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In medicine, hereditary hemorrhagic teleangiectasia (HHT), also known as Rendu-Osler-Weber syndrome, is a genetic disorder that leads to vascular malformations.
HHT is characterised by telangiectasia (small vascular malformations) on the skin and mucosal linings, epistaxis (nosebleeds), and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in various internal organs.
Skin and mucosa telangiectasias are most remarkable on the tongue, hands/fingers, nose, lips, mouth/throat and conjunctiva.
The internal organs that can harbor AVMs include the brain and lungs. In both, bleeding can seriously endanger life.
There are four diagnostic criteria. If three or four are met, a patient has definite HHT, while two gives a possible diagnosis:
When HHT is suspected, physical examination focuses on inspecting the whole skin for teleangiectasias, auscultation of the lungs and neurological examination.
Pulmonary AVMs can be anticipated by measuring oxygen levels and performing arterial blood gas (ABG) sampling. An X-ray of the chest can show susceptible lesions; in addition, low oxygen tension (<96% or a 2% decrease upon standing) or low blood oxygen levels on ABG are required for a diagnosis.
HHT is a genetic disorder by definition. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner.
Three forms have been described:
The mechanism underlying the formation of vascular malformations is not completely understood, but signalling of transforming growth factor-β is most likely to be involved. Possibly, connective tissue is required to support and guide proliferating blood vessels during angiogenesis, and defects in TGF-β signalling adversely affect connective tissue and matrix production.
Mainly in whites (1:10,000), more in certain areas of France, but much less in blacks (1 in million).