3 resultados para family history

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Lo scopo di questo studio è di valutare il significato prognostico dell'elettrocardiogramma standard in un'ampia casistica di pazienti affetti da cardiomiopatia ipertrofica. In questo studio multicentrico sono stati considerati 841 pazienti con cardiomiopatia ipertrofica (66% uomini, età media 48±17 anni) per un follow-up di 7.1±7.1 anni, per ognuno è stato analizzato il primo elettrocardiogramma disponibile. I risultati hanno dimostrato come fattori indipendentemente correlati a morte cardiaca improvvisa la sincope inspiegata (p 0.004), il sopraslivellamento del tratto ST e/o la presenza di onde T positive giganti (p 0.048), la durata del QRS >= 120 ms (p 0.017). Sono stati costruiti due modelli per predire il rischio di morte improvvisa: il primo basato sui fattori di rischio universalmente riconosciuti (spessore parietale >= 30 mm, tachicardie ventricolari non sostenute all'ECG Holter 24 ore, sincope e storia familiare di morte improvvisa) e il secondo con l'aggiunta delle variabili sopraslivellamento del tratto ST/onde T positive giganti e durata del QRS >= 120 ms. Entrambi i modelli stratificano i pazienti in base al numero dei fattori di rischio, ma il secondo modello risulta avere un valore predittivo maggiore (chi-square da 12 a 22, p 0.002). In conclusione nella cardiomiopatia ipertrofica l'elettrocardiogramma standard risulta avere un valore prognostico e migliora l'attuale modello di stratificazione per il rischio di morte improvvisa.

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Background. Hhereditary cystic kidney diseases are a heterogeneous spectrum of disorders leading to renal failure. Clinical features and family history can help to distinguish the recessive from dominant diseases but the differential diagnosis is difficult due the phenotypic overlap. The molecular diagnosis is often the only way to characterize the different forms. A conventional molecular screening is suitable for small genes but is expensive and time-consuming for large size genes. Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technologies enables massively parallel sequencing of nucleic acid fragments. Purpose. The first purpose was to validate a diagnostic algorithm useful to drive the genetic screening. The second aim was to validate a NGS protocol of PKHD1 gene. Methods. DNAs from 50 patients were submitted to conventional screening of NPHP1, NPHP5, UMOD, REN and HNF1B genes. 5 patients with known mutations in PKHD1 were submitted to NGS to validate the new method and a not genotyped proband with his parents were analyzed for a diagnostic application. Results. The conventional molecular screening detected 8 mutations: 1) the novel p.E48K of REN in a patient with cystic nephropathy, hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia and anemia; 2) p.R489X of NPHP5 in a patient with Senior Loken Syndrome; 3) pR295C of HNF1B in a patient with renal failure and diabetes.; 4) the NPHP1 deletion in 3 patients with medullar cysts; 5) the HNF1B deletion in a patient with medullar cysts and renal hypoplasia and in a diabetic patient with liver disease. The NGS of PKHD1 detected all known mutations and two additional variants during the validation. The diagnostic NGS analysis identified the patient’s compound heterozygosity with a maternal frameshift mutation and a paternal missense mutation besides a not transmitted paternal missense mutation. Conclusions. The results confirm the validity of our diagnostic algorithm and suggest the possibility to introduce this NGS protocol to clinical practice.

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Nocturnal Frontal Lobe Epilepsy (NFLE) is characterized by onset during infancy or childhood with persistence in adulthood, family history of similar nocturnal episodes simulating non-REM parasomnias (sleep terrors or sleepwalking), general absence of morphological substrates, often by normal interictal electroencephalographical recordings (EEGs) during wakefulness. A family history of epilepsy may be present with Mendelian autosomal dominant inheritance has been described in some families. Recent studies indicate the involvement of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in the molecular mechanisms of NFLE. Mutations in the genes encoding for the α4 (CHRNA4) and ß2 (CHRNB2) subunits of the nAChR induce changes in the biophysical properties of nAChR, resulting generally in a “gain of function”. Preclinical studies report that activation of a nuclear receptor called type peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-α) by endogenous molecules or by medications (e.g. fenofibrate) reduces the activity of the nAChR and, therefore, may decrease the frequency of seizures. Thus, we hypothesize that negative modulation of nAChRs might represent a therapeutic strategy to be explored for pharmacological treatment of this form of epilepsy, which only partially responds to conventional antiepileptic drugs. In fact, carbamazepine, the current medication for NFLE, abolishes the seizures only in one third of the patients. The aim of the project is: 1)_to verify the clinical efficacy of adjunctive therapy with fenofibrate in pharmacoresistant NFLE and ADNFLE patients; focousing on the analysis of the polysomnographic action of the PPAR- agonist (fenofibrate). 2)_to demonstrate the subtended mechanism of efficacy by means of electrophysiological and behavioral experiments in an animal model of the disease: particularly, transgenic mice carrying the mutation in the nAChR 4 subunit (Chrna4S252F) homologous to that found in the humans. Given that a PPAR-α agonist, FENOFIBRATE, already clinically utilized for lipid metabolism disorders, provides a promising therapeutic avenue in the treatment of NFLE\ADNFLE.