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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD) is a lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) due to
alpha-galactosidase A
(alpha-Gal A) deficiency and the resultant accumulation of incompletely metabolised glycosphingolipids (GSLs), primarily globotriosylceramide (Gb(3)), within various tissues. It is an X-linked multisystem disorder characterised by progressive renal insufficiency, with added morbidity from cardio- and cerebrovascular involvement, and associated with significant impact on quality of life and diminished lifespan. The disease manifests primarily in hemizygous males; however, there is increasing recognition that heterozygous (carrier) females may also develop disease-related complications, although onset among affected women may be delayed. Until recently, treatment has been limited to symptomatic management of
pain
and other measures to alleviate the problems associated with end-stage complications from renal, cardiac and nervous system involvement. The availability of the recombinant enzyme offers the potential of a safe and effective targeted treatment approach. At the moment, two distinct enzyme formulations are approved in Europe (and in other countries) and both continue to undergo FDA evaluation in the US. Increasing knowledge of the natural history of AFD and greater experience with enzyme therapy should enable optimal patient care. The relative rarity and complexity of AFD necessitates a multi-disciplinary team approach that may be facilitated by a centralised registry.
...
PMID:Advances in the management of Anderson-Fabry disease: enzyme replacement therapy. 1189 Aug 71
Fabry disease (FD, OMIM 301500) is an X-linked inherited disorder of metabolism due to mutations in the gene encoding
alpha-galactosidase A
, a lysosomal enzyme. The enzymatic defect leads to the accumulation of neutral glycosphingolipids throughout the body, particularly within endothelial cells. Resulting narrowing and tortuosity of small blood vessels lead to tissue ischaemia and infarction. Inability to prevent the progression of glycosphingolipid deposition causes significant morbidity (acroparesthesia, angiokeratoma, autonomic dysfunction, cardiomyopathy and deafness), and mortality from early onset strokes, heart attack and renal failure in adulthood. Demonstration of
alpha-galactosidase A
deficiency in leukocytes or plasma is the definitive method for the diagnosis of affected hemizygous males. Most heterozygotes present with a cardiac, renal or neurological symptomatology, although to a lesser extent than what is observed in hemizygotes. Due to random X-chromosomal inactivation, enzymatic detection of carriers is often inconclusive. Molecular testing of possible carriers is therefore mandatory for accurate genetic counselling. The GLA gene has been cloned and more than 200 mutations have been identified. Medical management is symptomatic and consists of partial
pain
relief with analgesic drugs (gabapentin, carbamazepine), whereas renal transplantation or dialysis is available for patients experiencing end-stage renal failure. However, the ability to produce high doses of
alpha-galactosidase A
in vitro has opened the way to clinical studies and enzyme replacement therapy has recently been validated as a therapeutic agent for FD patients in clinical trials. Long term safety and efficacy of replacement therapy are currently being investigated.
...
PMID:[Fabry's disease (alpha-galactosidase-A deficiency): physiopathology, clinical signs, and genetic aspects]. 1236 Jul 45
Fabry disease (FD, OMIM 301500) is an X-linked inherited disorder of metabolism due to mutations in the gene encoding
alpha-galactosidase A
, a lysosomal enzyme. The enzymatic defect leads to the accumulation of neutral glycosphingolipids throughout the body, particularly within endothelial cells. Resulting narrowing and tortuosity of small blood vessels with endothelial dysfunction lead to tissue ischaemia and infarction. Inability to prevent the progression of glycosphingolipid deposition causes significant morbidity and mortality from early onset strokes, cardiomyopathy and renal failure in adulthood. Medical management is symptomatic and consists of partial
pain
relief with analgesic drugs (gabapentin, carbamazepine), antihypertensive drugs, whereas renal transplantation or dialysis is available for patients experiencing end-stage renal failure. However, the ability to produce high doses of
alpha-galactosidase A
in vitro has opened the way to preclinical studies in the mouse model, and to the development of the first clinical trials in patients with Fabry disease. Enzyme replacement therapy has recently been validated as a therapeutic agent for Fabry disease patients. Long term safety and efficacy of replacement therapy are currently being investigated. Substrate deprivation and gene therapy may also prove future alternative therapeutic options.
...
