What are the differences and similarities of Bubonic Plague and Lowe Syndrome? - lowe syndrome more condition_symptoms
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Thursday, December 31, 2009
Lowe Syndrome More Condition_symptoms What Are The Differences And Similarities Of Bubonic Plague And Lowe Syndrome?
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There are very few similarities between the plague and the syndrome of Lowe, only a list of differences.
Lowe syndrome (also called Lowe syndrome, the name of Charles Upton Lowe) is a disease characterized by X-linked recessive hydrophthalmia (ie, enlargement of the eye through awatery spillover), cataract, mental, aminoaciduria, renal ammonia and Vitamin D-resistant rickets. It is linked to the gene OCRL. Lowe syndrome can cause Fanconi syndrome (ie, impaired proximal renal tubular function).
Bubonic plague is not genetic, not a kidney disease. It is caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, which affects the lymphatic system, which causes swollen lymph nodes called buboes. Sometimes there is progression of pneumonic plague) (eg pneumonia, followed by the septicemic plague (ie, blood poisoning). Other symptoms include skin spots, the first black colors, respiratory symptoms are red, vomiting of blood continues, limb pain and in terrible pain. The pain is usually causedby decomposition of the skin as the infected person is still alive. Death is preceded by convulsions.
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