Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Percutaneous renal biopsy was performed in a surface coal miner with radiographic and histopathologic pulmonary changes consistent with acute silicolipoproteinosis who developed proteinuria and hematuria. Electron microscopic evaluation of the renal tissue specimen revealed a diffusely thickened glomerular basement membrane, foot process effacement, and dense lamellar inclusions in swollen glomerular epithelial cells, similar to those seen in Fabry's disease. However, normal levels of plasma alpha-galactosidase A, normal urinary sediment glycosphingolipids and the absence of the clinical characteristics of Fabry's disease excluded this diagnosis. This case illustrates that electron-dense lamellar inclusions, similar to those seen in Fabry's disease, may be seen in other entities such as nephropathy associated with silicosis.
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PMID:Silicon nephropathy mimicking Fabry's disease. 641 69

Fabry's disease is a rare hereditary disease transmitted as an X-linked recessive trait with the primary metabolic defect of an enzyme alpha-galactosidase A, resulting in deposition of glycolipids (ceramide trihexoside) in various tissues, including the kidneys. Two sibling cases of Chinese adult male patients in a family with Fabry's disease were completely evaluated including the clinical, pathologic and biochemical studies. Both of the patients had the similar clinical manifestations such as telangiectases, proteinuria, acral pains, corneal opacities, tortuous renal vessels and recurrent fever. Chronic renal insufficiency was noted in Case 1, whereas Case 2 had normal renal function. Microscopic hematuria was noted in Case 1. In renal biopsy, LM showed foamy vacuolation of the glomerular visceral epithelial cells and EM showed widespread myelin bodies (Zebra bodies) in kidney tissues, most numerous in visceral epithelia in both cases. Those findings are diagnostic for Fabry's disease. The plasma activity of alpha-galactosidase of Case 1 was 0.8 and that of Case 2 was 1.0 (normal reference range: 8.5-18.5 nmol/hr/min). The plasma activity of alpha-galactosidase A of Case 1 was 0.4 and that of Case 2 was 0.8 (normal reference range: 7.9-16.9 nmol/hr/min). All the enzyme activities in both cases were much lower than those of normal subjects. In addition to clinical presentations, pathologic study and biochemical study with assays of plasma or serum activities of alpha-galactosidase and alpha-galactosidase A are important steps in the diagnosis of Fabry's disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Fabry's disease: clinical, pathologic and biochemical manifestations in two Chinese males. 783 62

We present the first female patient to exhibit Fabry-like myelin bodies in the glomerular epithelial cell in association with IgA nephropathy. This previously healthy 36-year-old woman presented with proteinuria and hematuria without skin lesions. Renal biopsy showed typical IgA nephropathy, with paramesangial deposits, mesangial proliferation and scattered myelin bodies. The leukocytic alpha-galactosidase A activity was abnormally low. She had no family history of Fabry's disease nor the characteristic features, such as skin lesion, neuralgia, or hypohidrosis. Fabry's disease is diagnosed from the renal biopsy findings and the activity of alpha-galactosidase A in leukocytes and/or fibroblasts. We diagnosed the present case with Fabry' disease and IgA nephropathy from these results.
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PMID:Fabry-like laminated myelin body associated with IgA nephropathy. 785 64

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.
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PMID:Atypical Fabry's disease. An oligosymptomatic variant. 855 52

A point mutation in exon 6 of the alpha-galactosidase A gene (alpha-GAL A) was found in a Japanese hemizygous male without typical manifestations of Fabry disease other than renal involvement. This 45-year-old man developed moderate proteinuria and was diagnosed with Fabry disease on the basis of renal histologic findings and prominent decreases in alpha-GAL A activity in his plasma, urine, leukocytes, and skin fibroblasts. Determination of the cDNA sequence of his alpha-GAL A gene revealed substitution of a G to A in codon 301, resulting in a glutamine rather than an arginine residue. Our case is unique in that this patient only demonstrated renal manifestations while all other reported patients with atypical Fabry disease, including a case with the identical point mutation, present with a cardiomyopathy. Direct DNA sequencing of exon 6 and measurement of alpha-GAL A activity among the patient's family confirmed that the mutation was transmitted from his mother.
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PMID:Point mutation in the alpha-galactosidase A gene of atypical Fabry disease with only nephropathy. 873 59

A 45-year-old man who developed proteinuria was diagnosed as having Fabry's disease on the basis of renal histological findings and prominent decreases in alpha-galactosidase A activity in blood leukocytes.
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PMID:Fabry's disease. Report of the case diagnosed on the basis of routine ultrastructural examination of the renal biopsy. 1041 76

The authors reported the accumulation of osmiophilic myelin-like bodies typical for Fabry's disease in the rebiopsied 19-year-old woman clinically presenting with intermittent mild microhematuria and trace proteinuria. The light microscopy examination of the first kidney biopsy specimen (10 years ago) showed the presence of vacuolated cells in glomeruli, but electron microscopy study was not performed. The family history was negative for renal diseases. A biochemical enzymatic assay for alpha-galactosidase A was not performed. It is concluded that electron microscopy examination of kidney biopsy specimen is important for the investigation of storage diseases.
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PMID:The ultrastructural changes in renal biopsy compatible with Fabry's disease. Case report. 1041 77

A large cohort of patients with Fabry disease is being studied to determine the natural history of the disease and how this relates to the specific mutation involved and the amount of residual alpha-galactosidase A activity. To date, we have investigated the progression of cerebral lesions and stroke, as identified by magnetic resonance imaging, and renal disease. Results have shown that cerebral lesions do not appear until 23 years of age, but are present in all patients by 55 years of age. The peak onset of proteinuria occurred in the fourth decade, and the peak onset of chronic renal insufficiency and end-stage renal disease occurred in the fifth decade of life. Renal outcome was related to the type of mutation and residual enzyme activity. Data from these studies in untreated patients will be important when assessing the long-term efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy.
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PMID:Natural history of Fabry disease in males: preliminary observations. 1175 74

Fabry disease is a rare X-linked disorder, characterized by deficient activity of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. This leads to systemic accumulation of the glycosphingolipid globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) in all body tissues and organs, including the kidney. Renal manifestations are less evident in female heterozygotes than in male hemizygotes, according to the Lyon hypothesis. Accumulation of Gb3 occurs mainly in the epithelial cells of Henle's loop and distal tubule, inducing early impairment in renal concentrating ability; involvement of the proximal tubule induces Fanconi syndrome. All types of glomerular cells are involved, especially podocytes, and glomerular proteinuria may occur at a young age. The evolution of renal Fabry disease is characterized by progressive deterioration of renal function to end-stage renal failure (ESRF). Ultrastructural study of kidney biopsies reveals typical bodies in the cytoplasm of all types of renal cells, characterized by concentric lamellation of clear and dark layers with a periodicity of 35-50 A. Management of progressive renal disease requires dietetic and therapeutic strategies, usually indicated in developing chronic renal failure, with dialysis and renal transplantation required for patients with ESRF. The recent development of enzyme replacement therapy, however, should make it possible to prevent or reverse the progressive renal dysfunction associated with Fabry disease.
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PMID:Renal pathological changes in Fabry disease. 1175 81

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.
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PMID:Enzyme replacement therapy for Fabry disease, an inherited nephropathy. 1183 97


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