Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
: 20 | 50 | 100
1 - 9 de 9
1.
Virchows Arch ; 460(6): 637-49, 2012 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22549280

Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS) results from a mutation in the gene encoding alpha-1, type III pro-collagen (COL3A1) and confers fragility to skin, ligament and vascular tissue. We tested the value of skin biopsy for diagnosis of vEDS through an ultrastructure scoring procedure. Study design was a multicentric, case-control, blinded trial consisting of two phases: phase 1 was to identify an ultra-structure score providing the best discriminative value for vEDS and phase 2 was to replicate this result in a different population. We enrolled 103 patients, 66 cases defined through the revised nosology for Ehlers-Danlos syndromes and 37 control subjects selected from patients referred for other pathologies. Ultrastructure of extracellular matrix was read by three to five experienced pathologists blinded for diagnosis. We used the receiver operating curves and logistic regression analysis for ranking ultrastructure scores. We created a detailed description of lesions observed in vEDS patients with 27 items (coded 0 or 1). In the phase 1 (17 cases and 20 controls), abnormal fibroblast shape, presence of lysosomes in the fibroblast and abnormal basal lamina were found to be independent discriminative items. Addition of these three items (defining an ultrastructure score) had the best diagnosis value (area under the curve (AUC) = 0.96). In the phase 2 (49 cases, 17 controls), ultrastructure score provided odds ratio of 9.76 (95 % CI 2.91-32.78), and AUC of 0.90. The ultrastructure score of skin biopsy has predictive value for the diagnosis of vEDS. Presence of two or more signs (either abnormal fibroblast, presence of lysosomes in the fibroblast or abnormal basal lamina) is very evocative of vEDS.


Collagen Type III/genetics , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/diagnosis , Skin/ultrastructure , Biopsy , Collagen Type III/ultrastructure , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/genetics , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/pathology , Humans
2.
Lancet ; 376(9751): 1476-84, 2010 Oct 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20825986

BACKGROUND: Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome is a rare severe disease that causes arterial dissections and ruptures that can lead to early death. No preventive treatment has yet been validated. Our aim was to assess the ability of celiprolol, a ß(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist with a ß(2)-adrenoceptor agonist action, to prevent arterial dissections and ruptures in vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. METHODS: Our study was a multicentre, randomised, open trial with blinded assessment of clinical events in eight centres in France and one in Belgium. Patients with clinical vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome were randomly assigned to 5 years of treatment with celiprolol or to no treatment. Randomisation was done from a centralised, previously established list of sealed envelopes with stratification by patients' age (≤32 years or >32 years). 33 patients were positive for mutation of collagen 3A1 (COL3A1). Celiprolol was administered twice daily and uptritrated by 100 mg steps every 6 months to a maximum of 400 mg per day. [DOSAGE ERROR CORRECTED]. The primary endpoints were arterial events (rupture or dissection, fatal or not). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00190411. FINDINGS: 53 patients were randomly assigned to celiprolol (25 patients) or control groups (28). Mean duration of follow-up was 47 (SD 5) months, with the trial stopped early for treatment benefit. The primary endpoints were reached by five (20%) in the celiprolol group and by 14 (50%) controls (hazard ratio [HR] 0·36; 95% CI 0·15-0·88; p=0·040). Adverse events were severe fatigue in one patient after starting 100 mg celiprolol and mild fatigue in two patients related to dose uptitration. INTERPRETATION: We suggest that celiprolol might be the treatment of choice for physicians aiming to prevent major complications in patients with vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Whether patients with similar clinical presentations and no mutation are also protected remains to be established. FUNDING: French Ministry of Health, Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique 2001.


