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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic pancreatitis is a rare disease in children and is usually secondary to underlying diseases such as hereditary
pancreatitis
, cystic fibrosis, hyperlipidemia, prolonged malnutrition, gallstones or anomalies of the biliary-pancreatic duct system.
Hereditary pancreatitis
is a common cause of chronic pancreatitis in children but is often unrecognized until months or years later. We report here a family with hereditary
pancreatitis
in which four members are affected.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis: report of a family from Turkey. 989 1
Hereditary pancreatitis
(HP) is a rare inherited disorder, characterised by recurrent episodes of
pancreatitis
often beginning in early childhood. The mode of inheritance suggests an autosomal dominant trait with incomplete penetrance. The gene, or at least one of the genes, responsible for hereditary
pancreatitis
has been mapped to the long arm of chromosome 7 and a missense mutation, an arginine to histidine substitution at residue 117 in the trypsinogen cationic gene (try4) has been shown to segregate with the HP phenotype. The aim of this work was to investigate the molecular basis of hereditary
pancreatitis
. This study was performed on 14 HP families. The five exons of the trypsinogen cationic gene were studied using a specific gene amplification assay combined with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). The present paper describes three novel mutations, namely K23R and N29I and a deletion -28delTCC in the promoter region. We also found a polymorphism in exon 4, D162D. In eight of these families we found a mutation which segregates with the disease. A segregation analysis using microsatellite markers carried out on the other families suggests genetic heterogeneity in at least one of them. Our findings confirm the implication of the cationic trypsinogen gene in HP and highlight allelic diversity associated with this phenotype. We also show that the pattern of inheritance of HP is probably complex and that other genes may be involved in this genetic disease.
...
PMID:Mutations in the cationic trypsinogen gene and evidence for genetic heterogeneity in hereditary pancreatitis. 1020 51
Hereditary pancreatitis
is a rare form of chronic recurrent
pancreatitis
. A family, in which 11 members had chronic pancreatitis, five had diabetes, and two had pancreatic cancer, was studied, and hereditary
pancreatitis
was diagnosed in all patients by demonstrating the mutation in exon 3 of the cationic trypsinogen gene (R117H). The clinical implications of genotypic analysis in hereditary
pancreatitis
are discussed.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis and mutation of the trypsinogen gene. 1020 58
Hereditary pancreatitis
is a rare condition characterized by acute and chronic pancreatitis transmitted in an autosomal dominant fashion. There also is an epidemiologic link to pancreatic cancer in some affected families. Failure of a secondary brake mechanism responsible for inactivation of prematurely activated cationic trypsin in acinar cells seems to be the fundamental defect in type I hereditary
pancreatitis
(R117H cationic trypsin), and also may explain the pathogenesis of type II hereditary
pancreatitis
(N211 cationic trypsin). The diagnosis is made based on clinical history and, in certain cases, by molecular diagnostic testing for these gene defects. Medical management of acute and chronic hereditary
pancreatitis
currently does not differ from that of nonhereditary AP. As in nonhereditary
pancreatitis
, the surgical approach must be tailored to the individual problem, with an understanding that disease restricted to the head of the gland is atypical and that residual acinar tissue continues to drive the disease state. Although diagnosis and management of pancreatic adenocarcinoma are similar in this cohort, the increased age-accumulated risk suggests that thoughtful screening protocols eventually may be clinically and cost-effective.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis. Gene defects and their implications. 1047 Mar 21
Hereditary pancreatitis
is a genetically transmitted condition usually presenting in childhood or adolescence. The natural history of the condition is that recurrent episodes of
pancreatitis
may be followed by the development of pancreatic exocrine and endocrine failure. Treatment options are limited, usually consisting of surgical drainage procedures whose efficacy is uncertain and whose effect on disease progression is unknown. We report a child with hereditary
pancreatitis
treated by means of a pancreatic duct stent placed via endoscopic retrograde cholangiopanctreatography resulting in long-term control of symptoms and speculate that earlier intervention may alter the disease course.
...
PMID:Pancreatic duct stenting as a treatment for hereditary pancreatitis. 1054 59
Hereditary pancreatitis
(HP) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by recurrent acute attacks of severe abdominal pain with an onset in early childhood. Many HP patients progress to complicated chronic pancreatitis and/or pancreatic cancer. Initially, a single mutation R117H in the cationic trypsinogen gene was detected in all affected members of five unrelated HP families. Further studies identified a second mutation (N21L) in two HP families without the R117H mutation. Before the association between cationic trypsinogen and HP was found, we detected a cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutation (L327R) in all affected individuals of a family with HP. We therefore performed a mutational analysis for R117H and N21L in cationic trypsinogen in this and three additional unrelated families with HP. The R117H mutation was detected in all 9 affected members of three HP families and in 3 asymptomatic but at-risk relatives. However, neither the R117H nor the N21L mutation in the cationic trypsinogen were found in the HP family with the L327R alteration in CFTR. The L327R allele segregates with the disease within this HP family and was not detected on 360 unrelated Caucasian non-CF chromosomes. Although close to 800 different mutations have been detected in the CF gene of cystic fibrosis patients, L327R is a new alteration, not yet reported in connection with CF. The results of this study indicate that the CFTR gene may play a role in the etiology of minority of cases with HP and suggest that hereditary
pancreatitis
is genetically heterogeneous disease.
