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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five patients who presented with arthritis as the sole manifestation of hereditary hemochromatosis and 51 family members were studied. Studies included clinical evaluation for the presence of arthritis and hemochromatosis, roentgenography of hands, knees, and pelvis, serum iron and serum
ferritin
measurements, complete
HLA
typing for 50 of the A and B loci, and, when indicated, liver biopsy. Arthritis occurred in 45 percent of persons with hemochromatosis. Although typical involvement of second and third metacarpophalangeal joints was observed in all five patients and some family members, two with typical arthritis did not have characteristic radiographic changes, two had constitutional symptoms without arthropathy, and one had unilateral hand changes. A specific
HLA
haplotype (A2/B17 in Family 1 and A29/B15 in Family 2) correlated with hereditary hemochromatosis but not with the arthropathy. Phlebotomy alleviated the early constitutional symptoms but did not help advanced arthritis. Anti-inflammatory drugs, intraarticular injections of glucocorticoids, and resection osteotomies of metacarpal heads were other treatment modalities.
...
PMID:Arthritis of hemochromatosis. Clinical spectrum, relation to histocompatibility antigens, and effectiveness of early phlebotomy. 665 May 51
Twenty-three probands with idiopathic hemochromatosis were assigned the status of homozygotes: 132 of their relatives were classified as homozygotes, heterozygotes or normal individuals using the
HLA
haplotypes of the probands as markers of the hemochromatosis allele. Only half of the probands sought help because of symptoms or signs of iron overload. Clinical manifestations of iron loading were present, however, 95% of the probands and 67% of the discovered homozygotes. The commonest symptom was joint pain and stiffness. None of the heterozygotes had any clinical symptoms of excess body iron. High transferrin saturation and serum
ferritin
levels were prevalent in homozygotes: only 1 of 38 homozygotes had values for both of these measurements that were within normal limits. The level of transferrin saturation was increased in 6% of heterozygotes but only 1% had serum
ferritin
concns greater than 350 ng ml-1. The mean radioiron absorption levels of 27 homozygotes and 28 heterozygotes were similar to those in 44 controls. Radioiron absorption in relation to the respective serum
ferritin
concn was above the 95% confidence interval of controls in 65% of the homozygotes and 7% of the heterozygotes. The inverse relation between radioiron absorption and the respective serum
ferritin
concn observed in controls was absent in homozygotes but remained strong in the heterozygotes. Absence of the inverse relation indicates a deregulation of the iron absorptive mechanism in homozygotes which results in the size of body iron stores having no effect on the level of iron absorption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Genetic and phenotypic expression of hemochromatosis in Canadians. 665 83
People with parenchymal iron overload exhibit an elevated serum iron concentration and a raised transferrin (TIBC) saturation early in the course of the disease. They can therefore be detected by simple laboratory tests before organ damage has occurred. In this study running for 2 months, 10512 samples from approximately 8750 patients and blood donors were examined in a county hospital in Central Sweden. Abnormal TIBC saturation (greater than 70%) was found in 1.7% of the samples. This abnormality was caused by physiological fluctuations in serum iron in 44%, liver disease in 22%, blood disorder in 10%, iron therapy in 10.5% and parenchymal iron overload in 11.5%. The diagnosis of iron overload was confirmed by measuring the serum
ferritin
concentration and by performing the desferrioxamine test, liver biopsy, quantitative phlebotomy and family studies including
HLA
typing. We found a prevalence of iron overload of 0.24%. This figure is almost certainly too low because some affected patients were probably lost because of TIBC desaturation induced by inflammatory conditions.
...
