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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Longitudinal myelitis is an uncommon complication of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We describe an unusual case of longitudinal myelitis and ischemic
stroke
in the presence of homozygous prothrombin G20210A, heterozygous
MTHFR
677T mutations and the absence of antiphospholipid antibodies in a young woman with SLE.
...
PMID:Longitudinal myelitis in patient with systemic lupus erythematosus, homozygous prothrombin G20210A and heterozygous MTHFR 677T. 1767 Aug 51
The objective of the present study was to examine demographic, historical, and prothrombotic risk factors in infants with perinatal arterial
stroke
and their mothers. Risk factors were evaluated in 60 mother-child pairs with perinatal arterial
stroke
. Prothrombotic factors analyzed included the DNA mutations factor V Leiden, prothrombin 20210,
MTHFR
C677T and A1298C; serum activity levels for protein C, protein S, and antithrombin III; serum levels of lipoprotein(a); and, in the mothers, antiphospholipid antibodies. Boys predominated, 36:24. There were four twin sets. Sixty percent were term and 22% were post-date. Ten were large for gestational age. Five mothers had abdominal trauma. Nine mothers (15%) had preeclampsia. Emergency caesarean section was performed in 17 cases (28%). Eight placental exams revealed seven with abnormalities. Seizures were the presenting sign in 70%, and 30% presented with early handedness or cerebral palsy. Prothrombotic risk factors were found in 28 of 51 mothers (55%) and 30 of 60 children (50%). Forty-one pairs (68%) had at least one abnormality in mother, child, or both. Long-term sequelae included cerebral palsy (40 of 51; 78%), cognitive impairment (35 of 51; 68%), seizures (23 of 51; 45%), and microcephaly (26 of 51; 51%). Perinatal arterial
stroke
is the result of multifactorial, synergistic fetal and maternal factors among which the prothrombotic factors, both fetal and maternal, appear significant.
...
PMID:Risk factors for perinatal arterial stroke: a study of 60 mother-child pairs. 1767 35
The ischemia in children affected by perinatal
stroke
has long been thought to be driven by nonhematologic maternal and perinatal events. New information from clinical studies, however, tells us that plasma-phase risk factors, such as factor V Leiden, elevated lipoprotein (a), and mutations in
MTHFR
, may be important in the pathogenesis of perinatal
stroke
, if not always in the risk of recurrence. With regard to
stroke
recurrence, this risk is only about 2% according to the largest follow-up study to date, and certainly less than 5%. Nonetheless, when strokes do recur, they tend to be associated with the presence of plasma-phase risk factors in the affected child, suggesting that a small percentage of children with a first perinatal
stroke
may benefit from anticoagulation therapy, both to prevent
stroke
recurrence as well as occurence of a second, non-CNS thrombotic event. Counselling of parents with regard to subsequent pregnancies should always include medical management of systemic maternal disorders, such as diabetes, persistently elevated antiphospholipid antibodies, and inherited maternal hypercoagulability states.
...
PMID:Prothrombotic risk factors in the evaluation and management of perinatal stroke. 1782 81
The concentration of circulating homocysteine has been associated with a variety of diseases, including myocardial infarction,
stroke
, venous thrombosis and cognitive decline. Genetic variation has been demonstrated to play an important role in determining plasma homocysteine, however, the genes involved are incompletely understood. Ligation of the transcription factor peroxisome proliferator-activated gamma (PPARG) has been demonstrated to lower plasma homocysteine. We examined the association of two sequence variations in PPARG with plasma concentrations of homocysteine in a population-based study of 3,875 elderly men. PPARG c.34G > C and PPARG c.1347C > T sequence variations were determined by real-time quantitative PCR and related to logarithm transformed homocysteine concentrations using linear regression, adjusting for the co-variants age, renal function, smoking, coronary heart disease, waist to hip ratio, diabetes, hypertension and
MTHFR
g.677C > T sequence variation. Median plasma homocysteine concentration was 10% higher in men who were homozygous for the rare allelic variation in PPARG c.34G > C and PPARG c.1347C > T by comparison to those who had wild type sequence variation. PPARG c.1347C > T (beta = 0.038, P = 0.01 recessive model; beta = 0.036, P = 0.02 dominant model) sequence variation was positively associated with homocysteine concentration after adjusting for co-variants. The two PPARG sequence variations were in linkage disequilibrium and the common haplotype was associated with lower plasma homocysteine (P = 0.005). Our findings demonstrate a new genotypic association with plasma homocysteine. Replication will be required in other cohorts.