PMID:[Fabry's disease (alpha-galactosidase-A deficiency): recent therapeutic innovations]. 1236 Jul 47
Fabry disease is an X-linked inherited disorder of metabolism due to mutations in the gene encoding
alpha-galactosidase A
, a lysosomal enzyme. The enzymatic defect leads to the systemic accumulation of incompletely metabolised glycosphingolipids, primarily globotriaosylceramide, in plasma and lysosomes within various tissues. Inability to prevent the progression of glycosphingolipid deposition causes significant morbidity, associated with significant impact on quality of life and diminished lifespan from early onset strokes, heart attack and progressive renal failure. The disease manifests primarily in hemizygous males; however, there is increasing recognition that heterozygous (carrier) females may also develop disease-related complications. Indeed, most heterozygotes present with cardiac, renal or neurological symptoms, although with later-onset and to a lesser extent than is observed in hemizygotes. Until recently, medical management was symptomatic, consisting of partial
pain
relief with analgesic drugs (carbamazepin, gabapentin), kidney and vascular protection with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, statins and folic acid, whereas renal transplantation or dialysis is available for patients experiencing end stage renal failure. The ability to produce high doses of
alpha-galactosidase A
has opened the way to preclinical studies, and enzyme replacement therapy has recently been validated as a therapeutic agent in clinical trials. Long-term safety and efficacy of replacement therapy are currently being investigated. Increasing knowledge of the natural history of Fabry disease and greater experience with enzyme therapy should enable optimal patient care. The complexity and relative rarity of Fabry disease necessitates a multi-disciplinary team approach that may be facilitated by a disease registry.
...
PMID:Fabry disease: recent advances in enzyme replacement therapy. 1238 6
Fabry disease is an X-linked disorder caused by a deficiency of the lysosomal
alpha-galactosidase A
[EC 3.2.1.22]. The molecular diagnosis of Fabry disease is important for genotype/phenotype correlation, pre-natal or early diagnosis, and detection of carrier status. Although more than 200 genotypes of the
alpha-galactosidase A
gene have been identified, mutation data on the Chinese population is sparse. We recently identified two unrelated Chinese families with Fabry disease. Mutation analysis was performed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) sequencing of the seven exons and adjacent introns of the
alpha-galactosidase A
gene. Two novel mutations were identified: in family I, a C-to-A transversion resulted in an early termination at amino acid 222 (Y222X), while in family II, an A-to-G transition resulted in a substitution of alanine for threonine at amino acid 410 (T410A). Carrier status was identified in all four females in the two families. The genotype Y222X is associated with classic Fabry disease, with unexpectedly rapid deterioration of visual acuity, while T410A is associated with a milder Fabry disease, with ventricular hypertrophy and neuropathic
pain
.
...
PMID:Two novel mutations in the alpha-galactosidase A gene in Chinese patients with Fabry disease. 1269 30
Fabry disease is an X-linked inherited inborn error of glycosphingolipid catabolism. The deficiency of
alpha-galactosidase A
leads to the deposition of glycosphingolipids primarily in lysosomes of blood vessel cells. In classically affected hemizygotes clinical manifestations include
pain
in the extremities, vessel ectasia (angiokeratoma) in skin and mucous membranes, ophthalmological abnormalities, and hypohidrosis. As disease progresses there is renal, cardiac, cerebral and vascular involvement, with most patients experiencing renal insufficiency, cardiac hypertrophy or stroke. Many female carriers of Fabry disease also have symptoms. Recently available enzyme replacement therapy has the potential to control or even reverse disease progression. The present analysis reports on five Austrian families with Fabry disease, cared for by nephrologists in June 2002. Furthermore we discuss potential indications for enzyme replacement therapy in patients maintained on renal replacement therapy.
...
PMID:Anderson-Fabry disease in Austria. 1277 75
Fabry's disease is an x-linked, recessive, lysosomal storage disorder that results from deficient
alpha-galactosidase A
activity with pathological sphingolipid deposition mainly in endothelium, smooth muscle cells, kidneys, central and peripheral nervous system, and myocardium. Clinical manifestation mostly occurs during childhood and adolescence with severe
pain
attacks or chronic pain mainly in hands and feet, hypohydrosis, and skin lesions (angiokeratoma). In more advanced disease stages, renal and cerebrovascular complications develop with proteinuria and later renal failure and cerebral ischemia caused by cerebral microangiopathy, dilatative arteriopathy, or cardiac embolism. Heterozygote female carriers are severely affected more often than was previously considered. The diagnosis is based on the detection of deficient
alpha-galactosidase A
activity in leukocytes, fibroblasts, or tissue biopsies. Two randomised placebo-controlled studies showed that enzyme replacement is effective by demonstrating either reduced
pain
or reduced tissue sphingolipid deposition. Early diagnosis of Fabry's disease is important in view of these new causal therapeutic options.
...
