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1/13. Absent innervation of skin and sweat glands in congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis.

    OBJECTIVES: A case of a 10-year-old girl with congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA) is reported. methods AND RESULTS: parents referred several hyperpyretic episodes without sweating occurring since birth, and insensitivity to pain, noticed when the child was 2 years old. Her body had many bruises and scars, bone fractures and signs of self-mutilation. Neurological examination was normal except for insensitivity to pain. Her IQ was 52. Electrical and tactile sensory nerve conduction velocities were normal. The patient was unable to detect thermal stimuli. histamine injection evoked a wheal but not a flare; pilocarpine by iontophoresis did not induce sweat. Microneurography showed neural activity from A-beta sensory fibers while nociceptive and skin sympathetic C fiber nerve activity was absent. No small myelinated fibers and very rare unmyelinated fibers were found in the sural nerve. immunohistochemistry showed a lack of nerve fibers in the epidermis and only few hypotrophic and uninnervated sweat glands in the dermis. CONCLUSIONS: The lack of innervation of the skin (C and A-delta fibers) appears to be the morphological basis of insensitivity to pain and anhidrosis, and is consistent with the loss of unmyelinated and small myelinated fibers in the sural nerve biopsy.
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keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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2/13. Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is an autosomal-recessive disorder resulting from defective neural crest differentiation with loss of the first-order afferent system, which is responsible for pain and temperature sensation. There is also a neuronal loss in the sympathetic ganglia. Lack of sweating, hyperthermia, and infections of bones are main features of the disorder; however, contradictory results have been published regarding eccrine sweat gland innervation. A 5-year-old male patient with typical clinical manifestations of congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is presented. immunohistochemistry with antibodies against S100 protein and neuron-specific enolase failed to reveal nerve fibers in the vicinity of the eccrine sweat glands. The roles of the nerve growth factor and tyrosine kinase receptor gene mutations in the pathogenesis of the disease are also discussed.
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ranking = 0.40527767283281
keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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3/13. Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA): novel mutations of the TRKA (NTRK1) gene, a putative uniparental disomy, and a linkage of the mutant TRKA and PKLR genes in a family with CIPA and pyruvate kinase deficiency.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is an autosomal recessive hereditary disorder characterized by recurrent episodic fever, anhidrosis (inability to sweat), absence of reaction to noxious stimuli, self-mutilating behavior, and mental retardation. The human TRKA gene (NTRK1), located on chromosome 1q21-q22 encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase for nerve growth factor. We reported that TRKA is the gene responsible for CIPA and we developed a comprehensive strategy to screen for TRKA mutations and polymorphisms, as based on the gene's structure and organization. Here we report eight novel mutations detected as either a homozygous or heterozygous state in nine CIPA families from five countries. Mendelian inheritance of the mutations was confirmed in seven families for which samples from either parent were available. However, non-mendelian inheritance seems likely for the family when only samples from the mother and siblings, (but not from the father) were available. A paternal uniparental disomy for chromosome 1 is likely to be the cause of reduction to homozygosity of the TRKA gene mutation in this family. Interestingly, a Hispanic patient from the USA has two autosomal genetic disorders, CIPA and pyruvate kinase deficiency, whose genetic loci are both mapped to a closely linked chromosomal region. A splice mutation and a missense mutation were detected in the TRKA and PKLR genes from the homozygous proband, respectively. Thus, concomitant occurrence of two disorders is ascribed to a combination of two separate mutant genes, not a contiguous gene syndrome. This finding suggests a mechanism responsible for two autosomal genetic disorders in one patient. All these data further support findings that TRKA defects can cause CIPA in various ethnic groups. This will aid in diagnosis and genetic counseling of this painless but severe genetic disorder.
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ranking = 0.026388364164053
keywords = sweat
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4/13. Congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis (hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV).

    Hereditary sensory neuropathies comprise a group of rare childhood diseases which are classified into four types. We present a Greek boy 11 years old with hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV (congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis) whom we have followed up and studied during the last seven years. Our patient presented for the first time with recurrent hyperthermic episodes without sweating, and lack of pain sensation from the first months of life. Insensitivity to pain and thermal stimuli had resulted in burns on the extremities and self-mutilation of the tongue, lips and fingertips. When he was five and seven years old respectively he had two painless fractures of the ankles which led to insoluble orthopedic problems. He also suffered from mental retardation, which was obvious from his first years of life. Sweat gland investigations showed significant hypohidrosis or anhidrosis although the sweat glands were normal microscopically. Hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV, although rare, is important for dermatologists because it must be differentiated from other anhidrotic syndromes, and in view of the poor prognosis of the condition.
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ranking = 0.21601895401151
keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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5/13. An infant with primary tooth loss and palmar hyperkeratosis: a novel mutation in the NTRK1 gene causing congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis.

