Wilson disease: Correlation of serum ceruloplasmin with hepatic inflammation and liver copper

1994 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. S162
2008 ◽  
Vol 46 (01) ◽  
Author(s):  
U Merle ◽  
C Eisenbach ◽  
KH Weiss ◽  
S Tuma ◽  
W Stremmel

2020 ◽  
pp. 112067212093102
Author(s):  
Cumali Degirmenci ◽  
Melis Palamar

Purpose: Evaluation the anterior segment parameters of Wilson disease patients with Kayser–Fleischer ring, the diagnostic power of Scheimpflug imaging for Kayser–Fleischer ring and suggest a scoring system. Materials and Methods: A total of 44 eyes of 22 Wilson disease patients with Kayser–Fleischer ring and 40 right eyes of 40 healthy age matched subjects were enrolled to the study. Serum ceruloplasmin and urine copper/24 hours levels were recorded. Anterior segment parameters including steep and flat keratometry, corneal thickness at central, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 mm, anterior chamber angle width, volume and depth, corneal volume, pupillary diameter were evaluated by Scheimpflug imaging. Images of cornea were scored according to Kayser–Fleischer ring size. Results: Serum ceruloplasmin level was below 10 mg/dL in 17 patients and was 12, 18.5, 20, 22, 37 mg/dl in the remaining five patients. Urinary copper/24 hours was 249.55 ± 304.14 (23–1050) µg/day. Central corneal thickness and corneal thickness at 2 mm were statistically different ( p values 0.02, 0.04, respectively). Scheimpflug images apparently showed Kayser–Fleischer ring as a hyper-reflective band at the corneal endothelial surface. Kayser–Fleischer ring in 24 eyes was grade 1, 16 eyes were grade 2 and 4 eyes were grade 3. Conclusion: Scheimpflug imaging seems to be a helpful diagnostic tool for detecting and grading the Kayser–Fleischer ring. Corneal thickness in Wilson disease patients with Kayser–Fleischer ring tends to be higher, so that the possible affection in corneal thickness should be kept in mind for clinical evaluation of these patients.


2010 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. S373
Author(s):  
G. Ranucci ◽  
E. Nicastro ◽  
C. Della Corte ◽  
M. Tufano ◽  
P. Vajro ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hansa Haftu ◽  
Mohammed Mustefa ◽  
Teklu Gebrehiwot

Background. Wilson disease is a rare metabolic disorder involving copper metabolism, and patients may present with a variable degree of hepatic, neurologic, and psychiatric manifestations. In the case of hepatic presentation, treatment is usually initiated with potentially toxic copper chelators (D-penicillamine or Trenton). Although zinc is of low toxicity and low cost for treatment of Wilson disease, it has been limited to the adjunctive as a single maintenance drug or for asymptomatic patients. The use of zinc monotherapy in patients suffering from a severe liver disease was not well studied. In our case report, we describe a pediatric patient who presented with liver failure and the use of zinc monotherapy in patients with severe hepatic manifestations. Case presentation. A 15-year-old male patient from Ethiopia presented with generalized body swelling (edema and ascites) with yellowish discoloration of his eyes and easy fatigability. He had hyperbilirubinemia, coagulopathy, hypoalbuminemia, and deranged liver enzymes. He had a Keyser–Fleischer ring visible with the naked eye, which was confirmed by slit-lamp examination. He had very low serum ceruloplasmin (<8 mg/L) and high 24-hour urine copper (150 mcg/dl). In accordance with the scoring system proposed by the 8th International Meeting on Wilson Disease and Menkes Disease, a diagnosis of Wilson disease was made. Zinc monotherapy with low copper diet was initiated for decompensated liver disease due to Wilson disease because of the inaccessibility of chelators (D-penicillamine or Trientine). After months of treatment with zinc, the patient experienced normalization of hepatic synthetic function and resolution of hypoalbuminemia and coagulopathy. The patient had also clinically stabilized (ascites, lower extremity swelling, edema, and jaundice were improved. Currently, the patient is on follow-up almost for the last four years in the gastrointestinal clinic. Conclusion. Our case shows that zinc has the potential for treatment in improving liver function. Though zinc has its own side effects, it is important and maybe an alternative treatment option in those with limited resources (not able to access chelators). This example hopefully will encourage future investigations and researches on zinc monotherapy for treating symptomatic decompensated hepatic Wilson disease.


