Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Poor nutritional status in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) is associated with increased mortality. Patients with CF often have a decreased sensation of smell secondary to recurrent sinus infections or sinus surgery; in other CF populations, a decreased sensation of smell has been associated with poor nutritional status. We hypothesized that a decreased sensation of smell would be associated with worse nutritional status in patients with CF. We studied 50 (26 F and 24 M) of 58 consecutive patients with CF (86%) aged 14-53 years (28 +/- 8; mean +/- SD) who attended the University of Washington Medical Center from June 1994 to March 1995 and who agreed to participate. Demographic information was obtained, and nutritional status was assessed by ideal body weight, arm muscle area, arm fat area, pancreatic sufficiency, insulin-requiring diabetes, vitamins A and E levels, albumin, iron, iron binding capacity, ferritin, cholesterol, and zinc levels. Objective sensation of small was examined (Sensonics, Philadelphia, PA), a sinus compacted tomogram (CT) was performed, and a questionnaire for prior sinus symptoms, sinus surgery, medications, and subjective sensation of smell was administered. Twenty-seven of 49 subjects (55%) had an objective decrease in sensation of smell, 23/50 (46%) had had prior sinus surgery. 46/50 (92%) were pancreatic insufficient, and 8/50 (16%) were insulin-requiring diabetics. Weight for height ranged from the 38th to 157th percentile (100 +/- 18; mean +/- SD). Arm muscle area ranged from the < 5th to the 75th percentile (25 +/- 23; mean +/- SD). Arm fat area ranged from the < 5th to the 95th percentile (45 +/- 39; mean +/- SD). Sinus CT scans were abnormal in all patients (100%). Patients with anosmia were more likely to have had sinus surgery, but their nutritional status was no different from that of patients with a normal sensation of smell. We conclude that decreased sensation of smell is common in patients with CF, especially those with prior sinus surgery. Subjective sensation of smell and sinus CT scans were unreliable indicators of a decreased objective sensation of smell. In this pilot study, no association was found between sensation of smell and nutritional status.
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PMID:Sensation of smell does not determine nutritional status in patients with cystic fibrosis. 926 54

A 58-year-old woman developed slowly progressive hearing loss, anosmia, and unsteady gait. She had neither repeated episode of headache nor a past history of neurosurgical operation or head injury. Neurological examination revealed anosmia, moderate degree of sensorineural hearing loss. She showed loss of caloric response bilaterally. No nystagmus was found. Romberg sign was present. No cerebellar ataxia was noted in the finger-to-nose or the heel-to-knee test. No adiadochokinesis was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were increased in both upper and lower extremities. Sensation was intact. She showed disturbance of the righting reflex in the tilt-table examination. CSF were under normal pressure, xanthochromic with siderophages. CSF total protein and ferritin level were elevated. T2-weighted image (TE4000/TR100) of high field strength magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed marginal hypointensity of the brain stem, the Sylvian fissures, the tips of temporal lobes, anterior cerebellar surfaces and the entire spinal cord. Angiography of the cerebral vessels and spinal arteries failed to identify the source of bleeding. It seemed likely that she had lost bilateral vestibular and auditory functions caused by hemosidelin deposition to her eighth nerves which are often affected by this disorder. Her disturbance of gait and station was apparently similar to cerebellar ataxic gait, however, she did not have limb ataxia. The electronystagmogram revealed marked degree of vestibular dysfunction (VOR) and relative sparing of cerebellar function (OKN). Her disturbance of the righting reflex in the tilt-table examination and the characteristic feature of her Romberg sign with directional preponderance also indicate that the bilateral loss of vestibular functions, i.e., vestibular ataxia caused her dysequilibrium syndrome. It is our impression that vestibular ataxia might precede cerebellar ataxia commonly reported so far.
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PMID:[A case of superficial siderosis of the central nervous system with bilateral vestibular dysfunction]. 936 92