Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pectus excavatum is a common malformation in diseases of elastic tissue (Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos...). When observed apparently alone it may represent a minor form of dystrophy, implying the same risk of a cardiac lesion. Abnormalities of the thoracic skeleton and echocardiographic mitral valve prolapse is a well established association, suggesting a common disorder of connective tissue. However, there is no absolute proof that this is a statistically significant association. Histological connective tissue changes relating these two markers have yet to be found. Clinical and echocardiographic examinations and skin biopsies were performed in 17 patients with pectus excavatum. Mitral valve prolapse was detected in 65% of cases (associated in 1 out of 3 cases with tricuspid valve prolapse). In 53% of cases electron microscopy showed abnormal skin collagen and elastin. Collagen abnormalities were twice as common as those of elastin and could be associated. Mixed changes of thinning of elastin and collagen fibres of irregular calibre were particularly suggestive. Pectus excavatum would therefore seem to be the expression of a minor form of dystrophy of collagen and elastin tissues and a clinical marker of possible mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse and pectus excavatum. Expressions of connective tissue dystrophy?]. 309 Sep 60

100 cases of RMVD underwent MVP successfully among 104 RMVD patients (utilization of MVP: 96%). The lesions included: MS in 31 cases, MI in 9, both in 60. preoperative cardiac function status was class III to IV in 94 cases. There were 6 early deaths and 6 late deaths (follow-up: 0.5-3.5 years). Postoperative cardiac function in 82 cases (93.2%) improved to class I to II. The authors focus their discussion on specific surgical technique and consider full functional recovery of mitral apparatus is the key for the success in MVP. The refined technique of removal of calcium deposits and thinning out of the proliferative fibrosis of the diseased valve have greatly increased the utilization of MVP. Eight standards in judgement to produce satisfactory mitral function under direct vision are described.
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PMID:[Report on 100 cases of rheumatic mitral valve disease treated with the valvuloplasty technique]. 804 11

Keratoconus is a bilateral noninflammatory corneal ectasia with an incidence of approximately 1 per 2,000 in the general population. It has well-described clinical signs, but early forms of the disease may go undetected unless the anterior corneal topography is studied. Early disease is now best detected with videokeratography. Classic histopathologic features include stromal thinning, iron deposition in the epithelial basement membrane, and breaks in Bowman's layer. Keratoconus is most commonly an isolated disorder, although several reports describe an association with Down syndrome, Leber's congenital amaurosis, and mitral valve prolapse. The differential diagnosis of keratoconus includes keratoglobus, pellucid marginal degeneration and Terrien's marginal degeneration. Contact lenses are the most common treatment modality. When contact lenses fail, corneal transplant is the best and most successful surgical option. Despite intensive clinical and laboratory investigation, the etiology of keratoconus remains unclear. Clinical studies provide strong indications of a major role for genes in its etiology. Videokeratography is playing an increasing role in defining the genetics of keratoconus, since early forms of the disease can be more accurately detected and potentially quantified in a reproducible manner. Laboratory studies suggest a role for degradative enzymes and proteinase inhibitors and a possible role for the interleukin-1 system in its pathogenesis, but these roles need to be more clearly defined. Genes suggested by these studies, as well as collagen genes and their regulatory products, could potentially be used as candidate genes to study patients with familial keratoconus. Such studies may provide the clues needed to enable us to better understand the underlying mechanisms that cause the corneal thinning in this disorder.
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PMID:Keratoconus. 949 73

Keratoconus (KC) is an eye disease characterized by the progressive thinning and protrusion of the cornea, which results in the loss of visual acuity. This disorder remains poorly understood, although recent studies indicate the involvement of genetic and environmental factors. Recently, we have found that the distribution of the cross-linking enzyme lysyl oxidase (LOX) is markedly decreased in about 63 % of keratoconic specimens. Similarly, LOX activity is significantly reduced by 38 % compared to control tissue. Nearly 70 systemic disorders have been reported in association with KC, most of them affecting the extracellular matrix. In this review we attempted to ascertain whether any KC-associated diseases exhibit signs that may reflect LOX impairment. We hypothesized that very similar changes in the extracellular matrix, particularly at the level of collagen metabolism, including LOX impairment in mitral leaflets, may reflect an association between KC and mitral valve prolapse. Moreover, this putative association is supported by the high frequency of Down syndrome in both diseases. Among other disorders that have been found to coincide with KC, we did not find any in which the LOX enzyme may be directly or indirectly impaired. On the other hand, in cases where KC is present along with other connective tissue disorders (Marfan syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and others), KC may not arise as a localized manifestation, but rather may be induced as the result of a more complex connective tissue disorder.
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PMID:The impairment of lysyl oxidase in keratoconus and in keratoconus-associated disorders. 2365 21