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:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a hereditary episodic febrile syndrome that is expressed by acute spells of fever, painful manifestations in the abdomen, chest and joints, and slow development of nephropathic amyloidosis. Despite the recent cloning of the FMF gene (
MEFV
) and the identification of about 40 disease-related mutations, the diagnosis is still clinically dependent, and the pathogenesis and most of the clinical heterogeneity remain to be explained. Because episodic abdominal pain affects 95% of FMF patients, most of them are seen by gastroenterologists and undergo complete or partial abdominal imaging before the diagnosis is made. Focusing on recent advances in FMF, this article reviews both common and infrequent manifestations that a gastroenterologist may encounter during workups of FMF patients. These include episodic abdominal pain, paralytic or mechanical ileus, constipation, diarrhea, ascites,
malabsorption
, bowel infarction, and bleeding, arising directly from FMF or secondary to FMF common associations such as amyloidosis, vasculitides, inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, or colchicine side effects. This article will help the gastroenterologist to cope with most clinical situations related to the abdominal and alimentary tract in patients with FMF.
...
PMID:Abdominal and digestive system associations of familial Mediterranean fever. 1468 3
The progression of familial Mediterranean fever is marked by the recurrence, at varying intervals, of acute flares that regress spontaneously. Prognosis, which depends on the occurrence of amyloidosis, has been transformed by colchicine treatment. Incidence of amyloidosis is higher in certain ethnic groups (Jews from North Africa, Turks) and depends on by the specific
MEFV
mutation. Amyloid is composed of clusters of protein strands identical to the AA protein of secondary amyloidosis and infiltrates the walls of all arterioles except those of the central nervous system. The earliest and most consistent localization is in the kidney, where it develops over several years and in 4 stages--preclinical (latency), proteinuric, nephrotic and uremic--before concluding in end-state renal failure. Before the advent of colchicine, dialysis and transplantation, only renal amyloidosis caused clinical manifestations and lethal complications; any amyloidosis at any other sites remained latent. Prolonged survival with hemodialysis and kidney transplantation now leaves time for manifestation of these other localizations, such as infiltration into the intestines causing
malabsorption
, or potentially lethal cardiac lesions. Treatment of familial Mediterranean fever is based on the continuous administration of colchicine, which at the average dose of 1 to 2 mg per day can prevent flares or at least reduce their frequency or intensity. Systematic use of colchicine also prevents the onset of amyloidosis, even in the rare cases where it cannot prevent flares. These data fully justify the systematic use of colchicine for continuous prophylactic treatment from diagnosis and even after kidney transplantation, to prevent recurrence of the grafted kidney or extension to other organs. The curative efficacy of colchicine on flares is debatable, although several studies report positive results against progression of early amyloidosis.
...
PMID:[From familial Mediterranean fever to amyloidosis]. 1614 55