...
PMID:Relationship between two sequence variations in the gene for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma and plasma homocysteine concentration. Health in men study. 1799 84
Single-gene disorders explain only a minority of
stroke
cases.
Stroke
represents a complex trait, which is usually assumed to be polygenic. On this topic, the role of a wide number of candidate genes has been investigated in
stroke
through association studies, with controversial results. Therefore, it is difficult for the clinician to establish the validity and the level of clinical applicability of the previously reported associations between genetic factors and
stroke
. This review is an update and an extensive analysis of the more recent association studies conducted in
stroke
. We evaluated a number of studies on several candidate genes (including F5, F2, FGA/FGB/FGG, F7, F13A1, vWF, F12, SERPINE1, ITGB3/PLA1/PLA2/ITGA2B, ITGA2, GP1BA, ACE, AGT, NOS3, APOE, LPL, PON1, PDE4D, ALOX5AP,
MTHFR
, MTR, and CBS), providing a final panel of genes and molecular variants. We categorized this panel in relation to the degree of association with
stroke
, supported by the results of meta-analyses and case-control studies. Our findings could represent a useful tool to address further molecular investigations and to realize more detailed meta-analyses.
...
PMID:Genetic polymorphisms for the study of multifactorial stroke. 1842 1
In a 12-member, 3-generation kindred with conjoint inheritance of G1691A factor V Leiden (FVL) and G20210A prothrombin gene (PTG) mutations, identified through a proband with amaurosis fugax and his father with nonarteritic ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION), the authors' hypothesis was that ocular thrombosis was a diagnostic window to familial thrombophilia-thrombosis. The authors used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) measures for thrombophilia (FVL, PTG, C677T-A1298C methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase [
MTHFR
], platelet glycoprotein PLA1A2) and hypofibrinolysis (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 4G4G). The 39-year-old white male proband, with amaurosis fugax and transient ischemic attacks (TIA), was found to be a compound heterozygote for FVL and PTG mutations. His symptoms resolved only after coumadin. His 44-year-old brother (deep venous thrombosis [DVT]) and 46-year-old sister (DVT, pulmonary embolus [PE]) were compound FVL-PTG gene heterozygotes. Of 4 asymptomatic children born to these 3 siblings, 2 were FVL heterozygotes and 2 PTG heterozygotes. The proband's 69-year-old father, with NAION and ischemic
stroke
, had PTG heterozygosity, familial high factor VIII, and compound
MTHFR
C677T-A1298C mutation with homocysteinemia. The proband's 61-year-old aunt had PTG heterozygosity, recurrent DVT, and mesenteric artery thrombosis. The proband's 67-year-old mother, free of thrombotic events, was a FVL heterozygote, had high factor VIII, and PAI-1 4G4G homozygosity. In this extended kindred, ocular thrombotic events (amaurosis fugax, NAION) were associated with variegated thrombotic events, including TIA, ischemic
stroke
, DVT, PE, and mesenteric artery thrombosis, and opened a diagnostic window to family screening and treatment for complex thrombophilias, which had previously been undiagnosed.
...
