scholarly journals P.053 A clinical mystery finally revealed

Author(s):  
Z Aljohani ◽  
S Venance

Background: We report 2 brothers sharing FHL1 identified mutation. They presented in childhood with overlapping clinical features characterized by early onset stiffness and increased muscle definition with cardiac involvement. After 30 years of neurological followup, the diagnosis is finally revealed. Methods: At early ages, both had increased definition of upper trunk musculature. The older brother had hypophonic voice with raspy character, which is to our knowledge, not reported with this mutation before. He required a pacemaker for arrhythmias, while the younger developed congestive heart failure. Results: Their initial investigations failed to unveil a diagnosis, including a negative next generation sequencing (NGS) panel for AR LGMD. An expanded NGS sent on the older brother revealed he is hemizygous for 1770 bp deletion within FHL 1 gene, this deletion includes exon 7to 8, and confirmed on the other. Conclusions: First reported in 2008, FHL1 mutations result in phenotypically distinct neuromuscular disorders: X-linked myopathy with Postural Muscle Atrophy and generalized hypertrophy, X-linked dominant scapuloperoneal Myopathy, and Reducing Body Myopathy. Subsequently other phenotypes have been reported including Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Our patients present with a phenotype that had been reported with FHL1 mutation, highlighting the possible recognition of this presentation in aiding a diagnostic approach.

2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 1140-1143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Takeda ◽  
D. Angioni ◽  
E. Setphan ◽  
T. Macaron ◽  
P. De Souto Barreto ◽  
...  

AbstractIn their everyday practice, geriatricians are confronted with the fact that older age and multimorbidity are associated to frailty. Indeed, if we take the example of a very old person with no diseases that progressively becomes frail with no other explanation, there is a natural temptation to link frailty to aging. On the other hand, when an old person with a medical history of diabetes, arthritis and congestive heart failure becomes frail there appears an obvious relationship between frailty and comorbidity. The unsolved question is: Considering that frailty is multifactorial and in the majority of cases comorbidity and aging are acting synergistically, can we disentangle the main contributor to the origin of frailty: disease or aging? We believe that it is important to be able to differentiate age-related frailty from frailty related to comorbidity. In fact, with the emergence of geroscience, the physiopathology, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment will probably have to be different in the future.


2005 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 314-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margareta Brännström ◽  
Christine Brulin ◽  
Astrid Norberg ◽  
Kurt Boman ◽  
Gunilla Strandberg