PMID:Screening for iron overload using transferrin saturation. 670 89
Hereditary hemochromatosis is an autosomal recessive disease in which the gene is linked to the
HLA
system. Investigation of nine unrelated probands and their family members has revealed distinct groups based on biochemical and clinical manifestations of the disease. Four different types of disease expression were identified: Group I--classic hereditary hemochromatosis with elevated transferrin saturation, serum
ferritin
levels, and liver iron content; Group II--severe iron overload, accelerated disease manifesting at an early age; Group III--elevated total body iron stores, normal transferrin saturation and serum
ferritin
levels; Group IV--markedly elevated findings on serum biochemical tests, e.g., transferrin saturation, serum
ferritin
levels, with minimal elevation in total body iron stores. This evidence for several clearly distinguishable modes of expression in different families suggests that more than one genetic lesion in iron metabolism may be responsible for iron overload in hereditary hemochromatosis. This genetic heterogeneity may be helpful in delineating the fundamental abnormalities in iron metabolism in this group of disorders.
...
PMID:Evidence for heterogeneity in hereditary hemochromatosis. Evaluation of 174 persons in nine families. 672 Jul 28
In seven patients with hemochromatosis, arthropathy was an early symptom, or first clinical symptom, of the hemochromatosis. In all seven patients, serum iron, transferrin saturation, and parameters of storage iron (serum
ferritin
, Desferal-test) were clearly elevated. In 5 patients hemochromatosis was associated with the
HLA
loci A3 and B7. Bone scan proved a sensitive detection method for hemochromatosis arthropathy. In one case joint involvement was detected by bone scan prior to clinical symptoms. Parameters of iron metabolism correlated well with other organ manifestations of hemochromatosis. In contrast, joint involvement did not correlate with parameters of iron metabolism or severity of hemosiderosis of other organs, and was not relieved by phlebotomy. These 7 cases confirm that joint symptoms can be an early or leading symptom of hemochromatosis, can lead to early therapy and thereby prevent major organ damage. It remains undecided, however, whether the arthropathy is a consequence of iron storage or an independent disease which is genetically associated with hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:[Arthropathy as an early symptom of hemochromatosis. Overview of the literature and 7 case reports]. 672 20
The excessive storage of iron in idiopathic haemochromatosis leads to severe organic lesion up to life-threatening conditions (cardiac insufficiency, portal decompensation). The symptoms melanodermia , diabetes mellitus and other endocrine failures, liver cirrhosis, cardiac insufficiency and arthropathy appear together or in various combinations. The diagnosis is ascertained by the proof of iron storage, the multiple organic affection and by familial accumulation of the various laboratory diagnostic possibilities are particularly to be emphasized the serum iron value together with the percetal transferrin saturation (as search test), serum
ferritin
, the desferrioxamine test, simple ferrokinetic investigations and the quantitative determination of iron in the liver in the bioptate . For family examinations, apart from the search test, a
HLA
typisation is reasonable, in order to estimate the risk of the disease (particularly of brothers and sisters). The therapy of choice are blood- lettings (0.5 l once to twice a week) up to obtaining a permanent easy iron deficiency anaemia. The maintenance therapy should be performed with monthly to quarterly blood- lettings . Only in cases exception a desferal treatment is indicated. Endocrine failures and cardiac disturbances need a particular therapy.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic hemochromatosis--diagnosis and therapy]. 673 May 91
The reliability of serum iron, transferrin saturation, and serum
ferritin
in the detection of early iron overload in hemochromatosis was determined in 120 young (less than 35 yr old) relatives whose genetic susceptibility for the disease was determined by
HLA
typing of families. Serum
ferritin
and transferrin saturation demonstrated high levels of sensitivity and specificity, whereas serum iron concentration was an unreliable test in the detection of hemochromatosis. In hemochromatosis homozygotes there was an excellent correlation between serum
ferritin
and mobilized body iron (r = 0.92), 1 microgram/L of serum
ferritin
corresponding to approximately 7.5 mg of body iron stores. For a given age, serum
ferritin
