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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 55 year old woman with heterozygous Fabry's disease presented with cardiac symptoms. The electrocardiogram showed a PR interval of 0.12 s and giant negative T waves, suggesting apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Endomyocardial biopsy, however, revealed myelin like substances characteristic of Fabry's disease. Increasing thickness of the left ventricular wall was seen by echocardiography over a period of five years. A deficiency of alpha galactosidase activity in the leucocytes confirmed the diagnosis of Fabry's disease, although this patient had neither
angiokeratoma
or
proteinuria
. The possibility of Fabry's disease should be considered in patients with cardiomegaly of unknown cause and the following electrocardiographic abnormalities: a PR interval less than or equal to 0.12 s, high voltage QRS complexes in the left precordial leads, and giant negative T waves.
...
PMID:A case of heterozygous Fabry's disease with a short PR interval and giant negative T waves. 310 63
A case of Fabry's disease in a 22-year-old male patient who had mild
proteinuria
and dark-red eruptions is reported. He had been treated as a case of a so-called "chronic glomerulonephritis" for one year. However, histopathological findings of the renal biopsy specimens showed the presence of numerous vacuolated cells in the glomeruli. These vacuolated cells contained numerous electron dense bodies observed by electron microscopy. Skin lesions of this patient were consistent with those of
angiokeratoma
corporis. The levels of serum alpha-galactosidase were significantly lower than those of healthy controls. The mother of this patient also showed decreased levels of serum alpha-galactosidase. The pedigree of this patient showed a familial history of various types of renal diseases. It was postulated that Fabry's disease occurring in older patients has a worse clinical course. it is concluded that early detection of this disease through biopsy and the assay of serum alpha-galactosidase levels is important in managing the future course of patients with Fabry's disease.
...
PMID:A case of Fabry's disease. 631 Aug 28
Fabry's disease is a rare, inherited, X-linked metabolic storage disease with ceramide hexoside due to alpha-galactosidase A deficiency. Patients with typical Fabry's disease usually present with several clinical manifestations of corneal dystrophy, neurologic abnormalities, cardiovascular disease, heavy
proteinuria
, and characteristic cutaneous
angiokeratoma
. However, atypical Fabry's disease with oligosymptomatic phenotype presents with symptoms restricted solely to cardiocytes or kidney and might be diagnosed by chance during a routine endomyocardial or renal biopsy examination. In this article, we report a case of Fabry's disease incidentally diagnosed in a 34-year-old man who presented with intermittent trace or 1(+)
proteinuria
only. This patient had no history of renal disease in any other family member. A renal biopsy to evaluate trace
proteinuria
revealed histologic and ultrastructural findings compatible with Fabry's disease. Subsequent to the renal biopsy, a skin biopsy on a few initially unrecognized, scattered, dark-pinkish scrotal papules showed typical
angiokeratoma
. A biochemical enzymatic assay of alpha-galactosidase in urine and plasma revealed a markedly decreased enzyme level in the hemizygous range.
...
PMID:Atypical Fabry's disease. An oligosymptomatic variant. 855 52
Fabry's disease is a genetic disorder caused by the absence of alpha-galactosidase (alpha-Gal), the gene of which is carried on the long arm of the X chromosome. This enzymatic defect leads to an accumulation of glycosphingolipids in the plasma and lysosomes of endothelial, perithelial, and smooth muscle cells, especially involving those of the cardiovascular, renal and cerebrovascular systems. We report one male case of Fabry's disease with renal deterioration. A 36-year-old man who was a classic case with acroparesthesia,
angiokeratoma
, and hypohidrosis from 10 years of age, was diagnosed to be a hemizygote of Fabry's disease at 27 years as a result of severe decreased alpha-Gal activity of his peripheral white blood cells. This patient was found to have a point mutation of a G to A transition in exon 1. In May, 1989, he was reported to have
proteinuria
with normal renal function and admitted to our hospital due to renal deterioration in September, 1993. Laboratory examinations revealed a serum urea nitrogen of 65 mg/dl and creatinine value of 6.9 mg/dl. Urinary protein excretion was 3.9 g/day and urinary sugar was negative. On the renal biopsy specimens, light microscopic examinations revealed multiple sclerosing and collaptic lesions in glomeruli without severe tubulo-interstitial damage, but with stenotic change of the small arteries and arterioles. Electron microscopic examinations revealed a large number of electron dense deposits in the tubules. We diagnosed this case as Fabry's disease with chronic renal failure, however the pathogenesis of this renal progressive deterioration remained obscure. In this case, degenerative changes in the renal vessels due to Fabry's disease may be associated with rapid deterioration in renal function.
...