Advanced homecare for persons with congestive heart failure is a ‘new’ challenge for palliative nurses. The aim of this study is to illuminate the meaning of being a palliative nurse for persons with severe congestive heart failure in advanced homecare. Narrative interviews with 11 nurses were conducted, tape-recorded, and transcribed verbatim. A phenomenological-hermeneutic method was used to interpret the text. One meaning of being a palliative nurse is being firmly rooted and guided by the values of palliative culture. Being adaptable to the patient's way of life carries great weight. On one hand nurses live out this value, facilitating for the patients to live their everydaylife as good as possible. Being a facilitator is revealed as difficult, challenging, but overall positive. On the other hand nurses get into a tight corner when values of palliative culture clash and do not correspond with the nurses interpretation of what is good for the person with congestive heart failure. Being in such a tight corner is revealed as frustrating and giving rise to feelings of inadequacy. Thus, it seems important to reflect critical on the values of palliative culture.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3021-3021
Author(s):  
Umit Tapan ◽  
David C Seldin ◽  
Kathleen T Finn ◽  
Salli Fennessey ◽  
Anthony C Shelton ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3021 The combination of lenalidomide and dexamethasone can produce partial and complete hematologic responses in previously treated patients with AL amyloidosis (Blood 2007; 109: 492–496). Since this prospective study was initiated, NT-proBNP and BNP have been found to be useful biomarkers for cardiac involvement, prognosis, and response to therapy in AL amyloidosis patients. Here we report on the retrospective analysis of the prospectively collected data on changes in BNP during lenalidomide therapy on this trial. Increase in BNP was defined as > 30% increase from baseline value at enrollment on the trial after cycles 1 and 3. Patients with BNP of < 100 pg/mL at baseline, and after 1 and 3 cycles as well as patients in whom BNP levels were not measured were excluded in this analysis. Sixty-eight patients with AL amyloidosis were treated with lenalidomide and dexamethasone (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00091260) at Boston Medical Center. The median age was 64 years (range, 42 to 85); and 69% were male. Fifty-one patients (75%) had lambda clonal plasma cell dyscrasia, and 38 (56%) had cardiac involvement. All patients received lenalidomide and dexamethasone as described in our previous report. Twenty-four of the 68 total patients enrolled did not meet the eligibility to be included in this analysis due to either BNP levels of < 100 pg/mL at baseline and at 1 and 3 months after treatment or unavailability of BNP measurement after 1 or 3 cycles of lenalidomide. Therefore, 44 patients are included in this analysis. Thirty-eight patients (86%) had > 30% increase in BNP level from baseline after initiation of lenalidomide treatment. Of these 38 patients, 30 (79%) had an increase after 1 cycle and additional 8 (21%) patients after 3 cycles of lenalidomide. The mean dose of lenalidomide for patients with increase in BNP after 1 cycle was 15 mg (range, 5–25) and after 3 cycles was 10 mg (range, 5–15). Forty % (n=12/30) and 63% (n=5/8) of patients did not receive dexamethasone with lenalidomide when increase in BNP was seen after 1 and 3 cycles, respectively. Of the patients with increase in BNP, only 5 patients (13%) had worsening of renal function from baseline. Moreover, increase in BNP after 1 and 3 cycles occurred in 23 of 29 patients (79%) with cardiac involvement. Cardiac troponin I levels were not measured after 1 and 3 cycles of lenalidomide. All the patients with increase in BNP were asymptomatic without association of modification in NYHA class congestive heart failure. The median survival of these 44 patients is 53 months since initiation of lenalidomide therapy. At these early time pointsof 1 and 3 months, 20% (n=9/44) of patients had >50% improvement in serum free light chain levels, and 2% (n=1/44) of patients had improvement in BNP of 30% or more. In conclusion, BNP increased by > 30% in a substantial proportion of patients with AL amyloidosis during treatment with lenalidomide. The mechanism for asymptomatic rise in BNP is not clear; however, the temporal relationship with lenalidomide initiation, the relatively rapid increase, and the absence of other identifiable precipitants for most of the patients suggest that lenalidomide may be playing a role. Moreover, patients with AL amyloidosis receiving lenalidomide whose BNP rises should not be assumed to be failing therapy without other signs of disease progression, but should be monitored closely and treated as needed for signs or symptoms of congestive heart failure should they occur. Disclosures: Off Label Use: Use of lenalidomide in AL amyloidosis. Zeldis:Celgene Corp: Employment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. e000631
Author(s):  
Laura Hargreaves ◽  
Lara Gosling ◽  
Jonathon J Dixon

A 20-year-old Warmblood mare was evaluated for acute-onset tachycardia and a one-week history of lethargy and ventral oedema. Haematology revealed leucocytosis with neutrophilia. Ultrasonographic examination revealed pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade consistent with right-sided congestive heart failure. Abdominal ultrasonography demonstrated loss of definition of the right kidney and a structure adjacent to the kidney suggestive of a renal neoplasm. A tentative antemortem diagnosis of multicentric neoplasia, most likely lymphoma, was made. The horse was subjected to euthanasia due to a grave prognosis. Postmortem examination and histological evaluation were consistent with lymphoma, including infiltration of the cardiac muscle with neoplastic cells. Although lymphoma has been reported to affect the heart, congestive heart failure due to cardiac and pericardial neoplastic infiltration has not been previously reported as the presenting complaint. This case report describes the diagnostic approach to pericardial effusion and congestive heart failure in a mare with lymphoma.


1986 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. 1662-1669 ◽  
Author(s):  
D E Hallahan ◽  
N J Vogelzang ◽  
K M Borow ◽  
D G Bostwick ◽  
M A Simon

Cardiac metastases were present in 30 of 120 (25%) consecutive autopsies of patients with soft-tissue sarcoma (STS). Fifty percent of the patients had metastases to the myocardium, while 33% had pericardial metastases and 17% had both. Congestive heart failure was present in ten patients and was commonly caused by diffuse myocardial or restrictive pericardial metastases. Other signs and symptoms of cardiac involvement by STS included chest pain (three patients), arrhythmias (two), conduction block (two), simulation of an atrial myxoma (one), and sudden death (one). Echocardiography was used infrequently, but was diagnostic in 80% of cases in which it was used. We conclude that metastatic STS commonly involves the heart and produces cardiac symptoms.


Diagnostics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Valeria Esposito ◽  
Carmela Nardelli ◽  
Ilaria Granata ◽  
Chiara Pagliuca ◽  
Valeria D’Argenio ◽  
...  

