Disease name

각막 이영양증
 Corneal dystrophy

Marker gene

Gene symbol Chromosome location Protein name
TGFB1 19q13.2 Transforming growth factor beta-1
PITX2 4q25 Pituitary homeobox 2
CHST6 16q22 Carbohydrate sulfotransferase 6
COL8A2 1p34.3 Collagen alpha-2(VIII) chain
DCN 12q21.33 Decorin
GSN 9q33.3 Gelsolin
KRT12 17q21.2 Keratin, type I cytoskeletal 12
KRT3 12q13 Keratin, type II cytoskeletal 3
PIKFYVE 2q33.3 1-phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate 5-kinase
SLC4A11 20p13 Sodium bicarbonate transporter-like protein 11
TACSTD2 1p32-p31 Tumor-associated calcium signal transducer 2
UBIAD1 1p36.22 UbiA prenyltransferase domain-containing protein 1
VSX1 20p11.21 Visual system homeobox 1
ZEB1 10p11.22 Zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox 1
PAX6 11p13 Paired box protein Pax-6
TGFBI 5q31.1 Transforming growth factor-beta-induced protein ig-h3

Inheritance

산발성, 상염색체 우성, X 연관 열성, 상염색체 열성, 미토콘드리아 유전

ICD 10 code

H18.5

MIM number

610158
610048
609141
609140
608471
608470
607541
602082
217800
217700
217600
217520
217500
204870
136800
122200
122100
122000
121900
121850
121820
121800
121700

Summary

The term corneal dystrophy embraces a heterogenous group of bilateral genetically determined non-inflammatory corneal diseases that are restricted to the cornea. The designation is imprecise but remains in vogue because of its clinical value. Clinically, the corneal dystrophies can be divided into three groups based on the sole or predominant anatomical location of the abnormalities. Some affect primarily the corneal epithelium and its basement membrane or Bowman layer and the superficial corneal stroma (anterior corneal dystrophies), the corneal stroma (stromal corneal dystrophies), or Descemet membrane and the corneal endothelium (posterior corneal dystrophies). Most corneal dystrophies have no systemic manifestations and present with variable shaped corneal opacities in a clear or cloudy cornea and they affect visual acuity to different degrees. Corneal dystrophies may have a simple autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive or X-linked recessive Mendelian mode of inheritance. Different corneal dystrophies are caused by mutations in the CHST6, KRT3, KRT12, PIP5K3, SLC4A11, TACSTD2, TGFBI, and UBIAD1 genes. Knowledge about the genetic mutations responsible for these disorders has led to a better understanding of their basic defect and to molecular tests for their precise diagnosis. Genes for other corneal dystrophies have been mapped to specific chromosomal loci, but have not yet been identified. As clinical manifestations widely vary with the different entities, corneal dystrophies should be suspected when corneal transparency is lost or corneal opacities occur spontaneously, particularly in both corneas, and especially in the presence of a positive family history or in the offspring of consanguineous parents. Main differential diagnoses include various causes of monoclonal gammopathy, lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase deficiency, Fabry disease, cystinosis, tyrosine transaminase deficiency, systemic lysosomal storage diseases (mucopolysaccharidoses, lipidoses, mucolipidoses), and several skin diseases (X-linked ichthyosis, keratosis follicularis spinolosa decalvans) (see these terms). The management of the corneal dystrophies varies with the specific disease. Some are treated medically or with methods that excise or ablate the abnormal corneal tissue, such as deep lamellar endothelial keratoplasty (DLEK) and phototherapeutic keratectomy (PTK). Other less debilitating or asymptomatic dystrophies do not warrant treatment. The prognosis varies from minimal effect on the vision to corneal blindness, with marked phenotypic variability.