Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0235394 (
wasting
)
8,040
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During 1981-88, 63 cases of female pseudohermaphroditism (FPH) were seen at the Intersex clinic at AIIMS, of whom 34 (54%) were diagnosed as due to congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). Though ambiguity was present at birth in most cases, only one child was brought immediately after birth, while 14 presented after one year. Family history of affected siblings and fetal wastage was present in 10. Salt
wasting
symptoms were present in 13 (38.2%), evidence of early virilization in 10 (29.4%) and generalised hyperpigmentation in 7 (20.6%). Clitoromegaly was present in 30 children with labial fusion in 10 and scrotalisation of labia in 6. The urogenital opening was single in 25 (73.5%). Buccal smear was positive for sex chromatin in 19. Chromosomal pattern showed 46 XX in 33. Dyselectrolytemia was present in 16 children. Bone age was advanced in all.
Adrenal hyperplasia
could be documented in 3 on CT scan. All the girls were put on hydrocortisone or prednisolone, and fluodrocortisone was given only to children with salt
wasting
CAH. Children with CAH are being brought to medical attention much too late and investigative and therapeutic facilities are grossly inadequate. There is a need to educate primary care physicians for early case detection and provide minimum diagnostic and therapeutic facilities in regional centres.
...
PMID:Congenital adrenal hyperplasia: experience at intersex clinic, AIIMS. 145 72
A total of 28 patients with salt-
wasting
adrenal hyperplasia
who underwent revision of the external genitalia at an early age (mean age 21.4 months) has been followed for 12 to 20 years (mean 16.3 years). The age at initial surgery ranged from 3 weeks to 5 years. Twenty-five patients had a low and 3 had a high takeoff of the vagina from the urogenital sinus. Of these children 22 (78.5%) required further vaginal reconstructive procedures to achieve a normal vaginal outlet. Of the 22 patients requiring further repair 18 have undergone vaginal reconstructive procedures with an initial success rate of 72.2%. These long-term data suggest that if vaginal reconstructive surgery is performed in infancy details, such as placement of the perineal flap well into the vagina and careful followup of the vaginal outlet, are mandatory for success. If there is evidence of outlet narrowing, periodic dilation will be needed to prevent vaginal stenosis and further vaginal surgery.
...
PMID:Vaginal reconstruction after initial construction of the external genitalia in girls with salt-wasting adrenal hyperplasia. 164 May 45
The recognition of renal cysts in two patients with chronic hypokalemia and the renal effects of hypokalemia in certain species of animals prompted this study of the possible association of hypokalemia and renal cysts in patients with primary aldosteronism or primary renal potassium
wasting
. Using CT scans, we studied 55 patients with primary aldosteronism, of whom 24 had cysts (44 percent). The cysts were more frequent in patients with adrenal tumors than in those with idiopathic
adrenal hyperplasia
. Sixteen of the 26 patients with tumors (62 percent) had renal cysts, which were often multiple and located in the medulla. Lower plasma potassium levels and higher serum aldosterone levels, urinary aldosterone excretion, and plasma renin activity were correlated with the extent of the cystic disease. Sequential observations indicated that prolonged hypokalemia can be accompanied by the development of renal scarring and that the size and number of cysts can decrease markedly in some patients after the removal of an adrenal adenoma. The association of hypokalemia, aldosteronism, and renal cysts was also supported by the finding of multiple medullary cysts in two patients with primary renal potassium
wasting
. We conclude that chronic hypokalemia is accompanied by enhanced renal cytogenesis and may lead to interstitial scarring and renal insufficiency. Renal cysts are thus dynamic structures whose growth can be influenced by hormonal or pharmacologic interventions.
...
PMID:Association of hypokalemia, aldosteronism, and renal cysts. 239 43
From the study of HLA, complement, and glyoxalase I alleles in 82 Venezuelan individuals belonging to 19 families of mixed ethnic origin having 20 affected newborns with salt-
wasting
congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase (21-OH) deficiency, a total of 38 disease haplotypes and 53 nondisease haplotypes were found. Of the pathological haplotypes 47% were found to share the HLA-B39 or -Bw62 specificities, 55% of them in combination with the BFS, C2C, C4A4, C4B2 (SC42) complotype. The frequencies of HLA-B39 and -Bw62 among the affected haplotypes were 29 and 18% as compared with 6 and 0% among the nondisease haplotypes of the same families. Statistical associations (P less than 0.01) with salt-
wasting
adrenal hyperplasia
were found with the SC42 complotype and with the combination SC42, HLA-B39. These results are markedly different from those reported in the literature which show an "association" at the population level among many Caucasoid samples of HLA-Bw47 and the extended haplotype (HLA-Bw47, DR7,FC91,0) with the salt-
wasting
form of the disease. Furthermore, four of the unrelated patients reported here were homozygous for all the major histocompatibility complex loci tested, while three others were homozygous for at least two HLA loci. Analysis of the geographical origin of the grandparents indicated clustering of the deficiency carrier HLA haplotypes. This observation, together with the fact that there is an excess of homozygotes among the patients in Venezuela, strongly suggests that salt-
wasting
21-OH deficiency congenital adrenal hyperplasia is mostly the result of a founder effect of relatively hyperplasia is mostly the result of a founder effect identity by descent of a few abnormal alleles at the 21-OHB locus in most cases. The mutation marked by HLA-Bw47 was not observed in this population.
