The American journal of the medical sciences
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Review Case Reports
Gaucher disease: a heterogeneous clinical complex for which effective enzyme replacement has come of age.
Gaucher disease, the most common form of lysosomal storage disease, is the result of autosomal recessive inheritance of a lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase deficiency, which produces defective hydrolysis of glucosylceramide that accumulates in reticuloendothelial (tissue macrophage) cells. The current review focuses on Type 1 (the nonneuronopathic) or adult Gaucher disease and defines the clinical manifestations (splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, bony lesions, and clinical metabolic dysfunction) in relationship to the known enzymatic defect. The clinical diversity and variability in symptoms and signs, the age at onset of the clinical manifestations and their rate of progression, and the heterogeneity of the organs involved are reviewed. ⋯ Enzyme assays now provide an excellent method for diagnosis. Effective enzyme replacement therapy emphasizes the value of early diagnosis and has altered the costs and potential risks of older therapeutic indications for splenectomy or cytokine therapy. Enzyme efficacy raises questions about the specific indications for replacement treatment and the most desirable rate and duration of enzyme delivery.
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Primary hypertension is almost twice as prevalent among American blacks as among whites. Causes of this increased prevalence of hypertension remain elusive. ⋯ Microneurography allows direct measurement of peripheral sympathetic nervous system activity. Application of this technique will allow comparison of sympathetic nervous system activity in black and white subjects and provide additional insight into the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the development of hypertension in blacks.
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This review integrates the clinical aspects of systemic sclerosis (SSc; scleroderma) and scleroderma-like conditions with new knowledge of the control of blood vessel tone and the role of anoxia in the activation of connective tissues leading to fibrosis. Serologic tests, high resolution computed tomographic scanning, bronchoalveolar lavage, and physiologic assessment of pulmonary gas diffusion are compared as diagnostic tools and as means of quantitating internal organ involvement. Treatment of Raynaud's disease and phenomenon, management of scleroderma renal crisis, and new means for improving gastrointestinal function with octreotide, the somatostatin analogue, also are discussed. The relationship between idiopathic forms of SSc and eosinophilic fasciitis/eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome caused by L-tryptophan ingestion and the scleroderma-like disease associated with silicone breast implants also is discussed.
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Epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EV) presents a genetically determined, unusual susceptibility to infection with EV-specific human papillomaviruses (HPVs) related to abrogation of immunosurveillance exclusively against these viruses. The cutaneous viral carcinogenesis depends upon potentially oncogenic HPVs, the cocarcinogenic effect of ultraviolet irradiation, and genetic host factors, presumably a defect of anti-oncogenes or alleles of major histocompatibility complex and tumor necrosis factor locus involved in antigen presentation.