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Dive into the research topics where Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer is active.

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Featured researches published by Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Neurofibromatosis 1 (Recklinghausen Disease) and Neurofibromatosis 2 (Bilateral Acoustic Neurofibromatosis): An Update

John J. Mulvihill; Dilys M. Parry; John L. Sherman; Anita Pikus; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Roswell Eldridge

The neurofibromatoses comprise at least two autosomal dominant disorders affecting an estimated 100,000 Americans with clinical manifestations that may require care from every type of clinician. Neurofibromatosis 1 and neurofibromatosis 2 have in common the occurrence of many neurofibromas but are distinctly different clinical disorders. The disease genes are on different chromosomes. Magnetic resonance imaging, particularly with gadolinium enhancement, has generally supplanted other techniques for visualizing brain, spinal, and other neural tumors in both disorders. The technique has rekindled the controversy over the nature and frequency of optic pathway tumors in patients with neurofibromatosis 1 and has revealed, throughout the brains of young patients, bright lesions that have uncertain clinical consequences and unknown pathologic bases. In patients with neurofibromatosis 2, small acoustic neuromas can be seen, leading to the possibility of excision with preservation of hearing and facial nerve function. Abnormal hearing may occur to excess in patients with neurofibromatosis 1, but acoustic neuroma has never been documented. In patients with neurofibromatosis 2, a battery of audiologic tests has a high positive predictive power. Lisch nodules or iris hamartomas, probably a universal sign in adults with the neurofibromatosis 1 gene, cause no problem with vision. Posterior capsular lens opacity in patients with neurofibromatosis 2 is a helpful diagnostic sign and a potential source of additional handicap in persons at risk for impaired hearing. Progress in the clinical delineation of the disorders has been matched with considerable research into the still obscure pathogenesis of the disorders. Such rapid advances may necessitate reconsideration of the conclusions of the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference on Neurofibromatosis, especially those on the categories of persons in which a neurofibromatosis should be considered and the need for caution in recommending surgery. Watchful waiting may often be the best management for acoustic neuromas in neurofibromatosis 2.


Medicine | 1980

Cogan Syndrome: Studies In Thirteen Patients, Long-term Follow-up, And A Review Of The Literature

Barton F. Haynes; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Pamela Mason; Anthony S. Fauci

Typical Cogan syndrome (CS) is a disease of young adults consisting of flares of interstitial keratitis (IK) and sudden onset of Ménière-like attacks. The prognosis of typical CS is excellent with life-threatening aortic insufficiency (AI) developing in only 10% of reported cases. Serious systemic necrotizing vasculitis (SNV) rarely, if ever, complicates typical CS. Atypical S (vestibuloauditory dysfunction with types of inflammatory eye disease other than IK) frequently overlaps other defined rheumatologic syndromes, is associated with vasculitis in 21% of cases, and carries a less favorable prognosis than typical CS. Topical ocular corticosteroids can usually control IK, and a short trial of systemic corticosteroids is warranted as soon as possible after the onset of hearing loss. SNV should be treated initially with prednisone and may also require the administration of cytotoxic agents, while aortitis and AI can be controlled with the administration of prednisone and surgical replacement of the aortic valve.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998

Genetic Defects and Clinical Characteristics of Patients with a Form of Oculocutaneous Albinism (Hermansky–Pudlak Syndrome)

William A. Gahl; Mark L. Brantly; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Fumino Iwata; Senator Hazelwood; Vorasuk Shotelersuk; Lynn F. Duffy; Ernest M. Kuehl; James Troendle; Isa Bernardini

BACKGROUND Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome is characterized by oculocutaneous albinism, a storage-pool deficiency, and lysosomal accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin, which causes pulmonary fibrosis and granulomatous colitis in some cases. All identified affected patients in northwest Puerto Rico are homozygous for a 16-bp duplication in exon 15 of a recently cloned gene, HPS. We compared the clinical and laboratory characteristics of these patients with those of patients without the 16-bp duplication. METHODS Forty-nine patients -- 27 Puerto Ricans and 22 patients from the mainland United States who were not of Puerto Rican descent -- were given a diagnosis on the basis of albinism and the absence of platelet dense bodies. We used the polymerase chain reaction to determine which patients carried the 16-bp duplication. RESULTS Twenty-five of the Puerto Rican patients were homozygous for the 16-bp duplication, whereas none of the non-Puerto Rican patients carried this mutation. Like the patients without the duplication, the patients with the 16-bp duplication had a broad variation in pigmentation. Nine of 16 adults with the duplication, but none of the 10 without it, had a diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide that was less than 80 percent of the predicted value. High-resolution computed tomography in 12 patients with the 16-bp duplication revealed minimal fibrosis in 8, moderate fibrosis in 1, severe fibrosis in 1, and no fibrosis in 2. Computed tomography in eight patients without the duplication revealed minimal fibrosis in three and no fibrosis in the rest. Inflammatory bowel disease developed in eight patients (four in each group) between 3 and 25 years of age. CONCLUSIONS The 16-bp duplication in exon 15 of HPS, which we found only in Puerto Rican patients, is associated with a broad range of pigmentation and an increased risk of restrictive lung disease in adults.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Bietti Crystalline Corneoretinal Dystrophy Is Caused by Mutations in the Novel Gene CYP4V2

