Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Myocardial calcification has been rarely described in premature infants after myocardial infarction and myocarditis with coxsackievirus B1. In adults and older children, metastatic myocardial calcification has been reported in chronic renal failure. We report a case of myocardial calcification in a 680-gm preterm infant after a prolonged course of renal failure complicated by secondary hyperparathyroidism. Subclinical myocardial injury was evidenced by a high serum creatine phosphokinase MB band concentration, which probably provided a susceptible substrate for the deposition of calcium crystals, because the multiplication product of serum calcium and inorganic phosphorus levels transiently exceeded 75 mg x mg/100 ml, indicating serum saturation during the course of secondary hyperparathyroidism. We report this case as an unusual complication of renal immaturity in extremely low birth weight infants and an indication of a relatively intact parathyroid glandular function in them. Hypoxia, myocardial dysfunction, and renal failure are common complications in such infants, and in the presence of renal failure, the serum levels of calcium and inorganic phosphorus should be maintained below the pathologic level to avoid ectopic calcification of the tissues, including the myocardium.
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PMID:Myocardial calcification in an extremely low birth weight infant with chronic renal failure and secondary hyperparathyroidism. 851 2

LoxP-Cre technology was used to remove the selenocysteine tRNA gene, trsp, in either endothelial cells or myocytes of skeletal and heart muscle to elucidate the role of selenoproteins in cardiovascular disease. Loss of selenoprotein expression in endothelial cells was embryonic lethal. A 14.5-day-old embryo had numerous abnormalities including necrosis of the central nervous system, subcutaneous hemorrhage and erythrocyte immaturity. Loss of selenoprotein expression in myocytes manifested no apparent phenotype until about day 12 after birth. Affected mice had decreased mobility and an increased respiratory rate, which proceeded rapidly to death. Pathological analysis revealed that mice lacking trsp had moderate to severe myocarditis with inflammation extending into the mediastinitis. Thus, ablation of selenoprotein expression demonstrated an essential role of selenoproteins in endothelial cell development and in proper cardiac muscle function. The data suggest a direct connection between the loss of selenoprotein expression in these cell types and cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Selenoprotein expression is essential in endothelial cell development and cardiac muscle function. 1714 41