Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0151825 (bone pain)
3,118 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gaucher's disease is a lipidosis caused by deficiency of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase (glucosylceramidase) with secondary accumulation of glucocerebrosides in macrophage lysosomes. Three clinical forms of the disease have been described with autosomal recessive genetic basis. They are caused by many different mutations in glucocerebrosidase gene which have been recently identified. The infantile (type III) and juvenile (type II) forms involve the central nervous system and are very rare. Type I is a non neuronopathic form and is the most common lysosomal storage disease, reaching an incidence of 1 in 2500 births among Ashkenazi jews. Clinical manifestations include splenomegaly and hypersplenism, while bone and lung involvement are less common. Most patients have a mild course and a normal life expectancy, but some others suffer for heavy bone pain that greatly inhabilitate them. A distinctive storage cell is present in bone marrow, but diagnostic confirmation is based upon leucocytes or fibroblasts enzyme assay. Total or partial splenectomy is the treatment of choice for correcting hematological abnormalities. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation was successfully employed in some cases, while studies on retroviral-mediated gene transfer are undergoing. Promising clinical results were obtained in last two years by chronic infusion of purified macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase enzyme. New experience is required in selecting patients for this expensive regimen and establishing duration of therapy.
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PMID:[Update on Gaucher's disease]. 849 69

Mucolipidosis type III (ML III; McKusick 252600) is a rare lysosomal storage disease in which skeletal involvement is prominent, in particular the destruction of vertebral bodies and the femoral heads. We describe studies in two siblings with ML III that suggest the presence of a distinct metabolic bone disorder. Biochemical indices of bone turnover were increased, and transiliac bone biopsy demonstrated both trabecular osteopenia and marked subperiosteal bone resorption. Intravenous pamidronate treatment given monthly for a year was well tolerated and produced dramatic clinical effects, with reduction in bone pain and improvements in mobility, despite incomplete suppression of bone resorption as assessed by biochemical, radiographic and histological criteria. Bisphosphonate therapy may have an important role in the management of bone pain in ML III, as it does in the related lysosomal disorder of Gaucher disease.
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PMID:The osteodystrophy of mucolipidosis type III and the effects of intravenous pamidronate treatment. 1270 98

Gaucher's disease is a lysosomal storage disease caused by the lack of beta-glucocerebrosidase enzyme, leading to the accumulation of glucocerebroside. Gaucher's disease is the most frequent type of sphingolipidosis as well as the most frequent lysosomal disease. Clinically, two forms of Gaucher's disease are defined: nonneuronopathic form, so-called type 1, characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, anemia, and osteopenia, and neuronopathic form, known as types 2 and 3, which are also characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, hematological and bone changes; however, involvement of the central nervous system dominates in the clinical picture. Severe deficiency of beta-glucocerebrosidase activity allows confirming the diagnosis based on the clinical picture or the findings of bone marrow examination. Treatment with human glucocerebrosidase was introduced in 1991. Clinically good results are achieved: not only accumulation of glucocerebroside is stopped, but also positive changes in the reticuloendothelial system and an improvement in development and hematological parameters of children are observed as well as the development of bone lesions is reduced. To date, Gaucher's disease has been diagnosed in 8 patients in Lithuania: 3 persons have type 3 and 5 have type 1 disease. Enzyme replacement therapy was started in 2001, and currently 6 persons are being treated. In majority of patients, Gaucher's disease was suspected after exclusion of other possible proliferative diseases. All patients within the first or second year of treatment achieved the therapeutic goals, namely: normalization of hematological parameters, reduction in liver and spleen volumes, and bone pain relief.
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PMID:Gaucher's disease in Lithuania: its diagnosis and treatment. 2211 91

Mucopolysaccharidosis and other lysosomal storage diseases are rare, chronic, and progressive inherited diseases caused by a deficit of lysosomal enzymes. Patients are affected by a wide variety of symptoms. For some lysosomal storage diseases, effective treatments to arrest disease progression, or slow the pathologic process, and increase patient life expectancy are available or being developed. Timely diagnosis is crucial. Rheumatologists, orthopedics, and neurologists are commonly consulted due to unspecific musculoskeletal signs and symptoms. Pain, stiffness, contractures of joints in absence of clinical signs of inflammation, bone pain or abnormalities, osteopenia, osteonecrosis, secondary osteoarthritis or hip dysplasia are the alerting symptoms that should induce suspicion of a lysosomal storage disease.
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PMID:Mucopolysaccharidoses and other lysosomal storage diseases. 2359 73