Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0162316 (
iron deficiency anemia
)
3,806
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) offers the potential for automating serum protein electrophoretic analysis traditionally performed on standard thin-layer agarose gels. The following describes the use of CZE compared to agarose gel electrophoresis (AGE) for the detection of dysproteinemia and paraproteinemia in a clinical study involving 240 patients. The study includes within-run and between-run reproducibility data on the Paragon CZE 2000 Clinical Capillary Electrophoresis System, in addition to concordance data between the two methodologies. Paraprotein quantitation studies comparing AGE versus CZE were also performed. Reproducibility for the automated CZE system was superior to the AGE system. Improved reproducibility for the CZE method is largely due to measuring protein absorbance directly at 214 nm versus the traditional AGE method that measures the amount of dye adsorbed to protein. Reproducibility data as percent coefficient of variance (% CV) for the five classic bands in a normal control serum for between-run precision ranged from 1.2 to 4.5% for CZE compared to AGE, which ranged from 3.8 to 8.0% CV. Concordance studies between AGE and CZE involving dysproteinemias including
hypogammaglobulinemia
, polyclonal and monoclonal gammopathies, acute and chronic inflammation, nephrosis, hepatodegenerative disease, cirrhosis, and
iron deficiency anemia
showed 96% agreement. Paraprotein classification, which compared the CZE immunosubtraction method to immunofixation electrophoresis (IFE) on agarose, showed 100% agreement. Certain dysproteinemias involving beta lipoprotein were in partial concordance due to the inability of the CZE procedure to detect this component. Detection limits for monoclonal gammopathies, providing they were not comigrating with other proteins, were IgG 50 mg/dL, IgM 75 mg/dL, and IgA 75 mg/dL. Paraprotein quantitative studies between the two methods showed less than a +/- 0.2 g/dL variation.
...
PMID:Comparison of serum protein electrophoresis by agarose gel and capillary zone electrophoresis in a clinical setting. 937 70
Intestinal lymphangiectasia in the adult may be characterized as a disorder with dilated intestinal lacteals causing loss of lymph into the lumen of the small intestine and resultant hypoproteinemia,
hypogammaglobulinemia
, hypoalbuminemia and reduced number of circulating lymphocytes or lymphopenia. Most often, intestinal lymphangiectasia has been recorded in children, often in neonates, usually with other congenital abnormalities but initial definition in adults including the elderly has become increasingly more common. Shared clinical features with the pediatric population such as bilateral lower limb edema, sometimes with lymphedema, pleural effusion and chylous ascites may occur but these reflect the severe end of the clinical spectrum. In some, diarrhea occurs with steatorrhea along with increased fecal loss of protein, reflected in increased fecal alpha-1-antitrypsin levels, while others may present with
iron deficiency anemia
, sometimes associated with occult small intestinal bleeding. Most lymphangiectasia in adults detected in recent years, however, appears to have few or no clinical features of malabsorption. Diagnosis remains dependent on endoscopic changes confirmed by small bowel biopsy showing histological evidence of intestinal lymphangiectasia. In some, video capsule endoscopy and enteroscopy have revealed more extensive changes along the length of the small intestine. A critical diagnostic element in adults with lymphangiectasia is the exclusion of entities (e.g. malignancies including lymphoma) that might lead to obstruction of the lymphatic system and "secondary" changes in the small bowel biopsy. In addition, occult infectious (e.g. Whipple's disease from Tropheryma whipplei) or inflammatory disorders (e.g. Crohn's disease) may also present with profound changes in intestinal permeability and protein-losing enteropathy that also require exclusion. Conversely, rare B-cell type lymphomas have also been described even decades following initial diagnosis of intestinal lymphangiectasia. Treatment has been historically defined to include a low fat diet with medium-chain triglyceride supplementation that leads to portal venous rather than lacteal uptake. A number of other pharmacological measures have been reported or proposed but these are largely anecdotal. Finally, rare reports of localized surgical resection of involved areas of small intestine have been described but follow-up in these cases is often limited.
...
PMID:Intestinal lymphangiectasia in adults. 2136 42
An 18-year-old woman was admitted with abdominal pain and hematochezia. She was previously healthy until 15 years of age and was subsequently diagnosed with
hypogammaglobulinemia
, protein-losing enteropathy, a benign temporal lobe brain lesion/orbital fibroadenoma, autoimmune hepatitis,
iron deficiency anaemia
and hypothyroidism. She developed respiratory distress and hypoxemia. She was found to have nodules on chest CT scan. She was diagnosed with cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 deficiency via genetic testing.
...
PMID:An 18-year-old woman with pulmonary nodules found to have cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 deficiency. 3181 88