PMID:[Fabry's disease: new therapeutic options for this lysosomal storage disorder]. 1279 87
Fabry disease is an X-linked disorder caused by a deficiency of lysosomal
alpha-galactosidase A
resulting in accumulation of alpha-D-galatosyl conjugated glycosphingolipids. Clinical manifestations include a small-fiber neuropathy associated with debilitating
pain
and hypohidrosis. We report the effect of a 3-year open-label extension of a previously reported 6-month placebo-controlled enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) trial in which 26 hemizygous patients with Fabry disease received 0.2 mg/kg of
alpha-galactosidase A
every 2 weeks. The effect of ERT on neuropathic
pain
scores while off
pain
medications, quantitative sensory testing, quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test (QSART), and thermoregulatory sweat test (TST) is reported. In the patients who crossed-over from placebo to ERT (n = 10), mean
pain
-at-its-worst scores on a 0-10 scale decreased (from 6.9 to 4.5). There was a significant reduction in the threshold for cold and warm sensation in the foot. At the 3-year time-point, pre-ERT sweat excretion in 17 Fabry patients was 0.24 +/- 0.33 microl/mm(2) vs. 1.05 +/- 0.81 in concurrent controls (n = 38). Sweat function improved 24-72 h post-enzyme infusion (0.57 +/- 0.71 microl/mm(2)) and normalized in four anhidrotic patients. TST confirmed the QSART results. We conclude that prolonged ERT in Fabry disease leads to a modest but significant improvement in the clinical manifestations of the small-fiber neuropathy associated with this disorder. QSART may be useful to further optimize the dose and frequency of ERT.
...
PMID:Enzyme replacement therapy improves peripheral nerve and sweat function in Fabry disease. 1463 84
Fabry disease is an X-linked glycosphingolipid storage disorder caused by a deficiency of
alpha-galactosidase A
. Affected patients experience debilitating neuropathic
pain
and have premature mortality due to renal failure, cardiovascular disease or cerebrovascular complications. The disease may be X-linked dominant, since most females heterozygous for Fabry disease are affected clinically. We evaluated the safety, efficacy and pharmacokinetics of agalsidase alfa (Replagal) administered intravenously to female patients with Fabry disease in an open-label, single-centre study. Fifteen severely affected patients received agalsidase alfa at 0.2 mg/kg every other week for up to 55 weeks. Agalsidase alfa was safe and well-tolerated in female patients. None of the patients developed antibodies or experienced an infusion reaction to agalsidase alfa. The pharmacokinetic profile of agalsidase alfa in female patients is comparable to the pharmacokinetics of agalsidase alfa in male patients. Mean urine sediment and plasma Gb3 levels decreased from baseline at 13, 27 and 41 weeks. A significant decrease in left ventricular mass from baseline was seen at weeks 27 (p = 0.003) and 41 (p = 0.039), and a significant reduction in QRS durations was seen at week 27 (p = 0.007). Furthermore, there was a significant improvement in quality of life. Renal function did not deteriorate in these 15 female patients over the 13- to 41-week period of observation. We conclude that enzyme replacement therapy with agalsidase alfa was safe and effective in female patients heterozygous for Fabry disease.
...
PMID:Enzyme replacement therapy in heterozygous females with Fabry disease: results of a phase IIIB study. 1470 10
Fabry disease is a hereditary metabolic disease, with an X-linked transmission, that is due to the deficit of
alpha-galactosidase A
, a lysosomal enzyme. The enzyme deficiency is responsible for an accumulation of neutral glycosphingolipids in the organism with a consequent disease of overload that is responsible for
pain
, dermatological, renal, cardiac, gastro-intestinal, cochlear and neurological manifestations. Fabry disease starts during childhood but the diagnosis is often made too late. An early diagnosis is nevertheless essential in order to commence a treatment before the occurrence of morbid cardio or cerebro-vascular accidents, or the development of end-stage chronic renal failure. Some phenotypic variants of Fabry disease are probably under-diagnosed among patients with so-called idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy on haemodialysis. Treatment by substitution of the enzyme with a recombinant alpha-galactosidase has been recently validated in breakthrough controlled clinical trials. Substitutive enzyme treatment represents a major therapeutic development. At the same time, it raises numerous questions such as the ideal age for initiation of treatment, the dose and the optimal frequency of enzyme administration, the reversibility of certain histopathological lesions and the determination of the best markers for the assessment and follow-up of the efficacy of treatment. Monitoring of the plasma levels of the enzyme substrate and the antibody titre seem to be essential. The documentation of short-term clinical benefits could require the use of sophisticated investigation methods such as the study of the myocardial function by tissue Doppler imaging.
...
PMID:[Fabry disease in 2004]. 1501 73
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