Coeliac disease (CD) is a multifactorial autoimmune disorder and gut dysbiosis contributes to its pathogenesis. We previously profiled by 16S rRNA sequencing duodenal and oropharyngeal microbiomes in active CD (a-CD), gluten-free diet (GFD) patients, and controls (CO) and found significantly higher levels of Neisseria spp., with pro-inflammatory activities, in a-CD patients than in the other two groups. In this study, we developed a fast and simple qPCR-based method to evaluate the abundance of the oral Neisseria spp. and the diagnostic performances of the test in CD diagnosis. The Neisseria spp. abundances detected by quantitative PCR (qPCR) were: CO = 0.14, GFD = 0.15, a-CD = 2.08, showing a similar trend to those previously measured by next generation sequencing (NGS). In particular, Neisseria spp. values obtained by both methods were significantly higher (p < 0.001) in a-CD than in the other two groups GFD and CO—the latter almost overlapping. We calculated by ROC curve analysis the threshold of 1.12 ng/μL of Neisseria spp. to discriminate between CO+GFD and a-CD patients with 100% and 96.7% of diagnostic sensitivity and specificity, respectively. In conclusion, our data, if confirmed in other cohorts, suggest the q-PCR evaluation of oral Neisseria spp. could be a fast and simple method to assess CD-associated dysbiosis for diagnostic purposes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masanori Hirota ◽  
Minoru Yoshida ◽  
Joji Hoshino ◽  
Taichi Kondo ◽  
Tadashi Isomura

Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 701
Author(s):  
Andrea Barp ◽  
Lorena Mosca ◽  
Valeria Ada Sansone

Neuromuscular disorders (NMDs) comprise a heterogeneous group of disorders that affect about one in every thousand individuals worldwide. The vast majority of NMDs has a genetic cause, with about 600 genes already identified. Application of genetic testing in NMDs can be useful for several reasons: correct diagnostic definition of a proband, extensive familial counselling to identify subjects at risk, and prenatal diagnosis to prevent the recurrence of the disease; furthermore, identification of specific genetic mutations still remains mandatory in some cases for clinical trial enrollment where new gene therapies are now approaching. Even though genetic analysis is catching on in the neuromuscular field, pitfalls and hurdles still remain and they should be taken into account by clinicians, as for example the use of next generation sequencing (NGS) where many single nucleotide variants of “unknown significance” can emerge, complicating the correct interpretation of genotype-phenotype relationship. Finally, when all efforts in terms of molecular analysis have been carried on, a portion of patients affected by NMDs still remain “not genetically defined”. In the present review we analyze the evolution of genetic techniques, from Sanger sequencing to NGS, and we discuss “facilitations and hurdles” of genetic testing which must always be balanced by clinicians, in order to ensure a correct diagnostic definition, but taking always into account the benefit that the patient could obtain especially in terms of “therapeutic offer”.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 1370-1379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dario de Biase ◽  
Federica Torricelli ◽  
Moira Ragazzi ◽  
Benedetta Donati ◽  
Elisabetta Kuhn ◽  
...  

Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is a rare but highly aggressive form of thyroid cancer. By contrast, differentiated papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) only rarely behave aggressively and develop distant metastasis. Whether distantly metastatic PTC (DM-PTC) and ATC share a common genetic background is still to be defined. We used next-generation sequencing (NGS) to explore the genetic background of a cohort of ATC and DM-PTC and a group of well-differentiated PTCs that did not developed distant metastasis as control (ctrl-PTC). A panel of 128 amplicons within 21 thyroid cancer-related genes was analyzed in a set of 151 thyroid cancer samples including 66 ATCs and DM-PTCs. We showed that the ATC/DM-PTC group had an overall mutational load higher than ctrl-PTCs and that ATCs and DM-PTCs are characterized by a different genetic background, with the exception of mutations in the TERT promoter that were overrepresented in both ATCs (61.1%) and DM-PTCs (48.2%) vs non-aggressive ctrl-PTCs (7.6%). In ATCs, TERT promoter mutations were frequently associated with TP53 mutations, while in the DM-PTCs no significant co-occurrence was observed. No significant association of MED12 mutations with aggressiveness of thyroid cancer was observed in our analysis. Finally, correlation analysis showed that increasing number of mutations negatively impact on patient overall survival also within the ATC and DM-PTC group. In conclusions, overall our analysis further highlights the relevance of TERT promoter mutations in driving aggressiveness and provides new pieces of information in the definition of aggressiveness evolution of thyroid cancer lesions.


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