Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of hemihypertrophy associated with multiple anomalies of the skin, bone and visceral organs is presented. A 31-year-old female was admitted for evaluation of her skin conditions. Her family history is noncontributory, while her past history discloses operations for syndactyly of the right foot, tonsillar hypertrophy, anal
prolapse
and ovarial cyst. Erythemas of the face and the left upper extremity were noticed during the neonatal period and hypertrophy of the right side of the body started at age 2 months. On admission, hemihypertrophy was observed in the face, trunk and extremities. Multiple faint nevi flammei were seen on the right half of the face and on the left side of the trunk and extremities.
Telangiectasis
and nevus anemicus were seen in the upper chest. The left upper extremity showed diffuse brown patches that was histologically basal pigmentation with some giant melanosomes. Visceral anomalies consisted of fibromatous tumors of the tip of the tongue and mitral
prolapse
. Angiography and computed tomography revealed a possible arteriovenous malformation of the right occipital region, small hemangiomas around the patella, dilation of the lateral ventricle, and calcification of the choroid plexus. Tortuous superficial veins were noted in the right leg. She had no seizure, but her IQ was 68. The bone disorders consisted of scoliosis, short forth metacarpus, hypoplastic mandible and peroneal exostosis. Examination revealed a slight diminution of urinary corticosteroid, but no other endocrinological disorders were found. The hemihypertrophy in this case is at least partially due to an arteriovenous shunt, suggested by elevated oxygen saturation of the blood obtained from the internal saphenous vein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Congenital hemihypertrophy associated with cutaneous pigmento-vascular, cerebral, visceral and bone abnormalities]. 282 Feb 92
Scleroderma of the colon is commonly associated with constipation, as was the case in a 70-year-old woman with rectal prolapse described by the authors. The chronic constipation in this patient may have been the cause of her rectal prolapse, but the onset of the
prolapse
and scleroderma at about the same time suggest that the scleroderma may have been a causative factor. A Ripstein repair of the
prolapse
was carried out. The authors discuss some of the complications of colonic scleroderma, which include megacolon, transverse and sigmoid colonic volvulus,
telangiectasia
, stenosis and diverticula and stercoral ulceration.
...
PMID:Rectal prolapse in scleroderma: case report and review of the colonic complications of scleroderma. 397 Dec 25
Primary lymphoedema is a genetic disorder with numerous phenotypic subgroups. The most common form is the non-syndromic Meige disease, which is primarily of pubertal or later onset, with oedema clinically indistinguishable from that found in the lymphoedema-distichiasis syndrome. There are also other very rare forms of lymphoedema such as yellow nail syndrome and lymphoedema with
ptosis
, which are clinically similar to Meige disease. The only causative genes so far identified for the non-congenital primary lymphoedemas are the transcription factor FOXC2, where mutations are known to produce lymphoedema with distichiasis, and SOX18 in the very rare condition hypotrichosis-lymphoedema-
telangiectasia
. This study has examined FOXC2 gene by sequence analysis in 23 affected individuals with Meige disease. A novel truncating mutation (c.563-584del) was identified in one family and found to segregate with the disease in eight affected relatives over three generations. This deletion creates a frameshift that predicts a premature stop at nucleotide 599 and truncating the normal protein by 38%. Although the affected patient initially selected for mutation screening from this family had lymphoedema without distichiasis, all but one of his affected relatives who carried the FOXC2 mutation did have accessory eyelashes originating from their meibomian glands. This is further confirmation that of the primary lymphoedemas, only lymphoedema with distichiasis is caused by FOXC2 mutations. All forms of post-pubertal lymphoedema need careful phenotyping for distichiasis, which may prove difficult to confirm unless several family members are examined, and cannot ever be assumed to be absent from self-report.
...
PMID:Primary non-syndromic lymphoedema (Meige disease) is not caused by mutations in FOXC2. 1819 97