Publications by authors named "S Whatley"

Article Synopsis
  • Porphyrias are rare health problems caused by mistakes in the body's metabolism, leading to different symptoms and complications, making them important for doctors in various fields to consider.
  • Diagnosing porphyria involves special tests to check for specific chemicals in the urine, blood, and stool, as just looking at symptoms isn't enough.
  • Genetic testing can help understand porphyria better, especially for family members of those affected, but it's important to confirm certain chemical markers first before doing genetic tests.
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Background: Electromagnetic navigational bronchoscopy has been the dominant bronchoscopic technology for targeting small peripheral lesions and now includes digital tomosynthesis-electromagnetic navigational bronchoscopy (DT-ENB), allowing near-real-time intraprocedural nodule visualization. Shape-sensing robotic-assisted bronchoscopy (ssRAB), with improved catheter stability and articulation recently became available. Although the diagnostic performance of these two methods seems higher than that of legacy systems, data remain limited.

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Mutations in the TRIM8 gene have been described in patients with severe developmental delay, intellectual disability and epilepsy. Only six patients have been described to date. All the previous mutations were truncating variants clustered in the C-terminus of the protein.

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With the advent of precision and genomic medicine, a critical issue is whether a disease gene variant is pathogenic or benign. Such is the case for the three autosomal dominant acute hepatic porphyrias (AHPs), including acute intermittent porphyria, hereditary coproporphyria, and variegate porphyria, each resulting from the half-normal enzymatic activities of hydroxymethylbilane synthase, coproporphyrinogen oxidase, and protoporphyrinogen oxidase, respectively. To date, there is no public database that documents the likely pathogenicity of variants causing the porphyrias, and more specifically, the AHPs with biochemically and clinically verified information.

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