PMID:Ocular vascular thrombotic events: a diagnostic window to familial thrombophilia (compound factor V Leiden and prothrombin gene heterozygosity) and thrombosis. 1879 59
Aim of the study was to investigate association of gene candidate polymorphisms encoding elements of the renin-angiotensin system and participating in regulation of vascular tone with development of microalbuminuria in patients with hypertensive disease. We examined 93 patients (52 women, 41 men, mean age 58.3+/-1.12 years, mean duration of hypertension 15.6+/-1.16 years) with hypertensive disease. Two patients had arterial hypertension (AG) with I, 22 with II, 63 with III degree of blood pressure (BP) elevation. Thirty four patients smoked, 2 had
stroke
in anamnesis, 33 had ischemic heart disease, in 58 heredity burdened with cardiovascular diseases was noted. In 38 patients hypertrophy of left ventricular myocardium was revealed. As gene-candidates we considered AGT, ACE, AT2R1, CYP11B2,
MTHFR
, PPARA, PPARG2, NOS3. Patients with microalbuminuria had significantly higher systolic and diastolic BP levels. Groups did not differ significantly according sex, age, disease duration, glucose level. There were no significant differences in involvement of other target organs - hypertrophy of left ventricular myocardium and atherosclerosis of carotid arteries. Patients with microalbuminuria had significantly higher level of blood cholesterol. Patients with and without microalbuminuria differed only in frequencies of genotypes of polymorphic marker A(-153)G of AT2R1 gene. Genotype AA predisposed to development of nephropathy--odds ratio (OR) 4.71 (95CI 1.78-12.97), while genotype AG was protective (OR 0.20 95%CI 0.07 to 0.56, p=0.031). According to results of multifactorial analysis independent factors affecting increase of risk of development of nephropathy in the studied group were level of systolic BP and carriage of genotype AA of polymorphic marker A(-153)G of AT2R1 gene.
...
PMID:[Genetic aspects of development of microalbuminuria in patients with hypertensive disease]. 1907 77
Hyperhomocysteinemia is reported to be an independent risk factor for the development of ischemic
stroke
. Several studies on genetic variants of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (
MTHFR
, which plays a crucial role in regulation of plasma homocysteine concentration) reported an association between C677T gene polymorphism and
stroke
in some Asian populations. No study but one detected this association in Caucasians. The purpose of the present case-control study was to find a relationship between
MTHFR
genotypes and
stroke
in a Polish population.
MTHFR
genotypes were determined by PCR in 152 patients with ischemic
stroke
from northwestern Poland and in 135 consecutive newborns from the same population. The TT genotype and the T allele were significantly more frequent in patients than in the control group (11.8% vs. 4.4%, and 34.5% vs. 21.5%, P<0.01). When males and females were analyzed separately, the differences were statistically significant in both genders. It is concluded that presence of the T allele is a risk factor for ischemic
stroke
in Polish subjects.
...
PMID:C677T polymorphism of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene and the risk of ischemic stroke in Polish subjects. 1919 85
The B vitamins are components of one-carbon metabolism (OCM) that contribute to DNA synthesis and methylation. Homocysteine, a by-product of OCM, has been associated with coronary heart disease,
stroke
and neurological disease. To investigate genetic factors that affect circulating vitamin B6, vitamin B12, folate and homocysteine, a genome-wide association analysis was conducted in the InCHIANTI (N = 1175), SardiNIA (N = 1115), and BLSA (N = 640) studies. The top loci were replicated in an independent sample of 687 participants in the Progetto Nutrizione study. Polymorphisms in the ALPL gene (rs4654748, p = 8.30 x 10(-18)) were associated with vitamin B6 and FUT2 (rs602662, [corrected] p = 2.83 x 10(-20)) with vitamin B12 serum levels. The association of
MTHFR
, a gene consistently associated with homocysteine, was confirmed in this meta-analysis. The ALPL gene likely influences the catabolism of vitamin B6 while FUT2 interferes with absorption of vitamin B12. These findings highlight mechanisms that affect vitamin B6, vitamin B12 and homocysteine serum levels.
...
PMID:Genome-wide association study of vitamin B6, vitamin B12, folate, and homocysteine blood concentrations. 1930 62
The development of the atherosclerosis is based on multifactorial causes. In addition to the traditional risk factors, gene polymorphisms can play a role in the disease. Therefore in this study we investigated whether the eNOS and
MTHFR
gene polymorphisms is associated with myocardial infarction and
stroke
in patients with or without diabetes. We have identified polymorphisms in the NOS 3 gene and one of these polymorphisms, Glu(298-->)Asp, was found to be a major risk factor for carotid artery disease and myocardial infarction. Our results indicate that the
MTHFR
G677T allele is significantly associated with MI.
MTHFR
677 G/T genotyping may be of clinical importance as a prognostic and therapeutic marker, although further studies are needed to substantiate this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Methylentetrahydrofolate reductase and nitric oxide synthase polymorphism in patients with atherosclerosis and diabetes. 1933 Apr 66
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