Neonatal hemochromatosis
Neonatal Hemochromatosis is a rare and severe liver disease of unknown origin, though research suggests that it may be alloimmune condition. Its characteristics are similar to hereditary hemochromatosis, where iron deposition causes damage to the liver and other organs and tissues.
Neonatal hemochromatosis | |
---|---|
Neonatal hemochromatosis is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner |
Causes
The causes of neonatal hemochromatosis are still unknown, but recent research has led to the hypothesis that it is an alloimmune disease. Evidence supporting this hypothesis includes the high rate among siblings (>80%). This evidence along with other research indicates that neonatal hemochromatosis could be classified as a congenital alloimmune hepatitis.[1]
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
The condition is sometimes confused with juvenile hemochromatosis, which is a hereditary hemochromatosis caused by mutations of a gene called hemojuvelin. While the symptoms and outcomes for these two diseases are similar, the causes appear to be different.
Treatment
Effective treatment of the disease has been confined to liver transplants. Success has also been reported with an antioxidant chelation cocktail, though its effectiveness cannot be confirmed. Based on the alloimmune cause hypothesis, a new treatment involving high-dose immunoglobulin to pregnant mothers who have had a previous pregnancy with a confirmed neonatal hemochromatosis outcome, has provided very encouraging results.[2]
References
- Whitington PF (August 2007). "Neonatal hemochromatosis: a congenital alloimmune hepatitis". Semin Liver Dis. 27 (3): 243–250. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.562.7251. doi:10.1055/s-2007-985069. PMID 17682971.
- Whitington PF, Hibbard JU (November 6–12, 2004). "High-dose immunoglobulin during pregnancy for recurrent neonatal haemochromatosis". The Lancet. 364 (9446): 1690–8. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(04)17356-X. PMID 15530630. S2CID 25829660.
Further reading
- Andrews N (1999). "Disorders of iron metabolism". New England Journal of Medicine. 341 (26): 1986–95. doi:10.1056/NEJM199912233412607. PMID 10607817. link
External links
Classification | |
---|---|
External resources |