Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (X-linked)
16,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Incontinentia Pigmenti (IP) is an X-linked dominant disorder of skin with neurologic and ophthalmologic involvement. IP predominantly affects females because the mutations are usually lethal in males in utero. IP is characterized by abnormalities of neuroectodermal tissues. IP is caused by mutations in a gene called NEMO, which is required to activate the NF-kB pathway. We present a diagnostic protocol for IP and a meta-analysis of the clinical spectrum of IP in 82 patients cited by MEDLINE in the European literature from 2000 to 2006.
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PMID:[Proposal for a protocol for the staging of incontinentia pigmenti in pediatric age]. 1751 71

Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare inherited multisystem disorder characterized by a distinctive swirling pattern of the skin; defects of teeth, hair, and nails; and ophthalmic, central nervous system, and musculoskeletal abnormalities. It progresses through several well-defined stages. IP is transmitted as a dominant X-linked trait with variable expressivity, but many--if not most--cases are sporadic. IP has been shown to result from mutations in the NEMO gene that completely abolish expression of NF-kappaB essential modulator. The diagnosis of IP typically is made based on characteristic clinical findings. Molecular analysis of the NEMO gene is now possible, as is analysis of skewed X-chromosome inactivation, which can further reduce diagnostic confusion. A number of disorders, including hypomelanosis of Ito, should be considered in the differential diagnosis. The considerations vary according to the stage of IP. Careful head-to-toe clinical evaluation is critical in the evaluation of a child with suspected IP given the frequent multisystem involvement. A multidisciplinary approach including dermatology, ophthalmology, neurology, and dental consults is typically warranted. The skin manifestations of IP do not require specific treatment other than reassurance; spontaneous resolution of the lesions usually occurs.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti (Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome): a systemic disorder. 1756 96

Incontinentia pigmenti is a rare hereditary, dominant, X-linked disorder. It involves the skin, the teeth, the eyes and the central nervous system. The case we report is an infant girl aged 2 months. She had typical skin lesions associated with severe impairment of her left eye. We comment on the clinical, histological, genetic, and therapeutic characteristics of this rare disease. Ophthalmologic examination should be made early in order to diagnose ocular involvement at an early stage of the disease to provide for greater treatment possibilities.
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PMID:[Incontinentia pigmenti: a case study]. 1797 72

Phacomatoses, or neurocutaneous disorders, are a group of congenital and hereditary diseases characterized by developmental lesions of the neuroectoderm, leading to pathologies affecting the skin and the central nervous system. There is a wide range of pathologies affecting individuals at different moments of life. The genetics is variable: while neurofibromatosis 1 and 2, tuberous sclerosis and von Hippel-Lindau disease are all inherited as autosomal dominant traits, Sturge-Weber syndrome is sporadic. Other neurocutaneous disorders can be inherited as autosomal recessive traits (i.e., ataxia-telangiectasia), X-linked (i.e., incontinentia pigmenti) or explained by mosaicism (i.e., hypomelanosis of Ito, McCune-Albright syndrome). In this review, we discuss the major types of neurocutaneous disorders most frequently encountered by the neurosurgeon and followed beyond childhood. They include neurofibromatosis types 1 and 2, tuberous sclerosis, Sturge-Weber syndrome and von Hippel-Lindau disease. In each case, a review of the literature, including diagnosis, genetics and treatment will be presented. The lifespan of the disease with the implications for neurosurgeons will be emphasized. A review of cases, including both pediatric and adult patients, seen in neurosurgical practices in the Lille, France and Lausanne, Switzerland hospitals between 1961 and 2007 is presented to illustrate the pathologies seen in different age-groups. Because the genes mutated in most phacomatoses are involved in development and are activated following a timed schedule, the phenotype of these diseases evolves with age. The implication of the neurosurgeon varies depending on the patient's age and pathology. While neurosurgeons tend to see pediatric patients affected with neurofibromatosis type 1, tuberous sclerosis and Sturge-Weber syndrome, there will be a majority of adult patients with von Hippel-Lindau disease or neurofibromatosis type 2.
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PMID:[Phacomatosis and genetically determined tumors: the transition from childhood to adulthood]. 1875 12

Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare, inherited, multisystem genodermatosis. It is transmitted as an X-linked dominant trait. The disorder is a consequence of mutations in the NEMO gene (Xq28) that completely abolish expression of the NF-kappaB essential modulator. Here we present a female infant of healthy nonconsanguinous, young parents with a clinically evident first phase of IP. PCR analysis of patient's peripheral blood lymphocytes DNA was done for detection of NEMO delta4-10 deletion. Skin changes present at birth appertain to first inflammatory stage. However, a pathohistological feature of the skin biopsy showed second phase of disease. Genetic testing of diseased child revealed delta4-10 in NEMO gene. However, the assumption that the female child has familial IP was rejected as PCR performed on the mother's leukocytes did not record the presence of the same mutation. Moreover, the existence of a healthy male infant of the same mother as well as the lack of any phenotypic signs of the disease in other family members additionally support that IP was not inherited, but it was a consequence of de novo NEMO gene mutation. In conclusion, here we describe a Croatian female with clinical IP phenotype having de novo genomic rearrangements in the NEMO gene.
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PMID:De novo NEMO gene deletion (delta4-10)--a cause of incontinentia pigmenti in a female infant: a case report. 1914 37

Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is an X-linked dominant disorder, which occurs in female patients. We present a typical case of IP with subungual tumors (STIP) together with a short review on subungual tumors in IP. The diagnosis was achieved on the basis of the onset in adult life of STIP together with the other specific symptoms like ocular and dental abnormalities and achromic lesions of the legs. In the STIP lesions the presence and, in one of them, the expression, of HPV type 15 were detected. Topical therapy with retinoic acid cured the tumoral lesions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of HPV in STIP, opening a new scenario in the pathogenesis and the treatment of STIP. In conclusion, in our opinion, all painful subungual tumors should be considered as a possible late manifestation of IP.
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PMID:Detection of HPV-15 in painful subungual tumors of incontinentia pigmenti: successful topical therapy with retinoic acid. 1921 57

The X-linked disorder incontinentia pigmenti (IP) with its well-defined underlying defect in the NFkappaB essential modulator (NEMO) gene and its variability in patients' phenotypes offers an excellent opportunity for expanding knowledge of the function of the NFkappaB pathway. We report a patient with the classic clinical and histologic characteristics of incontinentia pigmenti in the skin accompanied by foreshortening of the left hand. The occurrence of this limb deformity associated with a reduced expression of NFkappaB confirms the importance of this transcription factor in normal limb morphogenesis and may support its involvement in sonic hedgehog signaling. Further studies in established animal models may help to further define these roles.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti with a foreshortened hand: evidence for the significance of NFkappaB in human morphogenesis. 1925 Apr 14

Incontinentia Pigmenti (IP, Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome, OMIM 308300) is a rare X-linked dominant genodermatosis, usually lethal in males in the prenatal period. Wide spectrum of clinical expression consists of skin hyperpigmented lines and swirling patterns, dysplastic teeth and nails, and in 30% central nervous system abnormalities including seizures, microcephaly and intellectual disability (10% of cases). In 80% of IP cases, the disease is caused by a large-scale deletion of exons 4 to 10 of the NEMO gene. Three cases of variable expression of Incontinentia Pigmenti are presented. In a one-year-old girl, her mother and grandmother molecular analysis revealed the same typical deletion of the NEMO gene. In the proband, characteristic skin lesions were detected located over the trunk and lower limbs. Characteristic evolution of the changes was observed. In the mother, expression of the disease was much milder, whereas in the grandmother lesions were restricted to the fingernails. Clinical characteristics and pedigree data are described.
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PMID:[Variable clinical expression of familial Incontinentia Pigmenti syndrome - presentation of three cases]. 1930 25

Incontinentia pigmenti is a rare, X-linked dominant multisystem genodermatosis affecting ectodermal and mesodermal tissues. After the skin, the central nervous system is the second-most affected system. We report a neonate with incontinentia pigmenti and encephalocele, as a feature of the central nervous system involvement, to stress this uncommon association.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti with encephalocele in a neonate: a rare association. 1933 89

Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare, X-linked dominant disorder that presents at or soon after birth with characteristic cutaneous signs. The eyes and central nervous system are the next most commonly affected systems. We aimed to describe the ophthalmological, neurological and radiodiagnostic findings of a patient with IP and bilateral retinal detachment. Clinical and laboratory findings of a four-month-old female baby who did not have light fixation and had neurological maturation retardation are presented. Characteristic skin lesions of IP were noted especially at the extremities, bilaterally. On neurological examination, motor and mental maturation were retarded and axial hypotonia was noted. Bilateral retinal detachment was the cause of absent eye fixation noted during ophthalmologic examination, and the detachments were also documented by ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Otologic examination was normal. Focal left frontal lobe atrophy, corpus callosum hypoplasia and prominence of right hemisphere were also noted on MRI. MR spectroscopy revealed negative lactate peak at the involved left frontal lobe. Bilateral retinal detachment is a probable finding in IP and patients with neurological symptoms should be investigated for associated sight-threatening ocular pathologies.
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PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti: a case report and literature review. 1948 Mar 36


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