...
PMID:Evidence that hereditary pancreatitis is genetically heterogeneous disorder. 1065 40
Hereditary pancreatitis
is a rare form of
pancreatitis
, accounting for approximately 1% of all types of
pancreatitis
. It is inherited as an autosomal dominant disease, with incomplete penetrance. The genetic defect is believed to be caused by mutations in the trypsinogen gene. Patients who inherit the disorder suffer from a form of
pancreatitis
that resembles other types of
pancreatitis
, but the age of onset is much earlier. Sixteen biopsy-proven pancreatic cancers have developed in a cohort of 412 patients with a median follow-up period of 18 years (interquartile range, 7 to 30 years) since the onset of symptoms. Compared with the background population, the risk of pancreatic cancer is approximately 50 to 60 times greater than expected. Smoking appears to be an additional risk factor in these patients: Smoking increases the risk of developing pancreatic cancer and lowers the age of onset by approximately 20 years. Patients with hereditary
pancreatitis
are urged to avoid smoking because it greatly increases the risk of pancreatic cancer and to avoid alcohol, a known risk factor for all forms of
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Risk factors for cancer in hereditary pancreatitis. International Hereditary Pancreatitis Study Group. 1087 14
Hereditary pancreatitis
(HP) is an autosomal dominant disease. Two heterozygous missense mutations, R122H (R117H) and N29I (N21I), in the cationic trypsinogen gene have been clearly associated with HP. The 'self-destruct' model proposed for the R122H mutation is discussed in connection with the existing theory of
pancreatitis
, and the basic biochemistry and physiology of trypsinogen, with particular reference to R122 as the primary autolysis site of the cationic trypsinogen. Two different genetic mechanisms are identified which cause the R122H mutation, and gene conversion is the likely cause of the N29I mutation. A unifying model, which highlights an indirect impairment on the R122 autolysis site is hypothesised for the N29I mutation. Possible predisposition to
pancreatitis
by additional DNA variants in the gene, such as the A16V signal peptide cleavage site mutation and the K23R activation peptide cleavage site mutation is suspected, but not proven. Evidence of genetic heterogeneity of HP is reviewed and cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutations detected in HP families are re-evaluated. Finally, large scale association studies are expected to clarify the additional variants' role in
pancreatitis
and to identify new HP genes.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of hereditary pancreatitis. 1090 45
Hereditary pancreatitis
is an unusual form of acute and chronic pancreatitis with a familial predisposition. Recently, the gene mutations causing most cases of hereditary
pancreatitis
have been identified in the cationic trypsinogen gene. The known mutations are trypsinogen R117H and N211. These may predispose to acute pancreatitis by eliminating one of the fail-safe mechanisms used by the pancreas to eliminate prematurely activated trypsin. Accumulation of active trypsin mutants are hypothesized to initiate a digestive enzyme activation cascade in the pancreatic acinar cells leading to autodigestion, an intense inflammatory response, and acute pancreatitis. The observation that these patients also develop typical chronic pancreatitis and may later develop pancreatic cancer provides strong evidence that these conditions are linked. Knowledge of the pathophysiological conditions leading to acute and chronic pancreatitis and the development of a transgenic mouse expressing the mutant human trypsinogen genes will provide directions and tools necessary for the effective treatment or prevention of this human disease.
...
PMID:Hereditary pancreatitis: new insights, new directions. 1103 Jun 5
Hereditary pancreatitis
is an autosomal dominant form of chronic pancreatitis. It presents with recurrent attacks of acute pancreatitis, usually starting in early childhood. The attacks may vary from mild abdominal pain to pancreatic necrosis, splenic vein thrombosis, pseudocysts and death. Ultimately chronic pancreatitis ensues with unrelenting pain, calcifications, endocrine and exocrine dysfunction. The penetrance is estimated at 80%. With the use of genetic linkage analysis the gene for hereditary
pancreatitis
was placed on the long arm of chromosome 7 (7q35). Mutational analysis identified cationic trypsinogen as the disease gene. Cationic trypsinogen mutations are thought to result in resistance of this molecule to autolysis.
...
PMID:[From gene to disease; hereditary pancreatitis]. 1114 96
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