    patients with congenital insensitivity to pain and anhidrosis (CIPA), caused by mutations in the NTRK1 gene, can be difficult to diagnose because of their variable presentation, the lack of simple diagnostic tests, and the paucity of cases reported in north america. We describe a 1-year-old infant who had tooth loss and palmar hyperkeratosis as the primary manifestations of CIPA. He was initially evaluated by a pediatric dentist and epidermal dysplasia syndromes were considered, but insensitivity to pain was suspected after a skeletal survey revealed an unrecognized skull fracture. Nerve conduction studies were normal, as was his response to subdermal histamine injection. sequence analysis of his NTRK1 gene revealed 2 mutations: 1 mutation is novel, while the other has been described previously in a patient of northern European descent. An antibody directed against NTRK1 revealed persistent expression in keratinocytes, consistent with the mutations in this patient. skin biopsy specimens revealed a lack of epidermal and sweat gland innervation. immunohistochemistry of skin biopsy specimens, together with routine nerve conduction studies, can provide quick and reliable confirmation if CIPA is clinically suspected.
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ranking = 0.18944465433438
keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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6/13. Two brothers with a variant of hereditary sensory neuropathy.

    We report two brothers with the clinical symptoms and neuropathological findings of hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) type IV but with normal sweating function and absence of recurrent fever. We propose that our patients may have a lower degree of expression of the genetic defect underlying HSAN type IV or that they represent a separate genetic entity.
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keywords = sweat
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7/13. Desflurane used in a patient with congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis during septic shock.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA) is a rare autonomic recessive disorder characterized by congenital analgesia, absence of sweating and mental retardation. Because of these abnormalities, the anesthetic managements in patients with CIPA deserve special attention. Here we report a 22-year-old man with CIPA receiving left above-knee amputation due to severe lower extremity infection. General anesthesia was maintained with desflurane, an intervention that has never been reported, and the whole course of operation was uneventful. This is also the first reported case of CIPA in taiwan.
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ranking = 0.026388364164053
keywords = sweat
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8/13. Hereditary sensory neuropathy type 1 in a Portuguese family-electrodiagnostic and autonomic nervous system studies.

    Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type 1 (HSAN 1) is a dominantly inherited disorder; its gene locus is mapped on chromosome 9q22. Three different missense mutations (C133Y, C133W and V144D) have been described in 11 families from australia, england and austria. Common clinical features have been found in these families. We report the clinical and electrophysiological features of three members of a large Portuguese family with HSAN 1 and the C133Y missense mutation. The affected members showed typical clinical features. Electrophysiological findings were consistent with a distal axonal predominantly sensory neuropathy with motor involvement, in three different severity stages. No autonomic involvement was detected in sudomotor and cardiovascular tests. This report documents the lesion of the motor nerve fibers in this disease, as well as the preservation of the autonomic nervous system function, therefore suggesting that HSNA is an inappropriate name for this disorder.
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ranking = 0.0001859355130741
keywords = gland
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9/13. Hereditary sensory autonomic neuropathy Type IV.

    Hereditary sensory autonomic neuropathy Type IV is an autosomal recessive disorder due to lack of maturation of small myelinated and unmyelinated fibers of peripheral nerves, which convey sensation of pain and temperature, therefore, resulting in self mutilation. There is anhidrosis due to lack of innervation of normal sweat glands resulting in recurrent episodes of hyperpyrexia. The clinical presentation of two children with this rare disease is described.
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ranking = 0.18944465433438
keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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10/13. Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis: morphological and morphometrical studies on the skin and peripheral nerves.

    A rare case of congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is presented. The male patient, who expired at 17 years of age, was noted insensitive to pain and bouts of unexplained fever at birth. He frequently fractured the hands and feet with secondary osteomyelitis. He did not sweat even in warm season. The intradermal nerve fibres and sweat glands were normal in distribution. The peripheral nerve seemed to be almost normal with light microscopy but the electron microscopical study revealed extreme paucity of unmyelinated fibers and a reduction of myelinated fibres, especially of small caliber. Abundant collagen fibrils comprised the endoneurium. There were no regenerative and/or degenerative changes of axons and myelin sheaths. The pathology of the peripheral nerve was considered to be congenital. Our case might belong to a category of congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis (Pinsky and Di George 1966), congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (Gillespie and Perucca 1960) or hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV (Dyck and Ohta 1975, Goebel et al 1980).
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ranking = 0.21583301849843
keywords = sweat gland, sweat, gland
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