...
PMID:Sharing of MHC haplotypes among apparently unrelated patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency. 349 16
Mutations in 21 hydroxylase gene were investigated in 40 Russian patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia. Quantitative amplification/restriction procedure was used for detection of mutations involving promoter region, 3 and 8 exons. For affected chromosomes alleles of tightly linked HLA A and B genes were defined, as well as 5 different alleles or allele combinations HLA DQA1 gene. The most frequent (> 20% of chromosomes) cause of salt
wasting
adrenal hyperplasia
in Russia is a chimeric CYP21A-CYP21B gene with normal copy of a pseudogene which results from gene conversion in chromosome with B14-DQA1 0101/0102 haplotype. The second common mutation (about 10%) is a result of intragenic recombination well-known deletion of the gene linked with A3-B47-DQA1 0201/0601 haplotype. Two other mutations were linked with A3-B35-DQA1 0401/0402 and A3-B40-DQA1 0201/0601 haplotypes.
...
PMID:Preliminary investigation of mutations in 21-hydroxylase gene in patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia in Russia. 774 11
Twenty-one hydroxylase (21-OH)-deficient classic
adrenal hyperplasia
(CAH) and nonclassic
adrenal hyperplasia
(NCAH) are two of the most common genetic disorders known to man, yet the mechanism(s) resulting in steroid excess remains unclear. Overactivation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and increased ACTH secretion appear to be important mechanisms resulting in steroid excess in untreated patients, at least in the classic forms of the disorder. Nonetheless, most NCAH patients do not demonstrate overactivity of the HPA axis. A few of these patients may demonstrate a mild degree of ACTH hyper-responsiveness to corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation, and up to 40% have radiologic evidence of adrenocortical hyperplasia and/or isolated adenomas, suggesting that some degree of chronic ACTH excess is present. Another mechanism resulting in adrenocortical excess in
adrenal hyperplasia
, and primarily in NCAH, follows the alteration in enzyme kinetics resulting from the mutation of 21-OH. The mutated enzyme product is less efficient than the wild type, resulting in an increased precursor to product ratio, independent of ACTH levels. Hence, progesterone (P4) and 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-HP) levels in these patients may remain above normal even in the presence of excess glucocorticoid administration. Overactivity of the renin-angiotensin system may also be important in stimulating adrenocortical steroidogenesis in patients with salt-
wasting
and in some with simple virilizing CAH. Alterations in ovarian and gonadotropic function, with the appearance of a polycystic ovary-like picture, also contribute to the androgen excess of these patients. Functional ovarian abnormalities in patients with CAH or NCAH may relate to a number of causes, including prenatal masculinization of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis by adrenal androgens, continued disruption of the HPO axis by persistently elevated P4 or androgen levels, and/or a direct glucocorticoid effect. Finally, these data suggest that the measurement of P4 or 17-HP may not be the most accurate marker of therapeutic efficacy, and suppression of both the ovaries and adrenals may be necessary for optimum steroidogenic control.
...
PMID:The 21-hydroxylase-deficient adrenal hyperplasias: more than ACTH oversecretion. 892 12
Congenital lipoid
adrenal hyperplasia
(CLAH) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of steroid biosynthesis, caused by a molecular defect in the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR). Patients with CLAH usually manifest severe salt
wasting
, hypovolemia, enlargement of the adrenal glands and complete female external genitalia irrespective of the gonadal sex. CLAH seems to be more common in Koreans and Japanese than in other ethnic populations, with a preponderance of the mutation of a glutamine to a stop codon at the 258th amino acid residue (Q258X) in the StAR gene. Clinical findings of five unrelated Korean patients with CLAH and their molecular defects in the StAR gene are described, and the gene frequency of the Q258X mutation in the Korean population is investigated. All patients developed hypovolemic shock due to severe salt
wasting
in the first three months after birth. All were hyperpigmented, and three of five phenotypic females were genetic males. The basal ACTH level was extremely high in all patients with the minimal concentrations of all adrenal and gonadal steroids. The Q258X mutation was identified in 9 out of 10 alleles, indicating that the genetic defect in the StAR gene of Korean patients with CLAH is highly homogeneous probably due to a founder effect. The carrier frequency of the Q258X mutation in the normal Korean population has been estimated as approximately 1 in 250 with the allele frequency of 1 in 500. However, the confidence limits of the gene frequency for the mutant allele are wide (0.5 to 8.0 among 1,000 alleles). This implies that the carrier frequency could be lower, down to 1/1,000, or higher, up to 16/1,000.
...
