Search results for "Pearson syndrome"

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Clinical manifestations and management of four children with Pearson syndrome.

2011

Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome is a fatal disorder mostly diagnosed during infancy and caused by mutations of mitochondrial DNA. We hereby report on four children affected by Pearson syndrome with hematological disorders at onset. The disease was fatal to three of them and the fourth one, who received hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, died of secondary malignancy. In this latter patient transplantation corrected hematological and non-hematological issues like metabolic acidosis, and we therefore argue that it could be considered as a useful option in an early stage of the disease.

MalePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyMitochondrial DiseasesAnemiaMitochondrial diseasemedicine.medical_treatmenttrapianto cellule staminali emopoieticheHematopoietic stem cell transplantationDiseaseDNA MitochondrialLipid Metabolism Inborn Errorsmitochondrial disordersFatal OutcomeMuscular DiseasesCause of Deathhematopoietic stem cell transplantation; mitochondrial disorders; Pearson marrow-pancreas syndrome; trapianto cellule staminali emopoietiche; malattie mitocondriali; sindrome di PearsonGeneticsmedicineCongenital Bone Marrow Failure SyndromesHumansChildGenetics (clinical)Pearson marrow-pancreas syndromeCause of deathPearson syndromebusiness.industryAcyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Long-ChainHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationInfantMetabolic acidosissindrome di Pearsonmedicine.diseaseAnemia SideroblasticTransplantationChild PreschoolImmunologymalattie mitocondrialiFemalebusinessGene DeletionAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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Pearson Syndrome: A Retrospective Cohort Study from the Marrow Failure Study Group of A.I.E.O.P. (Associazione Italiana Emato-Oncologia Pediatrica)

2015

Pearson syndrome (PS) is a very rare and often fatal multisystemic mitochondrial disorder involving the liver, kidney, pancreas, and hematopoietic and central nervous system. It is characterized principally by a transfusion-dependent anemia that usually improves over time, a tendency to develop severe infections, and a high mortality rate. We describe a group of 11 PS patients diagnosed in Italy in the period 1993-2014. The analysis of this reasonably sized cohort of patients contributes to the clinical profile of the disease and highlights a rough incidence of 1 case/million newborns. Furthermore, it seems that some biochemical parameters like increased serum alanine and urinary fumaric ac…

Mitochondrial disordersmedicine.medical_specialtyAnemiabusiness.industryUrinary systemMortality rateIncidence (epidemiology)AnemiaRetrospective cohort studyDiseasemedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyArticleSurgeryAnemia; Mitochondrial disorders; Pearson syndromeInternal medicineCohortmedicinePearson syndromebusinessPearson syndrome
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