 Progeria Definition Alternative Names Causes, incidence, and risk factors Symptoms Signs and tests Treatment Support Groups Expectations (prognosis) Complications Calling your health care provider Prevention References DefinitionProgeria is a disease that produces rapid aging, beginning in childhood. Alternative NamesHutchinson-Gilford syndrome Causes, incidence, and risk factorsProgeria is a rare condition that is remarkable because its symptoms strongly resemble normal human aging, but occur in young children. Ninety percent of children with progeria have a mutation on the gene that encodes the protein lamin A. Progeria usually occurs without cause. It is only very rarely seen in more than one child in a family. SymptomsSigns and testsThe signs include: - Insulin-resistant diabetes (diabetes that does not respond readily to insulin injections)
- Skin changes similar to that seen in scleroderma (the connective tissue becomes tough and hardened)
Cardiac stress testing may reveal signs of early atherosclerosis of blood vessels. Genetic testing can detect mutations in lamin A that cause progeria. TreatmentThere is presently no treatment for progeria. Support GroupsProgeria Research Foundation, Inc. -- www.progeriaresearch.org Expectations (prognosis)Progeria is associated with a short lifespan. The average patient survives to the early teens. However, some patients can live up to 30 years. The cause of death is usually related to the heart or a stroke as a result of the progressive atherosclerosis. ComplicationsCalling your health care providerCall for an appointment with your health care provider if you child does not appear to be growing or developing normally. PreventionThere is no known prevention. ReferencesBrown WT. Progeria. In: Kliegman RM, Behrman RE, Jenson HB, Stanton BF, eds. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics. 18th Ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders Elsevier; 2007: chap 90.
Review Date: 8/26/2009 Reviewed By: Chad Haldeman-Englert, MD, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Section on Medical Genetics, Winston-Salem, NC. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.
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