Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ICD9 = | ICDO = | OMIM = 187300 | MedlinePlus = | eMedicineSubj = med | eMedicineTopic = 2764 | eMedicine_mult = | MeshID = D013683 |In medicine, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), also known as Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome, is an autosomal dominant genetic disorder that leads to vascular malformations.
Signs and symptoms
HHT is characterised by telangiectasia (small vascular malformations) on the skin and mucosal linings, epistaxis (nosebleeds), and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in various internal organs. Skin and mucosa telangiectasias are most remarkable on the tongue, hands/fingers, nose, lips, mouth/throat and conjunctiva.The internal organs that can harbor AVMs often include the brain and lungs. In both, bleeding can seriously endanger life. Anemia may occur due to bleeding from digestive tract AVMs. Congestive cardiac failure (high-output heart failure) may develop in the presence of marked shunting arterial blood to the venous circulation, e.g. when AVMs are present in the liver.Diagnosis
There are four diagnostic criteria.Shovlin CL, Guttmacher AE, Buscarini E, Faughnan ME, Hyland RH, Westermann CJJ, Kjeldsen AD, and Plauchu H. Diagnostic Criteria For Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (Rendu-Osler-Weber Syndrome). Am J Med Genet 2000:91:66-7. PMID 10751092. If three or four are met, a patient has definite HHT, while two gives a possible diagnosis:-
# Spontaneous recurrent epistaxis
# Multiple teleangiectasias on typical locations (see above)
# Proven visceral AVM (lung, liver, brain, spine)
# First-degree family member with HHT
Genetics
HHT is a genetic disorder by definition. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner.Four forms have been described:
Pathophysiology
The mechanism underlying the formation of vascular malformations is not completely understood, but signalling of transforming growth factor-β1 is most likely to be involved. Possibly, connective tissue is required to support and guide proliferating blood vessels during angiogenesis, and defects in TGF-β signalling adversely affect connective tissue and matrix production.Treatment
There is no specific treatment for the condition. Anemia due to bleeding from digestive tract AVMs often necessitates repeated blood transfusions. AVMs in critical organs often necessitates surgery.If major AVMs are all the patient has in terms of long-term problems, the surgery performed will block the malformed arteries, ruling out the risk for stroke and blood-clots. This surgery will hopefully lead to a normal life for the patient, and also help doctors diagnose patients with HHT more easily around the globe.Epidemiology
HHT occurs mainly in whites (1:5,000), more in certain areas of France, but much less in blacks (1 in million). It is found in all continents throughout the world. It is also seen with increased frequency in Mormon families from Utah.
Next Page
This article is based on an article from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and is available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
In the Wikipedia there is a list with all authors of this article available.