Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction
Home
A random Abstract
Our Project
Our Team
Overlap syndrome between Familial Mediterranean fever and tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome in a lupus patient.
[familial mediterranean fever]
Autoinflammatory
diseases
represent
an
expanding
spectrum
of
genetic
and
non-genetic
inflammatory
diseases
characterized
by
recurrent
episodes
of
fever
and
systemic
inflammation
,
affecting
joints
,
skin
and
serosal
surfaces
.
Familial
Mediterranean
fever
(
FMF
)
is
the
most
common
autosomal
recessive
hereditary
autoinflammatory
disease
.
Tumor
necrosis
factor
receptor-associated
periodic
syndrome
(
TRAPS
)
is
an
autosomal
dominant
hereditary
autoinflammatory
disease
.
They
share
some
clinical
manifestations
such
as
a
periodic
fever
and
skin
rash
.
We
present
here
the
association
of
FMF
with
TRAPS
in
a
systemic
lupus
erythematosus
(
SLE
)
patient
.
A
54
-
year
-old
SLE
patient
with
recurrent
attacks
of
fever
,
arthritis
,
and
skin
rashes
was
referred
to
our
hospital
.
She
had
been
diagnosed
with
lupus
nephritis
at
19
years
old
.
Her
lupus
nephritis
was
controlled
by
steroid
treatments
;
however
,
since
childhood
she
has
suffered
from
recurrent
episodes
of
periodic
fever
,
abdominal
pain
,
arthritis
,
and
erythematous
skin
rashes
.
An
initial
diagnosis
of
FMF
was
suspected
based
on
the
genetic
analysis
,
showing
the
compound
heterozygous
L
110
P
/
E
148
Q
mutations
in
the
MEFV
gene
that
is
responsible
for
FMF
.
Her
symptoms
responded
to
colchicine
,
but
the
febrile
attacks
were
not
completely
resolved
.
Therefore
,
genetic
testing
for
TRAPS
was
performed
.
The
results
revealed
a
heterozygous
T
61
I
mutation
in
the
TNFRSF
1
A
gene
that
encodes
tumor
necrosis
factor
-α
receptor
and
is
responsible
for
TRAPS
.
The
patient
was
diagnosed
with
overlapping
FMF
and
TRAPS
,
in
addition
to
SLE
.
This
is
the
first
report
of
SLE
associated
with
both
FMF
and
TRAPS
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"traps"
symptom
familial mediterranean fever
You can validate or delete this automatically detected symptom
Validate the Symptom
Delete the Symptom