS-positive, diastase-resistant deposits. The combined involvement of the muscles and motor neurones could account for the severity of hypotonia. The muscle biopsy, electromyogram and biochemical and enzyme assays were helpful in establishing the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Neonatal hypotonia and cardiomyopathy secondary to type IV glycogenosis. 805 7
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is an autosomal recessive disease resulting from deficient glycogen-
branching enzyme
(GBE) activity. The classic and most common form is progressive
liver cirrhosis
and failure leading to either liver transplantation or death by 5 yr of age. However, the liver disease is not always progressive. In addition, a neuromuscular type of the disease has been reported. The molecular basis of GSD-IV is not known, nor is there a known reason for the clinical variability. We studied the GBE gene in patients with various presentations of GSD-IV. Three point mutations in the GBE gene were found in two patients with the classical presentation: R515C, F257L, and R524X. Transient expression experiments showed that these mutations inactivated GBE activity. Two point mutations, L224P and Y329S, were detected in two separate alleles of a patient with the nonprogressive hepatic form. The L224P resulted in complete loss of GBE activity, whereas the Y329S resulted in loss of approximately 50% of GBE activity. The Y329S allele was also detected in another patient with the nonprogressive form of GSD-IV but not in 35 unrelated controls or in patients with the more severe forms of GSD-IV. A 210-bp deletion from nucleotide 873 to 1082 of the GBE cDNA was detected in a patient with the fatal neonatal neuromuscular presentation. This deletion, representing the loss of one full exon, was caused by a 3' acceptor splicing site mutation (ag to aa). The deletion abolished GBE activity. Our studies indicate that the three different forms of GSD-IV were caused by mutations in the same GBE gene. The data also suggest that the significant retention of GBE activity in the Y329S allele may be a reason for the mild disease. Further study of genotype/phenotype correlations may yield useful information in predicting the clinical outcomes.
...
PMID:Hepatic and neuromuscular forms of glycogen storage disease type IV caused by mutations in the same glycogen-branching enzyme gene. 861 47
Type IV glycogenosis is usually a rapidly progressive disease of early childhood, causing death before 4 years of age. It is characterized by hepatosplenomegaly,
cirrhosis
, and chronic hepatic failure. Muscle involvement is generally overshadowed by liver disease. A mild non-infantile variant of type IV glycogenosis has been described in a few patients. In some of them, the patients suffered foremost from chronic progressive myopathy. We here report on a female patient aged 51 years who had experienced difficulties in climbing stairs for 2 years due to leg weakness. EMG revealed a myopathic pattern. The muscle biopsy findings revealed polyglycosan bodies. Biochemical investigation showed absence of
branching enzyme
in muscle but not in leukocytes and fibroblasts.
...
PMID:A mild adult myopathic variant of type IV glycogenosis. 866 68
The classic clinical presentation for type IV glycogen storage disease (
branching enzyme
deficiency, GSD IV) is hepatosplenomegaly with failure to thrive occurring in the first 18 months of life, followed by progressive liver failure and death by age 5 years. Although there have been two patients without apparent liver progression previously reported, no long-term follow-up clinical data have been available. We present here the clinical spectrum of the non-progressive liver form of GSD IV in four patients, and long-term follow-up of the oldest identified patients (ages 13 and 20 years). None has developed progressive
liver cirrhosis
, skeletal muscle, cardiac or neurological involvement, and none has been transplanted. Branching enzyme activity was also measured in cultured skin fibroblasts from patients with the classic liver progressive, the early neonatal fatal, and the non-progressive hepatic presentations of GSD IV. The residual
branching enzyme
activity in the patients without progression was not distinguishable from the other forms and could not be used to predict the clinical course. Our data indicate that GSD IV does not always necessitate hepatic transplantation and that caution should be used when counselling patients regarding the prognosis of GSD IV. Patients should be carefully monitored for evidence of progression before recommending liver transplantation.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory findings in four patients with the non-progressive hepatic form of type IV glycogen storage disease. 883 Jan 77
Type IV glycogenosis (polyglucosan body disease) is a rare congenital autosomal recessive inherited disorder, caused by lack of the
branching enzyme
(amylo-1,4-1,6 transglucosidase). This deficiency leads to storage of abnormal glycogen (polyglucosan bodies) in the liver and other tissues. The clinical onset of the disease is insidious with non-specific gastrointestinal symptoms followed by progressive hepatic failure. Usually patients die due to
hepatic cirrhosis