PMID:Molecular and clinical characterization of Korean patients with congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia. 982 24
Salt wasting syndrome is caused by a congenital or acquired synthesis disorder or by the aldosterone function disorder. It manifests itself by ionic disorders where the sodium and chlorine level decrease with the simultaneous potassium retention. Synthesised aldosterone is in the glomerular zone of the adrenal cortex. Symptoms of dyselectrolitemia are not distinctive, they develop within a few first days of life. The suction aversion, apathy, lack of growth or progressing, body mass loss is being noticed. The most often cause of salt wasting syndrome is the congenital cortical
adrenal hyperplasia
(CAH) caused by 21-hydroxylase enzyme deficit. The classic form with and without salt
wasting
(SW), as well as non-classic form is distinguished. The therapy of SW form depends on Hydrocortisone and Cortineff administering. The other forms of salt wasting syndrome occur not so often and these are: aldosterone synthesis deficit, dehydrogenase 3beta-hydroxysteroid deficit, lipoid cortical hyperplasia, adrenal hypoplasia congenital (AHC), adrenoleukodystrophy and pseudohypoaldosteronism. The knowledge of the symptoms and causes of salt wasting syndrome allows for the proper therapeutic management and contributes to the regular psychophysical infantile development of the children.
...
PMID:[Salt wasting syndrome caused by congenital, insufficient synthesis or aldosterone function--etiology, diagnosis and management]. 1599 40
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency is one of the most common autosomal recessive hereditary diseases. The impairment of cortisol synthesis leads to excessive stimulation of the adrenal glands by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH),
adrenal hyperplasia
, and excessive androgen synthesis. The syndrome is characterised by a considerable correlation between the genotype and the phenotype with the type of CYP21A2 gene mutation affecting the severity of 21-hydroxylase deficiency. The clinical manifestations of CAH in adults result from adrenocortical and adrenomedullary insufficiency, hyperandrogenism, and the adverse effects of glucocorticosteroids used for the treatment of the condition. Non-classic CAH may sometimes be asymptomatic. In patients with classic CAH obesity, hyperinsulinaemia, insulin resistance, and hyperleptinaemia are more often seen than in the general population. These abnormalities promote the development of metabolic syndrome and its sequelae, including endothelial dysfunction, and cardiovascular disease. Long-term glucocorticosteroid treatment is also a known risk factor for osteoporosis. Patients with CAH require constant monitoring of biochemical parameters (17a-hydroxyprogesterone [17-OHP] and androstenedione), clinical parameters (body mass, waist circumference, blood pressure, glucose, and lipids), and bone mineral density by densitometry. The principal goal of treatment in adults with CAH is to improve quality of life, ensure that they remain fertile, reduce the manifestations of hyperandrogenisation in females, and minimise the adverse effects of glucocorticosteroid treatment. Patients with classic CAH require treatment with glucocorticosteroids and, in cases of salt
wasting
, also with a mineralocorticosteroid. Radical measures, such as bilateral adrenalectomy, are very rarely needed. Asymptomatic patients with non-classic CAH require monitoring: treatment is not always necessary. Medical care for patients with CAH should be provided by reference centres, as the management of such patients requires collaboration between an endocrinologist, diabetologist, gynaecologist, andrologist, urologist, and psychologist.
...
PMID:Congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency - management in adults. 2020 17
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency is one of the most common autosomal recessive hereditary diseases. The impairment of cortisol synthesis leads to excessive stimulation of the adrenal glands by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH),
adrenal hyperplasia
, and excessive androgen synthesis. The syndrome is characterised by a considerable correlation between the genotype and the phenotype with the type of CYP21A2 gene mutation affecting the severity of 21-hydroxylase deficiency. The clinical manifestations of CAH in adults result from adrenocortical and adrenomedullary insufficiency, hyperandrogenism, and the adverse effects of glucocorticosteroids used for the treatment of the condition. Non-classic CAH may sometimes be asymptomatic. In patients with classic CAH obesity, hyperinsulinaemia, insulin resistance, and hyperleptinaemia are more often seen than in the general population. These abnormalities promote the development of metabolic syndrome and its sequelae, including endothelial dysfunction, and cardiovascular disease. Long-term glucocorticosteroid treatment is also a known risk factor for osteoporosis. Patients with CAH require constant monitoring of biochemical parameters (17a-hydroxyprogesterone and androstenedione), clinical parameters (body mass, waist circumference, blood pressure, glucose, and lipids), and bone mineral density by densitometry. The principal goal of treatment in adults with CAH is to improve quality of life, ensure that they remain fertile, reduce the manifestations of hyperandrogenisation in females, and minimise the adverse effects of glucocorticosteroid treatment. Patients with classic CAH require treatment with glucocorticosteroids and, in cases of salt
wasting
, also with a mineralocorticosteroid. Radical measures, such as bilateral adrenalectomy, are very rarely needed. Asymptomatic patients with non-classic CAH require monitoring: treatment is not always necessary. Medical care for patients with CAH should be provided by reference centres, as the management of such patients requires collaboration between an endocrinologist, diabetologist, gynaecologist, andrologist, urologist, and psychologist.
...
PMID:[Congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency--management in adults]. 2212 31
1
2
Next >>