Adrenergic beta-Agonists/therapeutic use , Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use , Celiprolol/therapeutic use , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/complications , Vascular Diseases/prevention & control , Adolescent , Adult , Aortic Dissection/etiology , Aortic Dissection/prevention & control , Aneurysm, Ruptured/etiology , Aneurysm, Ruptured/prevention & control , Collagen Type III/genetics , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/diagnosis , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/genetics , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mutation , Vascular Diseases/etiology , Young Adult
3.
Arch Dermatol ; 144(7): 861-7, 2008 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18645137

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the clinical characteristics of venous malformation of the limbs and trunk and known but poorly appraised associated coagulation disorders. Venous malformations are ubiquitous, slow-flow vascular anomalies known to be occasionally painful because of thrombotic episodes inside the lesion. DESIGN: Large case series, with screening of accepted standard coagulation tests. SETTING: Ambulatory multidisciplinary clinics for vascular anomalies. PATIENTS: This 2-year study (2003-2005) included 118 patients with clinical, radiological, and biological features informative for better defining venous malformation and associated coagulation abnormalities. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was coagulation disorders associated with VM. Secondary measures include anatomic location, extent of lesion, localized pain, and impaired motion. RESULTS: The mean age of patients was 27 years, and there was a female preponderance of 64%. The venous malformation involved the upper extremity, lower extremity, and trunk in 30%, 58%, and 36% of patients, respectively; it was plurifocal in 22%. Intralesional pain (in 92% of patients) had a higher frequency in female (63%) than in male (47%) patients. Tissular involvement concerned the skin (65%), muscle (73%), bone (13%), joints (12%), and viscera (9%). According to our severity scoring system, cases of less gravity had a score of 2 or 3 (52%), cases of intermediate severity had a score of 4 or 5 (32%), and cases of major severity had a score of 6 to 9 (10%). The most frequent blood coagulation abnormality was a high plasma D-dimer level (> 0.5 microg/mL) (58% of patients), which was correlated with muscle involvement and high severity score and was more frequent in women. The factor VIII-von Willebrand factor complex was documented in 84 patients, and plasma von Willebrand factor level was decreased (<60%) in 23 (27%) of them; 10 of the 84 patients (12%) had more notably decreased levels (<50%). CONCLUSIONS: This study of a large case series of patients with pure venous malformation in the limbs and/or trunk highlights muscle involvement and frequency of pain. It validates that coagulation disorders, present in 58% of our patients, create thrombotic painful events. Under certain circumstances, these disorders entail a risk of hemorrhage because of the progression of localized intravascular coagulopathy to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy.


Blood Coagulation Disorders/epidemiology , Vascular Malformations/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Blood Coagulation Disorders/blood , Blood Coagulation Disorders/complications , Blood Coagulation Disorders/genetics , Blood Coagulation Disorders/pathology , Child , Child, Preschool , Extremities/blood supply , Female , France/epidemiology , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Joints/blood supply , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Pain Measurement , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Vascular Malformations/blood , Vascular Malformations/complications , Vascular Malformations/genetics , Vascular Malformations/pathology
4.
Orphanet J Rare Dis ; 2: 28, 2007 Jun 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17555581

Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), formerly called fibromuscular fibroplasia, is a group of nonatherosclerotic, noninflammatory arterial diseases that most commonly involve the renal and carotid arteries. The prevalence of symptomatic renal artery FMD is about 4/1000 and the prevalence of cervicocranial FMD is probably half that. Histological classification discriminates three main subtypes, intimal, medial and perimedial, which may be associated in a single patient. Angiographic classification includes the multifocal type, with multiple stenoses and the 'string-of-beads' appearance that is related to medial FMD, and tubular and focal types, which are not clearly related to specific histological lesions. Renovascular hypertension is the most common manifestation of renal artery FMD. Multifocal stenoses with the 'string-of-beads' appearance are observed at angiography in more than 80% of cases, mostly in women aged between 30 and 50 years; they generally involve the middle and distal two-thirds of the main renal artery and in some case also renal artery branches. Cervicocranial FMD can be complicated by dissection with headache, Horner's syndrome or stroke, or can be associated with intracerebral aneurysms with a risk of subarachnoid or intracerebral hemorrhage. The etiology of FMD is unknown, although various hormonal and mechanical factors have been suggested. Subclinical lesions are found at arterial sites distant from the stenotic arteries, and this suggests that FMD is a systemic arterial disease. It appears to be familial in 10% of cases. Noninvasive diagnostic tests include, in increasing order of accuracy, ultrasonography, magnetic resonance angiography and computed tomography angiography. The gold standard for diagnosing FMD is catheter angiography, but this invasive procedure is only used for patients in whom it is clinically pertinent to proceed with revascularization during the same procedure. Differential diagnosis include atherosclerotic stenoses and stenoses associated with vascular Ehlers-Danlos and Williams' syndromes, and type 1 neurofibromatosis. Management of cases with renovascular hypertension includes antihypertensive therapy, percutaneous angioplasty of severe stenoses, and reconstructive surgery in cases with complex FMD that extends to segmental arteries. The therapeutic options for securing ruptured intracerebral aneurysms are microvascular neurosurgical clipping and endovascular coiling. Stenosis progression in renal artery FMD is slow and rarely leads to ischemic renal failure.


