[Hereditary hypophosphatemia in adults].
Journal: 2006/January - Presse Medicale
ISSN: 0755-4982
PUBMED: 16374396
Abstract:
Hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets groups together X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets (XLH), autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets (ADHR) and hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria (HHRH, autosomal recessive). Clinical and biological characteristics and treatment depend on specific etiology. Mutations causing hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets involve PHEX located on Xp11.22 for XLH and FGF-23 located on 12p13 for ADHR. The gene involved in HHRH remains unknown: candidates may encode proteins that modulate phosphate transporter expression or activity. Others forms of rickets must be ruled out: acquired hypophosphatemia due to oncogenic osteomalacia, X-linked recessive hypophosphatemic rickets or Dent's disease, and hereditary 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D-resistant rickets with a defect either in the 1-alpha-hydroxylase gene (pseudo-vitamin D deficiency rickets, PDDR) or in the vitamin D receptor (hereditary vitamin D-resistant rickets, HVDRR).
Relations:
Citations
(1)
Diseases
(1)
Drugs
(1)
Organisms
(1)
Processes
(1)
Affiliates
(1)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.