within 4 years. Sometimes myopathy of the heart and skeletal muscle is also present. In these cases, the clinical onset is often later than in typical cases. We report on two brothers with primarily cardiac manifestation and late onset of the disease. The older one started to suffer from progressive dilated cardiomyopathy at the age of 18 years, presenting with severe heart failure, hepatosplenomegaly, ascites and peripheral oedema. He also demonstrated myopathy and muscular atrophy especially of the shoulder and lower limbs. Initially he improved on medical therapy, but one year later severe heart failure recurred followed shortly afterwards by sudden cardiac death. Right heart and skeletal muscle biopsies were performed while he was alive. These, as well as the autopsy, revealed massive accumulation of polyglucosan bodies. In both heart and skeletal muscle, complete
branching enzyme
deficiency could be proven. His 14-year-old brother showed similar clinical findings of mild dilated cardiomyopathy. His muscle biopsy also revealed polyglucosan body myopathy. Thus, in young patients presenting with congestive cardiomyopathy, type IV glycogenosis has to be considered in the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:A new variant of type IV glycogenosis with primary cardiac manifestation and complete branching enzyme deficiency. In vivo detection by heart muscle biopsy. 888 67
Type IV glycogenosis or Andersen disease is characterized by a deficiency in
branching enzyme
. This rare disease is exceptionally seen at birth. The clinico-pathological data are then typical: severe hypotonia with hypoventilation and cellular storage, without any hepatosplenomegaly. The stored material is PAS positive, sometimes made of crystals and appeared birefringent under polarized light. Granulo-filamentous inclusions are shown by electron microscopy, essentially observed in muscle and liver without
cirrhosis
. Death occurs rapidly. The present case was typical. It is the eleventh reported case in the literature.
...
PMID:[Congenital variant of type IV glycogenosis. Anatomoclinical report of a case]. 909 Sep 36
Deficiency of
glycogen branching enzyme
activity causes glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV). Clinically, GSD-IV has variable clinical presentations ranging from a fatal neonatal neuromuscular disease, to a progressive
liver cirrhosis
form, and to a milder liver disease without progression. Current methods for prenatal and postnatal diagnosis are based on an indirect method of measuring the enzyme activity, which has a limited sensitivity and cannot be used to distinguish patients with these variable clinical phenotypes. In this study, a GSD-IV family with a non-progressive hepatic form of the disease requested prenatal diagnosis. Determination of the
branching enzyme
activity in cultivated amniocytes showed 20 per cent residual activity overlapping with the level detected in the heterozygotes. Mutation analysis revealed that the fetus carried two mutant alleles, L224P and Y329S, the same as the proband of this family. The fetus was predicted to be affected and postnatally his clinical presentation is consistent with the diagnosis. We conclude that DNA mutation analysis should be used in the prenatal diagnosis of GSD-IV, especially in the situation of high residual enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of glycogen storage disease type IV using PCR-based DNA mutation analysis. 1052 41
Glycogen storage disease type IV or Andersen disease is an autosomal recessive disorder due to deficiency of
glycogen branching enzyme
. Typically, glycogen storage disease type IV presents with rapidly progressive
liver cirrhosis
and death in childhood. Variants include a cardiopathic form of childhood, a relatively benign myopathic form of young adults, and a late-onset neurodegenerative disorder (adult polyglucosan body disease). A severe neuromuscular variant resembling Werdnig-Hoffmann disease has also been described in two patients. The objective was to describe two additional infants with the neuromuscular variant and novel mutations in the GBE1 gene. Branching enzyme assay, Western blot, RT-PCR and sequencing were performed in muscle biopsies from both patients. The cDNA of patient 1 was subcloned and sequenced to define the mutations. Muscle biopsies showed accumulation of periodic acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant storage material in both patients and increased lysosomal enzyme activity in patient 1. Branching enzyme activity in muscle was negligible in both patients, and Western blot showed decreased
branching enzyme
protein. Patient 1 had two single base pair deletions, one in exon 10 (1238delT) and the other in exon 12 (1467delC), and each parent was heterozygous for one of the deletions. Patient 2 had a large homozygous deletion that spanned 627 bp and included exons 8-12. Patient 1, who died at 41 days, had neurophysiological and neuropathological features of Spinal Muscular Atrophy. Patient 2, who died at 5(1/2) weeks, had a predominantly myopathic process. The infantile neuromuscular form of glycogen storage disease type IV is considered extremely rare, but our encountering two patients in close succession suggests that the disease may be underdiagnosed.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile neuromuscular presentation of glycogen storage disease type IV. 1501 3
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