Anren Li; Xiaodong Jiao; Francis L. Munier; Daniel F. Schorderet; Wenliang Yao; Fumino Iwata; Mutsuko Hayakawa; Atsushi Kanai; Muh Shy Chen; Richard Alan Lewis; John R. Heckenlively; Richard G. Weleber; Elias I. Traboulsi; Qingjiong Zhang; Xueshan Xiao; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Yuri V. Sergeev; J. Fielding Hejtmancik

Bietti crystalline corneoretinal dystrophy (BCD) is an autosomal recessive retinal dystrophy characterized by multiple glistening intraretinal crystals scattered over the fundus, a characteristic degeneration of the retina, and sclerosis of the choroidal vessels, ultimately resulting in progressive night blindness and constriction of the visual field. The BCD region of chromosome 4q35.1 was refined to an interval flanked centromerically by D4S2924 by linkage and haplotype analysis; mutations were found in the novel CYP450 family member CYP4V2 in 23 of 25 unrelated patients with BCD tested. The CYP4V2 gene, transcribed from 11 exons spanning 19 kb, is expressed widely. Homology to other CYP450 proteins suggests that CYP4V2 may have a role in fatty acid and steroid metabolism, consistent with biochemical studies of patients with BCD.


Ophthalmology | 1981

1. Tamoxifen Retinopathy: A Clinicopathologic Report

Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Carl Kupfer; Merlyn M. Rodrigues

Abstract A 57-year-old woman with metastatic breast carcinoma treated by surgery and high-dosage tamoxifen chemotherapy developed tamoxifen retinopathy characterized by white superficial retractile retinal lesions primarily in the paramacular area. At postmortem examination, the retinal lesions seen clinically were identified as being 3 to 10 microns in diameter in the macular area, and 30 to 35 microns in diameter in the paramacular area. The lesions were confined to the nerve fiber layer and inner plexiform layer and stained positive with stains for glycosaminoglycans. Electron microscopic examination revealed that the smaller lesions were intracellular and the larger lesions extracellular. The lesions were composed of randomly oriented branching electron dense 6-nm filaments accompanied by occasional electron dense coated vesicles measuring 60 to 70 nm in diameter. The lesions appeared to be occurring in axons and seemed to represent products of axonal degeneration.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1987

REMOVAL OF CORNEAL CRYSTALS BY TOPICAL CYSTEAMINE IN NEPHROPATHIC CYSTINOSIS

Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Leslie S. Fujikawa; Toichiro Kuwabara; Sandeep Jain; William A. Gahl

In patients with nephropathic cystinosis, corneal crystals develop by one year of age; they progressively accumulate and eventually cause recurrent corneal erosions and photophobia. After an in vitro study of cystinotic corneal stromal cells showed cystine depletion by cysteamine and after topical cysteamine was determined to be nontoxic in rabbits, we performed a controlled double-blind clinical trial of 10 mM cysteamine eyedrops in young patients with cystinosis, using one eye for treatment and the other as the control. Two children begun on the protocol before two years of age had a striking decrease in the number of corneal crystals in the cysteamine-treated eye within four to five months of entering the study. Cysteamine eyedrops appear to be safe and efficacious in the short-term treatment of patients with cystinosis who are under two years of age. The long-term value of such treatment and its effectiveness in older patients remain to be determined.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1979

OBSERVATIONS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ANTERIOR CHAMBER ANGLE WITH REFERENCE TO THE PATHOGENESIS OF CONGENITAL GLAUCOMAS

Carl Kupfer; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer

Abnormalities in neural crest cell migration may have a role in the pathogenesis of the congenital glaucomas, with or without changes in the gonioscopic appearance of the anterior chamber angle. Neural crest cells also contribute to the bones of the face, dental papilla, cartilage, bone, and meninges; this may explain the association of craniofacial, dental, and upper spinal malformations with some of the congenital glaucomas.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1994

Clinical Biochemical and Pathologic Correlations in Bietti's Crystalline Dystrophy

Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Chi-Chao Chan; Thomas C. Markello; Mary Alice Crawford; Rafael C. Caruso; Karl G. Csaky; Juanru Guo; William A. Gahl

We examined three affected members of a Chinese-American family with Biettis crystalline retinopathy. The clinical characteristics of a 24-year-old proband are contrasted to the clinical findings of her grandmother, for whom we have 26 years of follow-up data. Lymphocytes and fibroblasts from a skin biopsy of the grandmother contained crystalline lysosomal material, which supports the diagnosis. Biochemical studies of the crystalline lysosomal material failed to identify the stored compounds but did not show them to be cholesterol or cholesterol ester. Finally, histopathologic studies performed for this condition demonstrated advanced panchorioretinal atrophy, with crystals and complex lipid inclusions seen in choroidal fibroblasts.