PMID:[A case of Fabry's disease with chronic renal failure]. 1044 95
We report a case of Fabry's disease, diagnosed in a 39-year-old patient treated for 4 years because of glomerulonephritis. The disease manifested itself by the presence of typical petechiae-like skin lesions in the bathing trunk area (
angiokeratoma
), eye changes, paresthesia, and--in additional investigations--mild
proteinuria
, lowered creatinine clearance, along with changes in the central nervous system. A biopsy of the kidney revealed the presence of foamy cells in all glomeruli, and in electron microscopy multilamellar bodies (zebra bodies). The diagnose of the disease was confirmed by a marked decrease in leucocyte alpha-galactosidase activity. An early diagnosis of non-inflammatory character of Fabry's disease allows to avoid an unnecessary immunosuppressive treatment.
...
PMID:[Fabry's disease--late diagnosis in men with chronic nephropathy and skin changes]. 1074 Apr 22
Fabry disease, an X-linked lysosomal storage disease, results from the deficient activity of the enzyme alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A) and the progressive accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (GL-3) and related glycosphingolipids. In classically affected males with this inherited nephropathy, early and marked GL-3 deposition in the podocytes leads to
proteinuria
in childhood or adolescence. With increasing age, GL-3 deposition in renal microvascular endothelial cells, and to a lesser extent in interstitial and mesangial cells, leads to renal insufficiency in the third to fifth decades of life. Recently identified "renal variants" who lack the classical disease manifestations of acroparesthesias,
angiokeratoma
, hypohidrosis, and characteristic corneal/lenticular opacities also develop renal failure. In contrast, "cardiac variants" who also lack the classical phenotype, develop
proteinuria
in adulthood, but survive a normal lifespan without developing renal failure. Here, we review the renal involvement and pathology in the classical, renal and cardiac variant phenotypes, and present highlights of the preclinical studies and clinical trials that demonstrated the safety and effectiveness of recombinant alpha-Gal A replacement for this inherited nephropathy.
...
PMID:Enzyme replacement therapy for Fabry disease, an inherited nephropathy. 1183 97
A 40-year-old man with Fabry disease, confirmed by decreased leukocyte alpha-galactosidase A activity in 2001, complained of sudden bilateral deafness, as evidenced by clinical history and audiometry. Magnetic resonance of the brain revealed features typical of Fabry disease. Other clinical manifestations of the disease included:
angiokeratoma
, mild
proteinuria
with normal renal function, lymphoedema of the lower limbs, pre-excitation syndrome, myocardial hypertrophy.
...
PMID:[Atypical symptoms of Fabry's disease: sudden bilateral deafness, lymphoedema and Lown-Ganong-Levine syndrome]. 1268 50
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
In men with classical Fabry disease (alpha-galactosidase A [alpha-Gal A] deficiency), kidney failure occurs as early as the second decade of life. In contrast, men with the mild "cardiac variant" have late-onset cardiac involvement and
proteinuria
but usually do not have renal failure. To investigate the nature of renal involvement in the cardiac variant of Fabry disease, the renal function and morphology were assessed in a 75-year-old affected man. He had mild congestive heart failure, a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, and hypercholesterolemia but lacked the classical Fabry disease manifestations, including
angiokeratoma
, acroparesthesias, corneal and lenticular opacities, and hypohidrosis. At age 75 years, he had significant
proteinuria
, and mildly decreased renal function (serum creatinine, 1.8 mg/dL [159 micromol/L]), presumably secondary to hypertensive arteriosclerosis. He had about 4% residual alpha-Gal A activity in leukocytes, and mutation analysis identified the N215S missense mutation, the common lesion in cardiac variants. Histologic and ultrastructural studies of kidney tissue showed that lysosomal glycosphingolipid deposition was extensive in podocytes, rare in tubular epithelial cells, and absent in mesangial, interstitial, and vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells. This cardiac variant serves as an "experiment of nature" showing that the residual alpha-Gal A activity precludes glycosphingolipid deposition in the renal endothelial and other cells that lead to early renal failure in classically affected men, whereas marked podocyte accumulation is associated with
proteinuria
and possibly late-onset renal dysfunction. These findings have important implications for the renal effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy in classically affected patients and for the aggressive treatment of
proteinuria
in Fabry disease.
...
PMID:Fabry disease: renal involvement limited to podocyte pathology and proteinuria in a septuagenarian cardiac variant. Pathologic and therapeutic implications. 1471 41
Fabry disease is an under-recognized X-linked recessive lysosomal storage disorder resulting from the deficient activity of the enzyme alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A). The first case of Fabry disease in Slovenia was diagnosed in 1991. This 46 year-old male was referred for dermatologic evaluation of a purpura on his abdomen. He was being treated for
proteinuria
and cardiac symptoms. The diagnosis of
angiokeratoma
corporis diffusa (Fabry disease) was made clinically and confirmed by demonstration of the deficient leukocyte alpha-Gal A activity. The patient subsequently developed cerebrovascular symptoms, coronary disease, and renal failure, and died from a recurrent myocardial infarction. Family studies identified several other affected males and carrier female relatives with this X-linked recessive disorder. This case illustrates the typical multi-manifestations of this inherited disease which now can be safely and effectively treated by enzyme replacement therapy. Early diagnosis is important for the most effective treatment of this disease.
...
PMID:Fabry disease. A case report. 1581 41
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