values were higher in homozygotes compared with heterozygotes or homozygous-normal subjects and increased by approximately 65 micrograms/L X yr, reflecting the progressive accumulation of iron in hemochromatosis homozygotes. All hemochromatosis subjects with either hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis had serum
ferritin
concentrations greater than 700 micrograms/L. We conclude that the combination of serum
ferritin
and transferrin saturation is a reliable screening regimen for the detection of hemochromatosis and for predicting the level of body iron stores in young hemochromatosis subjects.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of hemochromatosis in young subjects: predictive accuracy of biochemical screening tests. 674 16
The association of hereditary ring sideroblastic anaemia with Christmas disease in a Swedish family is described. We have studied the transmission of the sideroblastic trait, in relation to
HLA
groups and Christmas disease, and also evaluated the erythrocyte morphology, uroporphyrinogen-I-synthetase activity and S-
ferritin
for the detection of latent cases of ring sideroblastic anaemia. The proband had ring sideroblastic anaemia, Christmas disease and haemochromatosis. 3 cases of ring sideroblastic anaemia were found among the 12 family members studied. Using the factor IX deficiency as a marker of the X chromosome, it appeared that autosomal transmission of the sideroblastic trait was most likely. The sideroblastic trait did not seem to be linked to
HLA
-A3-alloantigen. Erythrocyte morphology was normal in all non-anaemic subjects. S-
ferritin
was found to be increased in all 3 cases of sideroblastic anaemia as well as in 1 non-anaemic relative. Erythrocyte uroporphyrinogen-I-synthetase was elevated in 10 of the 12 family members; those with sideroblastic anaemia had the highest values indicating that uroporphyrinogen-I-synthetase is of importance in the disturbed haem-synthesis of ring sideroblastic anaemia. This interpretation is supported by the positive correlation between S-
ferritin
values and the uroporphyrinogen-I-synthetase activity.
...
PMID:Hereditary ring sideroblastic anaemia and Christmas disease in a Swedish family. 685 51
Elevated serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) for more than one year was found in 36 (28.8%) of 125 patients on maintenance haemodialysis. In 10 the ALT returned to normal spontaneously but in 26 it remained high. Liver tissue from 21 patients with high ALT and seven with normal ALT was examined. Statistically significant correlations were found between the mean ALT during the year prior to the biopsy and assessments of the lymphocytic infiltration (p less than 0.001), fibrosis (p less than 0.001) and amount of silicone particles in the liver (p less than 0.001). Epithelioid cell granulomata, lobular and portal macrophages and perivenular fibrosis were related to silicone particles. Lymphocytes were not spacially related to the particles; nevertheless, there was a significant correlation between amounts of silicone and lymphocytic infiltration (p less than 0.01). No associations were found between high ALT, hepatitis B serology, serum
ferritin
, parenchymal siderosis, propensity to fluid overload, alcohol abuse and
HLA
-B8.
...
PMID:Chronic liver disease in haemodialysis patients. 687 29
It has previously been shown by immunofluorescence experiments that the cross-linking of
HLA
antigens into patches (by antibody reagents directed to human beta 2--microglobulin) on the surfaces of cultured human fibroblasts leads to the lining up of the patches over the actomyosin-containing stress fibers lying immediately under the surface membrane. These experiments have now been extended to the resolution of the electron microscope by the use of
ferritin
-conjugated antibody. The results show that a substantial part of the
HLA
surface clusters that form by 5 min after the addition of the antibody reagents is found in small uncoated surface invaginations which are subsequently endocytosed and ultimately fuse with lysosomal bodies. At no stage in this process is there any indication that coated pits or coated vesicles participate. These and other results suggest, therefore, that there are at least two distinct mechanisms for the ligand-induced endocytosis and lysosomal processing of membrane components, one involving coated pits and the other the noncoated invaginations described in this paper. Transmembrane associations of clusters with intracellular actomyosin-containing structures may have a role in the endocytosis of these noncoated invaginations.
...
PMID:The antibody-induced clustering and endocytosis of HLA antigens on cultured human fibroblasts. 699 34
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