Pediatric Research | 2000

Ocular nonnephropathic cystinosis : Clinical, biochemical, and molecular correlations

Yair Anikster; Cynthia Lucero; Juanru Guo; Marjan Huizing; Vorasuk Shotelersuk; Isa Bernardini; Geraldine McDowell; Fumino Iwata; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; Ronald Jaffe; Jess G. Thoene; Jerry A. Schneider; William A. Gahl

Ocular nonnephropathic cystinosis, a variant of the classic nephropathic type of cystinosis, is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder characterized by photophobia due to corneal cystine crystals but absence of renal disease. We determined the molecular basis for ocular cystinosis in four individuals. All had mutations in the cystinosis gene CTNS, indicating that ocular cystinosis is allelic with classic nephropathic cystinosis. The ocular cystinosis patients each had one severe mutation and one mild mutation, the latter consisting of either a 928 G→A (G197R) mutation or an IVS10–3 C→G splicing mutation resulting in the insertion of 182 bp of IVS10 into the CTNS mRNA. The mild mutations appear to allow for residual CTNS mRNA production, significant amounts of lysosomal cystine transport, and lower levels of cellular cystine compared with those in nephropathic cystinosis. The lack of kidney involvement in ocular cystinosis may be explained by two different mechanisms. On the one hand (e.g. the G197R mutation), significant residual cystinosin activity may be present in every tissue. On the other hand (e.g. the IVS10–3 C→G mutation), substantial cystinosin activity may exist in the kidney because of that tissues specific expression of factors that promote splicing of a normal CTNS transcript. Each of these mechanisms could result in minimally reduced lysosomal cystine transport in the kidneys.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome Type 3 in Ashkenazi Jews and Other Non–Puerto Rican Patients with Hypopigmentation and Platelet Storage-Pool Deficiency

Marjan Huizing; Yair Anikster; Diana L. Fitzpatrick; Anna B. Jeong; Maria D’Souza; Melanie Rausche; Jorge R. Toro; Muriel I. Kaiser-Kupfer; James G. White; William A. Gahl

Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS), consisting of oculocutaneous albinism and a bleeding diathesis due to the absence of platelet dense granules, displays extensive locus heterogeneity. HPS1 mutations cause HPS-1 disease, and ADTB3A mutations cause HPS-2 disease, which is known to involve abnormal intracellular vesicle formation. A third HPS-causing gene, HPS3, was recently identified on the basis of homozygosity mapping of a genetic isolate of HPS in central Puerto Rico. We now describe the clinical and molecular characteristics of eight patients with HPS-3 who are of non-Puerto Rican heritage. Five are Ashkenazi Jews; three of these are homozygous for a 1303+1G-->A splice-site mutation that causes skipping of exon 5, deleting an RsaI restriction site and decreasing the amounts of mRNA found on northern blotting. The other two are heterozygous for the 1303+1G-->A mutation and for either an 1831+2T-->G or a 2621-2A-->G splicing mutation. Of 235 anonymous Ashkenazi Jewish DNA samples, one was heterozygous for the 1303+1G-->A mutation. One seven-year-old boy of German/Swiss extraction was compound heterozygous for a 2729+1G-->C mutation, causing skipping of exon 14, and resulting in a C1329T missense (R396W), with decreased mRNA production. A 15-year-old Irish/English boy was heterozygous for an 89-bp insertion between exons 16 and 17 resulting from abnormal splicing; his fibroblast HPS3 mRNA is normal in amount but is increased in size. A 12-year-old girl of Puerto Rican and Italian background has the 3,904-bp founder deletion from central Puerto Rico on one allele. All eight patients have mild symptoms of HPS; two Jewish patients had received the diagnosis of ocular, rather than oculocutaneous, albinism. These findings expand the molecular diagnosis of HPS, provide a screening method for a mutation common among Jews, and suggest that other patients with mild hypopigmentation and decreased vision should be examined for HPS.

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William A. Gahl

National Institutes of Health

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Rafael C. Caruso

National Institutes of Health

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Fumino Iwata

National Institutes of Health

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Benjamin I. Rubin

National Institutes of Health

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Ekaterini Tsilou

National Institutes of Health

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Manuel B. Datiles

National Institutes of Health

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David Valle

Université de Montréal

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Dilys M. Parry

National Institutes of Health

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Toichiro Kuwabara

National Institutes of Health

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Carl Kupfer

National Institutes of Health

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