Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0162316 (
iron deficiency anemia
)
3,806
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pica was a surprise finding in 8 cases of severe
iron deficiency anaemia
of unknown cause and 2 patients with pregnancy-related anaemia who had a mixed picture of iron deficiency and megaloblastic features owing to folic acid deficiency. The pica cases demonstrated an apparently consistent pattern: severe anaemia, young age, normal psychiatric assessment, good nutrition and lack of an overtly disadvantaged background. Pica was significantly absent in other forms of anaemia in a series of 53 subjects. The literature is briefly reviewed to highlight the unanswered questions about this disorder. The cases reported do not furnish any clues to the
enigma
of pica, but reveal an obscure form of idiopathic
iron deficiency anaemia
. Pica may be commoner than is thought.
...
PMID:Iron deficiency anaemia and pica. 377 86
Recent evidence points to isolated deficiency of the largest multimers of von Willebrand factor (VWF)-known as von Willebrand syndrome type 2A (VWS-2A)-as a risk factor for bleeding from gastrointestinal (GI) angiodysplasia. This disorder is not widely recognized, perhaps because most patients do not exhibit generalized hemostatic impairment (bleeding is generally restricted to GI angiodysplasia) and because all but the largest multimers of VWF remain detectable in the plasma (thus, routine screening tests for VWS-2A are usually normal). The "Rosetta stone" for elucidating this syndrome was the
enigma
of Heyde's syndrome (aortic stenosis plus bleeding GI angiodysplasia), particularly the striking observation that aortic valve replacement generally cures GI bleeding and that preoperative deficiency of the largest VWF multimers undergoes long-term normalization after valve replacement. We critically review the evidence implicating VWS-2A as a risk factor for bleeding GI angiodysplasia. We hypothesize that VWS-2A secondary to cardiovascular disease other than severe aortic stenosis, such as peripheral arterial occlusive disease, could explain why elderly patients often develop recurrent GI bleeding or
iron deficiency anemia
from GI angiodysplasia.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal bleeding, angiodysplasia, cardiovascular disease, and acquired von Willebrand syndrome. 1457 95