RESUMO
We report the familial occurrence in a French Canadian family of peptic ulcer/hiatal hernia, multiple lentigines/café-au-lait spots, apparent hypertelorism, and myopia caused by a pleiotropic autosomal dominant gene with high penetrance and variable expressivity. Other probable but rarer components of the syndrome include ischemic heart disease, congenital heart disease, and maturity onset diabetes. Symptoms of peptic ulcer/hiatal hernia usually started in the second or third decade and were associated, as least in some examined individuals, with relatively increased acid secretion and abnormal dermatoglyphics.
Assuntos
Disostose Craniofacial/genética , Hérnia Diafragmática/genética , Hérnia Hiatal/genética , Hipertelorismo/genética , Miopia/genética , Úlcera Péptica/genética , Transtornos da Pigmentação/genética , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Dermatoglifia , Etnicidade , Feminino , Genes Dominantes , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Linhagem , Fenótipo , Quebeque , SíndromeRESUMO
In patients with cerebrospinal fluid internal shunts, immune complex glomerulonephritis sometimes develops. Of two new cases the first was classic, while the second was in an adult who had had a ventriculoatril shunt for 8 years; furthermore, the patient had acute renal failure and is the first to have been reported to have Peptococcus septicemia. Shunt glomerulonephritis is characterized by the following: (a) its occurrence following, most often, Staphylococcus albus infection in a patient who usually has a ventriculoatrial shunt; (b) transitory improvement of the symptoms by antibiotherapy only; and (c) full recovery if the prosthesis is removed. Laboratory studies show a low serum concentration of the C3 component of complement, the presence of cryoglobulins and a positive rheumatoid factor test. These abnormalities are reversible with removal of the prosthesis. Optical microscopy of a renal biopsy specimen in the two cases showed cellular proliferation of the glomerular tuft, electron microscopy demonstrated subepithelial deposits and immunofluorescent studies revealed intramembranous and intramesangial immune complexes. These features are similar to those observed in experimental nephritis induced in animals by foreign protein.