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Hemochromatosis

More information in Books or onNLM PubMed
Definition: A disorder due to the deposition of hemosiderin in the parenchymal cells, causing tissue damage and dysfunction of the liver, pancreas, heart, and pituitary. Full development of the disease in women is restricted by menstruation, pregnancy, and lower dietary intake of iron. Acquired hemochromatosis may be the result of blood transfusions, excessive dietary iron, or secondary to other disease. Idiopathic or genetic hemochromatosis is an autosomal recessive disorder of metabolism associated with a gene tightly linked to the A locus of the HLA complex on chromosome 6. (From Dorland, 27th ed)  accumulation of hemosiderin in tissue    Other names Diabetes, Bronze; Hemochromatoses; Bronze Diabetes
 
SubstanceCAS Registry & nameCategoriesSource
Hemochromatosis, type 4  0   *Hemochromatosis Cation Transport Proteins/deficiency.
Hemochromatosis, type 3  0   *Hemochromatosis Receptors, Transferrin/deficiency.
Hemochromatosis, type 2  0   *Hemochromatosis/congenital.
Neonatal hemochromatosis  0   *Hemochromatosis.
Hjv protein, rat  0   *Membrane Proteins Hemochromatosis. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2006 Sep;291(3):G482-90
Hfe2 protein, mouse  0   *Membrane Proteins Hemochromatosis. J Clin Invest. 2005 Aug;115(8):2180-6
HFE2 protein, human  0   *GPI-Linked Proteins Hemochromatosis. Nat Genet 2004 Jan;36(1):77-82
HLA-hc protein, human  0   *Histocompatibility Antigens Class I Hemochromatosis Major Histocompatibility Complex. Immunogenetics 1997;45(5):336-40

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Sources: NLM Medical Subject Headings, NIH UMLS, Drugs@FDA, FDA AERS original data copyright United States Government. No endorsement implied. Last modified 6/6/2012

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