Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since skeletal muscle is an important source of precursor for gluconeogenesis, it would not be surprising if carbohydrate metabolism was altered in some muscle disorders. We report a 7-10/12-year-old white male with congenital muscular dystrophy whose recurrent episodes of vomiting and dehydration were due to fasting hypoglycemia. He was found to have a blood glucose of 21 mg/dl with an episode of vomiting and dehydration. Diagnostic fasting replicated the symptoms and hypoglycemia. Associated laboratory findings included hypoalaninemia, ketonemia, and acidosis. With use of frequent feedings, there were no further episodes over 1-9/12 years of observation. To our knowledge this is the first report of hypoglycemia complicating muscular dystrophy. However, hypoglycemia may not be diagnosed because of the nonspecific nature of the symptoms. Hypoglycemia should be considered when children with reduced muscle mass develop otherwise unexplained vomiting.
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PMID:Hypoglycemia in a child with congenital muscular dystrophy. 292 68

Hypernatremia has occasionally been observed in patients with myotonic muscular dystrophy (MyD). To elucidate the possibility of osmoregulatory dysfunction, we investigated hypothalamo-posterior pituitary function as well as serum electrolytes in eight patients with MyD. Blood samples were obtained early in the morning after overnight dehydration. Renal function was estimated by blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine and creatinine clearance. Posterior pituitary function was evaluated by direct measurement of plasma vasopressin (AVP) during a 5% hypertonic saline infusion. Plasma AVP concentrations were determined by sensitive radioimmunoassay. In five patients, circulating blood volume (CBV), plasma renin activity (PRA) and serum aldosterone (S-Aldo.) were also measured. The mean serum sodium level (143.9 +/- 1.7mEq/1: Mean +/- SD) was significantly higher than in the controls (139.4 +/- 2.2mEq/1). A 5% hypertonic saline infusion showed a subnormal increase in AVP and diminished thirst, despite sufficient elevation of plasma osmolality, in all patients as compared with healthy adults. Renal function was intact. Biochemical evidence of dehydration, estimated by PRA, S-Aldo and CBV, was unremarkable in four of the five patients. These findings suggest that patients with MyD have neurogenic disorders of osmoregulation in addition to previously reported endocrine abnormalities. Impaired AVP secretion in response to osmotic stimuli and reduced thirst might be responsible for such failure.
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PMID:[Impaired vasopressin secretion in patients with myotonic dystrophy]. 328 99

Myotubularin and myotubularin-related proteins are evolutionarily conserved in eukaryotes. Defects in their function result in muscular dystrophy, neuronal diseases and leukemia in humans. In contrast to the animal lineage, where genes encoding both active and inactive myotubularins (phosphoinositide 3-phosphatases) have appeared and proliferated in the basal metazoan group, myotubularin genes are not found in the unicellular relatives of green plants. However, they are present in land plants encoding proteins highly similar to the active metazoan enzymes. Despite their remarkable structural conservation, plant and animal myotubularins have significantly diverged in their functions. While loss of myotubularin function causes severe disease phenotypes in humans it is not essential for the cellular homeostasis under normal conditions in Arabidopsis thaliana. Instead, myotubularin deficiency is associated with altered tolerance to dehydration stress. The two Arabidopsis genes AtMTM1 and AtMTM2 have originated from a segmental chromosomal duplication and encode catalytically active enzymes. However, only AtMTM1 is involved in elevating the cellular level of phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphate in response to dehydration stress, and the two myotubularins differentially affect the Arabidopsis dehydration stress-responding transcriptome. AtMTM1 and AtMTM2 display different localization patterns in the cell, consistent with the idea that they associate with different membranes to perform specific functions. A single amino acid mutation in AtMTM2 (L250W) results in a dramatic loss of subcellular localization. Mutations in this region are linked to disease conditions in humans.
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PMID:Divergent functions of the myotubularin (MTM) homologs AtMTM1 and AtMTM2 in Arabidopsis thaliana: evolution of the plant MTM family. 2232 91