The Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) is a hereditary inflammatory disorder characterized by acute febrile inflammatory episodes comprising abdominal pain, arthritis, and urticaria. Progressive nerve deafness develops subsequently, and, after several years, the disease is complicated by multiorgan AA-type amyloidosis (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperimmunoglobulinaemia D and periodic fever syndrome (HIDS; MIM 260920) is a rare, apparently monogenic, autosomal recessive disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of fever accompanied with lymphadenopathy, abdominal distress, joint involvement and skin lesions. All patients have high serum IgD values (>100 U/ml) and HIDS 'attacks' are associated with an intense acute phase reaction whose exact pathophysiology remains obscure. Two other hereditary febrile disorders have been described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFamilial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a recessively inherited disorder that is common in patients of Armenian ancestry. To date, its diagnosis, which can be made only retrospectively, is one of exclusion, based entirely on nonspecific clinical signs that result from serosal inflammation and that may lead to unnecessary surgery. Renal amyloidosis, prevented by colchicine, is the most severe complication of FMF, a disorder associated with mutations in the MEFV gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA sixty-three year old French man presented with isolated late-onset amyloid cardiomyopathy proven by endomyocardial biopsy. There was no known family history of amyloidosis. Immunohistochemistry of cardiac deposits suggested that amyloi fibrils were derived from transthyretin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA French family with hereditary renal amyloidosis (HRA) was studied. The disease presented in 7 of the 8 affected individuals with proteinuria or the nephrotic syndrome. The age of onset was in the fifth decade of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutosomal dominant hereditary amyloidosis with a unique cutaneous and cardiac presentation and death from heart failure by the sixth or seventh decade was found to be associated with a previously unreported point mutation (thymine to cytosine, nt 1389) in exon 4 of the apolipoprotein A1 (apoA1) gene. The predicted substitution of proline for leucine at amino acid position 90 was confirmed by structural analysis of amyloid protein isolated from cardiac deposits of amyloid. The subunit protein is composed exclusively of NH2-terminal fragments of the variant apoA1 with the longest ending at residue 94 in the wild-type sequence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHereditary fevers are a group of rare disorders of the inflammatory response. Clinical features include recurrent attacks of fever and organ-localized inflammation. Minimal clinical variations, a unique biochemical-specific abnormality, and the mode of genetic inheritance distinguish the three main diseases: familial Mediterranean fever, hyperimmunoglobulinemia D and periodic fever syndrome, and autosomal dominant recurrent fever.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Due to the improvement in cystic fibrosis management, life expectancy has risen; on the other hand, longer survival has led to new complications, including secondary renal amyloidosis, which has been so far very uncommonly reported.
Case Reports: Secondary nephropathic amyloidosis was seen in two 25-year and 22-year-old adults with cystic fibrosis. Both had developed recurrent pulmonary infections due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa over several years.
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by recurring attacks of fever and serositis. It affects primarily North African Jews, Armenians, Turks and Arabs, in which a founder effect has been demonstrated. The marenostrin-pyrin-encoding gene has been proposed as a candidate gene for the disease ( MEFV ), on the basis of the identification of putative mutations clustered in exon 10 (M680V, M694I, M694V and V726A), each segregating with one ancestral haplotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical aspects of hereditary amyloidoses are very diverse, and they pose many diagnostic problems to the physician. Biochemical and genetic aspects are also various. Several proteins are implicated in these hereditary diseases: transthyretin, apolipoprotein A1, gelsolin, fibrinogen alpha chain and lysozyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA French kindred with autosomal dominant hereditary renal amyloidosis was found to have a novel mutation in the fibrinogen Aalpha-chain gene. In this kindred, renal disease appeared early in life and led to terminal renal failure at an early age. Renal transplantation resulted in rapid destruction of the allograft by amyloid deposition within 2 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Plasma-cell neoplasms of the head and neck include extramedullary plasmacytoma and solitary plasmocytoma of bone or may represent a local manifestation of multiple myeloma. Involvement of sphenoid sinus has been rarely reported in multiple myeloma.
Methods: We present the case of a 77-year-old man with a 3-year-history of benign monoclonal IgG-lambda gammopathy who developed left sixth-nerve palsy and malaise.
We report nine cases of haemophagocytic syndrome (HS) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection, and review the 17 cases described to date in the literature. In 21 of 26 cases, HS developed during an advanced stage of immunodeficiency. Clinical and haematological signs are not specific in this setting, and the diagnosis relies on histological features, mainly bone marrow examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFamilial Mediterranean fever is an autosomal recessive disease characterised by multiple attacks of serosal inflammation in the absence of treatment. In the absence of timely diagnosis, renal amyloidosis is a life threatening complication. The diagnosis is often missed because no specific test is available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases of fatal bleeding in patients treated with low molecular weight heparin for deep vein thrombosis are reported. Risk factors for bleeding were: severe underlying disease (cancer in one case, morbid obesity and cardiac failure in the other), age over 80 years and worsening of renal insufficiency in both cases, recent surgical procedure in one case. Anti-Xa activity was beyond the therapeutic range at the time of bleeding in both cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSymptomatic primary human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection was originally defined as a mononucleosis-like syndrome, with or without lymphocytic meningitis, associated with seroconversion for HIV. However, other protean clinical manifestations have been reported, and diagnosis should be considered in patients with risk factors for HIV who experience acute infectious illness, requiring search for p24 antigenemia and development of HIV antibodies. The clinical presentation of symptomatic HIV infection could predict the subsequent disease progression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGastroenterol Clin Biol
April 1997