Fibromuscular Dysplasia/diagnosis , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/therapy , Adult , Age Distribution , Aortic Dissection/epidemiology , Angiography/methods , Cardiovascular Agents/therapeutic use , Carotid Arteries , Causality , Comorbidity , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/classification , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/epidemiology , Humans , Male , Prevalence , Prognosis , Renal Artery , Sex Distribution , Vascular Diseases/diagnosis
6.
Presse Med ; 36(6 Pt 2): 1016-23, 2007 Jun.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17442534

Fibromuscular dysplasia is an idiopathic, segmental, nonatherosclerotic and noninflammatory disease of the muscle layer of arterial walls that leads to stenosis of small- and medium-sized arteries. Fibromuscular dysplasia preferentially affects young women. Although it can affect every arterial tree, it most often touches the renal and internal carotid arteries. Renal fibromuscular dysplasia can cause hypertension by stenosis of the renal artery, most often seen on angiography as resembling a "pearl necklace". Cerebrovascular fibromuscular dysplasia becomes symptomatic when the arterial stenosis is tight and causes hypoperfusion, embolism, or thrombosis or when arterial dissection or rupture of the associated aneurysm occurs.


Fibromuscular Dysplasia/diagnosis , Carotid Artery, Internal , Diagnosis, Differential , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/classification , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/genetics , Humans , Renal Artery
7.
Presse Med ; 35(12 Pt 2): 1864-75, 2006 Dec.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17159712

The vascular type of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) is a rare genetic disease transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. It is distinguished from other forms of EDS by its unstable acrogeric morphotype and by vascular, gastrointestinal, and obstetrical complications. Diagnosis is based on various clinical signs, noninvasive imaging, and on the identification of a mutation of the COL3A1 gene, which provides diagnostic certainty but has a sensitivity of only 61%. When two major diagnostic criteria are present, a genetic test should be proposed, performed and its result presented in a multidisciplinary group. The precautionary principle requires that preventive measures be implemented when the diagnosis is suspected. All artery puncture, surgery, and gastrointestinal and uterine endoscopy are contraindicated, permissible only in life-threatening emergencies. Straining against a closed glottis and all other situations or drugs likely to raise blood pressure must be avoided. Contraception must be discussed to avoid pregnancy during the diagnostic period. Arterial lesions suggestive of the disease include dissecting aneurysms of the internal carotid and iliac arteries and of the anterior visceral branches of the abdominal aorta, fusiform aneurysms of the splenic artery, and early onset nontraumatic direct carotid-cavernous fistulae. Early-onset varicose veins, spontaneous peritonitis or unusually important perineal lesions after giving birth should also attract the physician's attention. Psychological treatment and support of patients and their families is essential, to help them both to live with their disease and to deal with the information and screening issues. The prognosis of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, vascular type, is grim but there is wide interindividual variability and life expectancy is best among patients receiving regular follow-up. Management by an experienced multidisciplinary team, implementation of drastic prevention measures and, depending on the results of the BBEST study, the possible prescription of beta-blockers should help to reduce the risk of complications and justify hope for a real improvement in prognosis in the near future.


Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome , Adult , Ascorbic Acid/therapeutic use , Celiprolol/therapeutic use , Child , Clinical Trials as Topic , Collagen Type III/genetics , Contraception , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/complications , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/diagnosis , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/drug therapy , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/genetics , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/physiopathology , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/therapy , Female , Genetic Counseling , Humans , Male , Mutation , Phenotype , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications , Prognosis , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Ultrasonography, Doppler , Vasodilator Agents/therapeutic use
8.
J Hypertens ; 24(4): 705-10, 2006 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16531799

OBJECTIVE: We previously showed that fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) of the renal artery may be familial. Case reports have associated alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and FMD. The aim of this study was to test the implication of the alpha1-antitrypsin (AAT) gene in a large cohort of patients with renal FMD. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A case-control study comparing the genotype frequencies in 161 consecutive patients with angiographically proven renal FMD with those observed in three sets of controls (353 hypertensive patients, 288 normotensive patients, 444 normotensive women) was conducted. High-resolution echotracking of the carotid and radial arteries was performed in a subset of 77 FMD patients. Three functional polymorphisms of the AAT gene (PiM1, PiZ, PiS) were investigated. RESULTS: Clinical (age 44.3 +/- 13.8 years, 85.1% women) and radiological (77.1% of multifocal lesions) characteristics of the FMD population were consistent with those previously published. No differences were found in AAT genotype frequencies in the FMD subjects compared with the 1085 controls. We found no correlation between the AAT genotypes and the clinical and angiographical characteristics of the FMD patients. Echotracking results confirmed our previously published results in FMD patients with a specific pattern and a mean arterial phenotypic score greater than 3. However, no difference in the arterial score was observed across the genotypes. CONCLUSION: Polymorphisms PiM1, PiZ and PiS of the AAT gene are not associated with renal FMD or infraclinical carotid lesions detected by echotracking methods. As the true prevalence of renal FMD is not precisely known and alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency is not infrequent in the general population, the association of the two may occur by chance.


Fibromuscular Dysplasia/pathology , Polymorphism, Genetic , Renal Artery/pathology , alpha 1-Antitrypsin/genetics , Adult , Alleles , Female , Fibromuscular Dysplasia/genetics , Gene Frequency , Genotype , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Phenotype , Renal Artery/metabolism
9.
Circulation ; 109(12): 1530-5, 2004 Mar 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15007000

BACKGROUND: Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS), also known as EDS type IV, an inherited disorder of connective tissue, results from mutations in the gene encoding type III procollagen (COL3A1). Affected patients are at risk for arterial dissection or rupture, the main cause of death. To understand the pathogenesis of the vascular lesions, we used a biomechanical approach and determined steady and pulsatile wall stress. METHODS AND RESULTS: Sixteen patients with vEDS and 16 age-, gender-, and blood pressure-matched control subjects were included in this cross-sectional noninvasive study. Circumferential wall stress was determined under steady and pulsatile conditions at the site of an elastic (common carotid) and a muscular (radial) artery from the measurements of intima-media thickness and internal diameter with high-resolution echo-tracking systems and either mean blood pressure or pulse pressure, respectively. At the site of the carotid artery, steady circumferential wall stress was 43% higher in vEDS patients than in control subjects (68.9+/-14.3 versus 48.2+/-12.1 kPa, P<0.001), and pulsatile circumferential wall stress was 22% higher (28.2+/-7.7 versus 23.1+/-5.7 kPa, P<0.001). Carotid intima-media thickness was 32% lower (408+/-56 versus 598+/-171 microm, P<0.001) in vEDS patients, and internal diameter was not different between groups. Radial artery parameters were not significantly different between groups. CONCLUSIONS: In vEDS patients, an abnormally low intima-media thickness generates a higher wall stress than in control subjects at the site of an elastic artery, which may increase the risk of arterial dissection and rupture.


Carotid Artery, Common/physiopathology , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/physiopathology , Hemorheology , Stress, Mechanical , Tunica Intima/pathology , Tunica Media/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Aneurysm/etiology , Aneurysm, Ruptured/etiology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Blood Pressure , Carotid Artery Diseases/etiology , Carotid Artery, Common/pathology , Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection/etiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome/complications , Elasticity , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pulsatile Flow , Radial Artery/pathology
...