Epigenetics ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentina Medici ◽  
Noreene M Shibata ◽  
Kusum K Kharbanda ◽  
Mohammad S Islam ◽  
Carl L Keen ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (9) ◽  
pp. 587-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
Go Hun Seo ◽  
Yoon-Myung Kim ◽  
Seak Hee Oh ◽  
Sun Ju Chung ◽  
In Hee Choi ◽  
...  

BackgroundTo identify biochemical and genetic features that characterise neurological Wilson disease as a distinct disease subgroup.MethodsDetailed biochemical profiles and genotypic characteristics of neurological (86 patients) and hepatic subgroups (233 patients) from 368 unrelated Korean families were analysed.ResultsCompared with patients in the hepatic subgroup, patients in the neurological subgroup had a later age at onset, a higher proportion with Kayser-Fleischer rings and higher serum creatinine levels, and a lower proportion with favourable outcome (62% vs 80%, P<0.016). At diagnosis, the neurological subgroup had lower serum ceruloplasmin (3.1±2.1 mg/dL vs 4.2±3.2 mg/dL, P<0.001), total copper (26.4±13.8 µg/dL vs 35.8±42.4 µg/dL, P=0.005), free copper (17.2±12.5 µg/dL vs 23.5±38.2 µg/dL, P=0.038) and urinary copper (280.9±162.9 µg/day vs 611.1±1124.2 µg/day, P<0.001) levels. Serum aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, gamma glutamyltransferase and total bilirubin levels, as well as prothrombin time, were also lower in the neurological subgroup. Liver cirrhosis was more common but mostly compensated in the neurological subgroup. Frameshift, nonsense or splice-site ATP7B mutations and mutations in transduction or ATP hinge domains (2.4% vs 23.1%, P=0.006) were less common in the neurological subgroup.ConclusionThe neurological subgroup had distinct clinical, biochemical and genetic profiles. Further studies are required to identify the factors, with or without association with copper metabolism, underlying the neurological presentation for which treatment needs to be targeted to improve the clinical outcome of this subgroup.


2008 ◽  
Vol 54 (8) ◽  
pp. 1356-1362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chloe M Mak ◽  
Ching-Wan Lam ◽  
Sidney Tam

Abstract Background: A serum ceruloplasmin concentration below 0.20 g/L is conventionally considered as one of the major diagnostic criteria for Wilson disease. This decision threshold has not been fully validated for its diagnostic characteristics, however. In this study, we evaluated various decision thresholds of serum ceruloplasmin concentration in the diagnosis of Wilson disease based on genotype-verified Wilson disease patients, carriers, and normal individuals. Methods: Serum ceruloplasmin concentration was measured by a nephelometric method in 57 Wilson disease patients and 71 family members (49 heterozygotes and 22 wild-type homozygotes), a validation group of 25 subjects clinically suspected of Wilson disease, and 690 normal individuals. We performed ROC analysis using Analyze-it software and confirmed the genotypes by direct DNA sequencing of ATP7B. Results: Serum ceruloplasmin concentrations &lt;0.20, 0.14, and 0.10 g/L showed positive predictive values of 48.3%, 100%, and 100%, respectively, and negative predictive values of 98.7%, 97.1%, and 91.9%. In the validation group, a serum ceruloplasmin threshold of 0.14 g/L rendered 100% sensitivity and specificity. Forty of 690 healthy subjects had serum ceruloplasmin concentrations &lt;0.20 g/L; however, these 40 individuals had normal genotypes by DNA sequencing, and none of the 40 had ceruloplasmin concentrations &lt;0.14 g/L. Conclusions: The diagnostic accuracy for Wilson disease using a serum ceruloplasmin concentration of 0.14 g/L as the local decision threshold was better than that using a threshold of 0.20 g/L. We suggest that laboratories providing ceruloplasmin assays determine decision thresholds based on local populations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 49 ◽  
pp. 119-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer-Christin Müller ◽  
Josef Lichtmannegger ◽  
Hans Zischka ◽  
Michael Sperling ◽  
Uwe Karst

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