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Harlequin Ichthyosis

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Title: Harlequin Ichthyosis


1
Harlequin Ichthyosis
  • By Dan Hood, Matt Sharbaugh, Brian Monterroso

2
WARNING!
  • THE IMAGES YOU ARE ABOUT TO SEE ARE REAL AND MAY
    CAUSE SOME TO BECOME QUEASY !

3
Biological Basis
  • Intro
  • Harlequin Ichthyosis, most commonly known as
    harlequins disease or HI is the most sever form
    of keratinizing disorders.
  • The condition is characterized by a profound
    thickening of the external layer of the skin.

4
The Condition
  • This rare but debilitating condition occurs in 1
    in 300,000 births.
  • The babies are born with a massive hard shell
    like covering containing many deep fissures.
  • The babies also have problems contracting their
    eyes, mouths, and appendages.
  • They have a hard time moving because where there
    are folds on a normal baby there are cracks on an
    HI child.

5
The Condition Continued
  • In most cases the child is born prematurely.
  • Most of the time the child dies within a few days
    because of respiratory disease, bacterial
    infections, feeding difficulties, and body
    temperature regulation.
  • Respiratory failure can result from restricted
    movement of the chest muscles, and bacterial
    infections occur from the lack of a protective
    outer layer. The bacteria can easily enter the
    baby through the fissures in the skin. The
    cracks in the skin allow water and heat to
    escape.

6
Surviving HI
  • With improved neonatal care more HI children have
    the chance of survival.
  • The few survivors have skin that turns dark red
    and very scaly.
  • The skin will eventually from a scaly layer and
    dry out so water retention and sun protection are
    concerns for the survivors.

7
Detection
  • One way to notice the child has abnormalities is
    through a sonograph during the second trimester.
  • The sonograph shows abnormal facial features and
    small foot size in ratio to the femur.
  • A fetal skin biopsy can be done but it is an
    invasive procedure. From the biopsy, tests can
    be run on the childs genes to see if they are
    abnormal.

8
Genetics
  • HI is caused by a frame shift mutation or a large
    deletion.
  • The gene effected is the ABCA12 in the 2q35
    region, which is involved in lipid transport that
    impacts the development of the epidermis.

9
Genetics
  • The condition is inherited autosomal recessively.
  • This means an effected individual must have two
    copies of the gene on chromosome 2 to have the
    disorder.
  • People with only one copy of the normal ABCA12
    gene are not effected by the disorder.
  • The disorder does not show prevalence in gender
    or racial background.
  • There have been many cases of HI in southern Iraq
    where mothers were exposed to uranium oxide
    during the early stages of pregnancy.

10
Lipid Transport
  • Members of the class of ABCA genes are involved
    in lipid transport across cell membranes. The
    proteins the gene produces bind to ATP for active
    transport of lipids to the stratum corneum, the
    outer most layer of the skin. These lipids are
    important for the protection of the skin.

11
Lipid Transport
12
Treatment
  • The treatment of HI babies is quite extensive.
  • The vitals of an HI baby must be constantly
    monitored.
  • Their eyes must be constantly kept moist and
    shielded from the sun.
  • The environment they live in must be constantly
    kept sterile to protect from infection.
  • They must have a salt solution applied followed
    by a lubricant to facilitate the skin cells to
    fall off and to keep the cells moist.
  • Antibacterial pills and creams are also used to
    fight infection.

13
Ryan Gonzalez
  • Almost all HI children die in infancy but there
    are exceptions.

14
Birth
  • He was born with harlequin ichthyosis.
  • Dr. Brian Saunders, a neo-natologist, cared for
    Ryan during the first critical moments of life.
  • Ryans skin was so tight that it was crushing his
    lungs.
  • Accutane, a vitamin A derivative, was used to
    keep the skin from hardening.
  • His scales became smaller and thinner.

15
Life of a Harlequin
  • He competes in triathlons.
  • To keep his skin from hardening, he covers
    himself in lotion 7 times per day.
  • He has to consume 7,500 calories per day.
  • He tube feeds himself pure protein every night
    while he sleeps to help him produce extra skin
    cells.

16
The View
  • The condition was first described in South
    Carolina by Reverend Oliver Hart.
  • "On Thursday, April ye 5, 1750, I went to see a
    most deplorable object of a child, born the night
    before of one Mary Evans in Chastown. It was
    surprising to all who beheld it, and I scarcely
    know how to describe it. The skin was dry and
    hard and seemed to be cracked in many places,
    somewhat resembling the scales of a fish. The
    mouth was large and round and open. It had no
    external nose, but two holes where the nose
    should have been. The eyes appeared to be lumps
    of coagulated blood, turned out, about the
    bigness of a plum, ghastly to behold. It had no
    external ears, but holes where the ears should
    be. The hands and feet appeared to be swollen,
    were cramped up and felt quite hard. The back
    part of the head was much open. It made a strange
    kind of noise, very low, which I cannot describe.
    It lived about forty-eight hours and was alive
    when I saw it."

17
Live or Die?
  • Two doctors in the Netherlands have developed a
    checklist to determine whether a newborn is
    suffering greatly or not.
  • If the doctors find that the child is suffering
    greatly, they support euthanasia (assisted
    suicide).
  • Our society has gone off the edge in terms of
    protecting the vulnerable by forcing them to
    suffer.Glen McGee

18
References
  • http//ghr.nlm.nih.gov/conditionharlequinichthyos
    isstatistics
  • http//www.asylumeclectica.com/malady/archives/har
    lequin.htm
  • http//www.10news.com/health/3919722/detail.html
  • http//dermatology.wustl.edu/dermsub/caseofmonth/7
    -2000a.html
  • http//www.scalyskin.org/content.cfm?ContentID222
    ColumnID6
  • http//www.jultrasoundmed.org/cgi/content/full/23/
    12/1653
  • http//www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcg
    i?artid1199369
  • http//www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A3816830
  • http//www.jci.org/content/vol115/issue7/images/la
    rge/JCI0525736.f1.jpeg
  • http//ribosome.med.miyazaki-u.ac.jp/RPDB/Map/RPL3
    7A.gif
  • http//www.answers.com/topic/harlequin-type-ichthy
    osis
  • Chan, Y et. All. Harlequin Ichthyosis in
    Association with Hypothyroidism and Juvenile
    Rheumatoid Arthritis. Pediatric Dermatology. Vol
    20. No. 5. p. 421-426. 2003.
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