Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032463 (polycythemia vera)
3,374 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cause of stroke in a young adult can usually be ascertained with proper workup. One of the most common causes is atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease, and cigarette smoking is an important risk factor in young adults. Several types of nonatherosclerotic cerebral vasculopathy can also result in premature cerebral infarction; these include cervicocephalic arterial dissection, nonpenetrating traumatic arterial disease, moyamoya disease, fibromuscular dysplasia, vasculitis, and migraine. Cardiac embolism may play a more important role than was previously thought, and hematologic disorders (eg, sickle cell disease, polycythemia rubra vera, coagulation problems) are known to predispose patients to stroke. A careful history of risk factors and a thorough neurologic and cardiovascular examination followed by adequate testing, including angiography, are essential to diagnosis.
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PMID:Diagnosis of stroke in young adults. 356 68

Moyamoya disease is a stenoocclusive disease involving the intracranial carotid and proximal middle cerebral arteries. There are rarely any additional extracranial stenoses occurring concurrently with moyamoya. The pathophysiology of moyamoya remains obscure, but hematologic disorders, notably sickle-cell anemia, have been associated in some cases. We describe the novel case of polycythemia vera associated with severe steno-occlusive disease of both intracranial and extracranial large arteries. A 47-year-old woman with polycythemia vera had multiple transient ischemic attacks, and noninvasive vessel imaging revealed steno-occlusive disease of bilateral supraclinoid internal carotid arteries with moyamoya-type collaterals, proximal left subclavian artery, right vertebral artery origin, bilateral renal arteries, superior mesenteric artery, and right common iliac artery. Laboratory workup for systemic vasculitis was negative. She required bilateral direct external carotid to internal carotid bypass procedures and percutaneous balloon angioplasty of her right VA origin stenosis. This case suggests that hematologic disorders can lead to vessel stenoses and occlusion. The pathophysiology may be due to a prothrombotic state leading to repeated endothelial injury, resultant intimal hyperplasia, and progressive steno-occlusion.
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PMID:Concurrent stenoocclusive disease of intracranial and extracranial arteries in a patient with polycythemia vera. 2269 Feb 22