Search results for " Angioedema"
showing 10 items of 121 documents
A single nucleotide deletion at the C1 inhibitor gene as the cause of hereditary angioedema: insights from a Brazilian family
2011
To cite this article: Ferraro MF, Moreno AS, Castelli EC, Donadi EA, Palma MS, Arcuri HA, Lange AP, Bork K, Sarti W, Arruda LK. A single nucleotide deletion at the C1 inhibitor gene as the cause of hereditary angioedema: insights from a Brazilian family.Allergy 2011; 66: 1384–1390. Abstract Background: Hereditary angioedema is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by episodes of subcutaneous and submucosal edema. It is caused by deficiency of the C1 inhibitor protein, leading to elevated levels of bradykinin. More than 200 mutations in C1 inhibitor gene have been reported. The aim of this study was to analyze clinical features of a large family with an index case of hereditary angioe…
New Mutations of C1 inhibitor (SERPING1/C1NH) Gene Associated with Hereditary Angioedema in a European Population
2007
Hereditary Angioedema: a New Mutation of the C1 Inhibitor Gene in a Brazilian Family
2008
Characterization of a partial exon 9/intron 9 deletion in the coagulation factor XII gene (F12) detected in two Turkish families with hereditary angi…
2014
Novel SERPING1 mutation causing Hereditary Angioedema in a Brazilian family
2009
Health-Related Quality Of Life (HRQoL) In Adult Patients With Hereditary Angioedema Due To C1 Inhibitor Deficiency (HAE-C1-INH) Assessed By SF-36v2
2014
IHAE-Qol: Specific Health-Related Quality Of Life (HRQoL) Questionnaire In Hereditary Angioedema Due To C1 Inhibitor Deficiency (HAE-C1INH)
2014
Functional C1-inhibitor diagnostics in hereditary angioedema: Assay evaluation and recommendations
2008
Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by recurrent episodes of potentially life-threatening angioedema. The most widespread underlying genetic deficiency is a heterozygous deficiency of the serine protease inhibitor Cl esterase inhibitor (C1-Inh). In addition to low C4 levels, the most important laboratory parameter for correct diagnosis of HAE or angioedema due to acquired C1-Inh deficiency is reduced C1-Inh function (fC1-Inh). No direct recommendations about the assays for fC1-Inh or sample handling conditions are available, although this would prove especially useful when a laboratory first starts to offer assays on fC1-Inh for HAE diagnosis. In the p…
Hereditary angioedema cosegregating with a novel kininogen 1 gene mutation changing the N‐terminal cleavage site of bradykinin
2019
The Expanding Spectrum of Mutations in Hereditary Angioedema.
2021
The evolution in the knowledge of rare genetic diseases such as hereditary angioedema (HAE) has increased at a parallel pace with the development of new molecular tools. The deficiency of C1 inhibitor (C1-INH) has been recognized as the main cause of HAE (HAE-C1-INH) since the 1960s, but the discovery of the wide spectrum of mutations affecting the C1-INH gene (SERPING1) was possible only from the late 1980s, when Sanger sequencing became available and more accessible worldwide. Nevertheless, the involvement of other genes in HAE was discovered only in 2006 with the description of mutations in the F12 gene in patients with HAE and normal C1-INH. In the last 3 years, advanced next-generation…