1.Diagnosis and treatment procedures and health management for patients with hereditary angioedema.
Min ZHOU ; Xin LUO ; Qi Lin ZHOU ; Wen Hao ZHOU ; Rui ZHENG ; Ya Na ZHANG ; Xi Fu WU ; Shuo WU ; Jing SU ; Guo Wei XIONG ; Yun CHENG ; Ya Ting LI ; Ping Ping ZHANG ; Kun ZHANG ; Min DAI ; Xue Kun HUANG ; Zhao Hui SHI ; Jin TAO ; Yu Qi ZHOU ; Pei Ying FENG ; Zhuang Gui CHEN ; Qin Tai YANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(8):1280-1285
As a recognized rare and highly fatal disease, hereditary angioedema (HAE) is difficult to diagnose and characterized by recurrent edema involving the head, limbs, genitals and larynx, etc. Diagnosis of HAE is not difficult. However, low incidence and lack of clinical characteristics lead to difficulty of doctors on timely diagnosis and correct intervention for HAE patients. Therefore, it is crucial to improve the awareness of this disease and prevent its recurrence. for HAE patients. In view of absent cognition of doctors and the general public on HAE, patients often suffer from sudden death or become disabled due to laryngeal edema which cannot be treated in time. Thus, based on the Internet mobile terminal platform, the team set up an all-day rapid emergency response system which is provided for HAE patients by setting up "one-click help". The aim is to offer optimization on overall management of HAE and designed the intelligent follow-up management to provide timely assistance and specialized suggestion for patients with acute attacks.
Humans
;
Angioedemas, Hereditary/drug therapy*
2.Diagnosis and treatment procedures and health management for patients with hereditary angioedema.
Min ZHOU ; Xin LUO ; Qi Lin ZHOU ; Wen Hao ZHOU ; Rui ZHENG ; Ya Na ZHANG ; Xi Fu WU ; Shuo WU ; Jing SU ; Guo Wei XIONG ; Yun CHENG ; Ya Ting LI ; Ping Ping ZHANG ; Kun ZHANG ; Min DAI ; Xue Kun HUANG ; Zhao Hui SHI ; Jin TAO ; Yu Qi ZHOU ; Pei Ying FENG ; Zhuang Gui CHEN ; Qin Tai YANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(8):1280-1285
As a recognized rare and highly fatal disease, hereditary angioedema (HAE) is difficult to diagnose and characterized by recurrent edema involving the head, limbs, genitals and larynx, etc. Diagnosis of HAE is not difficult. However, low incidence and lack of clinical characteristics lead to difficulty of doctors on timely diagnosis and correct intervention for HAE patients. Therefore, it is crucial to improve the awareness of this disease and prevent its recurrence. for HAE patients. In view of absent cognition of doctors and the general public on HAE, patients often suffer from sudden death or become disabled due to laryngeal edema which cannot be treated in time. Thus, based on the Internet mobile terminal platform, the team set up an all-day rapid emergency response system which is provided for HAE patients by setting up "one-click help". The aim is to offer optimization on overall management of HAE and designed the intelligent follow-up management to provide timely assistance and specialized suggestion for patients with acute attacks.
Humans
;
Angioedemas, Hereditary/drug therapy*
3.Migraine-like Headache in a Patient with Complement 1 Inhibitor Deficient Hereditary Angioedema.
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2012;27(1):104-106
We report on an angioedema patient with a genetic defect in complement 1 inhibitor, manifesting migraine-like episodes of headache, effective prophylaxis with Danazol, and triptan for a treatment of acute clinical episode. The patient was 44-yr-old Korean man with abdominal pain and headache, who was brought into the Emergency Department of Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul. He suffered from frequent attacks of migraine-like headache (3-7 per month), pulsating in nature associated with nausea. Severities were aggravated by activity and his headache had shown recent progression with abdominal pain. No remarkable findings were observed on radiologic examination, brain magnetic resonance images and intracranial and extracranial magnetic resonance angiography. Danazol 200 mg every other day was subsequently used. Following administration of Danazol, symptoms showed improvement and the patient was discharged. While taking Danazol, the migraine-like episodes appeared to be prevented for about 2 yr. At the eighth month, he suffered a moderate degree of migraine-like headache; however, administration of naratriptan 2.5 mg resolved his problem. A case of genetic defect of C1-INH deficiency presented with headache episodes, and was controlled by Danazol and triptan. It suggests that pathogenic mechanism of headache in hereditary angioedema may be mediated by the neurogenic inflammatory-like physiology of migraine.
Adult
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Angioedemas, Hereditary/*complications/diagnosis/*genetics
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Brain/radionuclide imaging
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Complement C1 Inhibitor Protein/*genetics/metabolism
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Danazol/therapeutic use
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Estrogen Antagonists/therapeutic use
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Humans
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Magnetic Resonance Angiography
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Male
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Migraine Disorders/*diagnosis/drug therapy/*etiology
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Piperidines/therapeutic use
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Tryptamines/therapeutic use
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Vasoconstrictor Agents/therapeutic use