Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (
emphysema
)
11,506
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Familial idiopathic nonarteriosclerotic cerebral calcification (FINCC) constitutes a rare but pathologically well defined disorder. Thus far, central nervous system symptoms and signs have been the only recorded expression of this disease. Autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive inheritance have both been postulated as cause. We describe three sibs who had symmetrical cerebral calcifications, but three also had cirrhosis and pulmonary
emphysema
; two had congenital cerebral aneurysms. All were male and of short stature; they also had delayed development and seizures, and two had other neurologic deficits. One sib died at age 3 years of hepatic failure and portal hypertension. Ruptured cerebral aneurysms led to the death of the other two boys at ages 8 and 13 years. The cerebral calcifications symmetrically involved the basal ganglia and thalami, the dentate nucleus, and the cortical and subcortical areas of the cerebrum. The liver was studied by sequential biopsies in two of the children and in all three by autopsy. Fatty degeneration and portal fibrosis preceded a periportal and micronodular cirrhosis. Severe bilateral pulmonary
emphysema
was present in one sib at age 12 years, whereas all three had bullae and cysts at autopsy. Ruptured left middle cerebral artery aneurysms were demonstrated in two sibs, and one also had aneurysms of the anterior and posterior communicating arteries. We conclude that in this family FINCC is a complex pleiotropic mendelian mutation, either of autosomal or
X-linked recessive
nature, whose basic pathogenesis remains unknown but may involve a metabolic defect. This form of FINCC may be a previously undescribed syndrome or a form of FINCC in which extraneural manifestations were previously overlooked.
...
PMID:Berry aneurysms, cirrhosis, pulmonary emphysema, and bilateral symmetrical cerebral calcifications: a new syndrome. 313 Aug 69
Blotchy is an
X-linked recessive
mutation at the "Mottled" locus in the mouse. The affected blotchy male (Blo/Y) mouse from an inbred genetic background demonstrates morphologic and physiologic abnormalities consistent with
emphysema
in adult life. Breeding of Blo/Y mice has been difficult because the inbred Blo/Y males are sterile. We report the successful development of a line of outbred Blo/Y male and Blo/Blo female nice by the controlled outcross mating of the inbred heterozygous Blo/+ female with the Argonne hybrid B6CF1 male mouse. The subsequent outcross Blo/Y progeny breed vigorously with the outcrossed Blo/+ female. The lungs of the outbred Blo/Blo female and inbred Blo/Y male mice demonstrate mild to moderate panacinar
emphysema
with a significant decrease in internal surface area (p less than 0.005) and an increase in mean linear intercept (p less than 0.005). In contrast, the lungs of the outbred Blo/Y is structurally normal. Despite the absence of
emphysema
-like changes in the outbred Blo/Y males, there were phenotypic features that suggest inherited abnormalities in connective tissue proteins including 1) high incidence of aortitis leading to premature death from aneurysmal rupture, and 2) significant decrease in the morphometrically determined parenchymal elastic fiber length in the lung (p less than 0.01). The outbred blotchy strain may be a useful experimental animal model in determining the pathogenesis of
emphysema
.
...
PMID:Morphologic and phenotypic analysis of an outcross line of blotchy mouse. 686 19
Menkes disease is an
X-linked recessive
disorder of copper transport characterized by neurological deterioration, connective tissue, and vascular defects, abnormal hair, and death in early childhood. We report on a patient with Menkes disease in whom severe diffuse
emphysema
caused respiratory failure and death at 14 months of age. He had severe growth and developmental delays and other typical clinical manifestations of Menkes disease. He developed respiratory problems requiring continuous supplemental oxygen and a progressively enlarging soft tissue mass appeared on the neck. Imaging studies revealed cystic spaces in multiple lobes of the lung consistent with bullous
emphysema
. The neck mass was determined to be an internal jugular venous aneurysm. At autopsy, extensive emphysematous change was evident. Post-mortem barium injections of the pulmonary arterial system revealed marked dilatation and tortuosity of the preacinar pulmonary arteries and reduced numbers of intra-acinar arteries. Severe
emphysema
, presumably caused by abnormal elastin due to deficiency of the copper-dependent enzyme lysyl oxidase, may represent an underestimated clinical complication of Menkes disease and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of chronic respiratory disease in these patients.
...
PMID:Severe bilateral panlobular emphysema and pulmonary arterial hypoplasia: unusual manifestations of Menkes disease. 1627 98
Background. Cutis laxa (CL) is a rare disorder of elastic tissue characterized by loose, sagging skin with reduced elasticity, and resilience without resulting scarring. CL may be inherited as a dominant, recessive, or
X-linked recessive
disease, or acquired. The heritable forms of CL predominantly begin at birth, but it may be delayed until puberty or age of 30 years with extracutaneous manifestations including pulmonary
emphysema
, umbilical and inguinal hernias, and gastrointestinal and vesicourinary tract diverticuli. An acquired form of the disease occurs in adults with no evidence of internal organ involvement. Objective. The aim of this case report was to present our patient suffering from CL, and to evaluate clinical presentation, diagnostic and therapeutic difficulties in this rare condition. Case Report. A 30-year-old female patient was admitted to our Hospital due to localized loose and sagging skin of abdomen, induced by prior cesarean section 6 years ago. CL has been diagnosed based on the clinical picture and pathohistological appearance. Conclusion. Reconstructive surgery provides a dramatic cosmetic improvement with significant psychosocial benefit. Repeated surgical procedures may be required to correct the lax skin, which worsens with age.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of a patient with localized acquired cutis laxa of abdomen: a case report. 2058