Hereditary diseases are a large group of human diseases caused by pathological changes in the genetic apparatus. Currently, more than 6 thousand syndromes with a hereditary transmission mechanism are known, and their total frequency in the population ranges from 0.2 to 4%. Some genetic diseases have a certain ethnic and geographical prevalence, while others occur with the same frequency all over the world. The study of hereditary diseases is mainly in the competence of medical genetics, but almost any medical specialists can face such a pathology: pediatricians, neurologists, endocrinologists, hematologists, therapists, etc.

Hereditary diseases should be distinguished from congenital and familial pathology. Congenital diseases can be caused not only by genetic, but also by unfavorable exogenous factors affecting the developing fetus (chemical and medicinal compounds, ionizing radiation, intrauterine infections, etc.). However, not all hereditary diseases manifest themselves immediately after birth: for example, signs of Huntington’s chorea usually first manifest themselves at the age of over 40 years. The difference between hereditary and familial pathology is that the latter may be associated not with genetic, but with social or professional determinants.

The occurrence of hereditary diseases is caused by mutations – sudden changes in the genetic properties of an individual, leading to the appearance of new, non-normal signs. If mutations affect individual chromosomes, changing their structure (due to loss, acquisition, variation in the position of individual sites) or their number, such diseases are referred to as chromosomal. The most common chromosomal abnormalities are Down syndrome (trisomy on chromosome 21), Edwards syndrome (trisomy on chromosome 18), Klinefelter syndrome (polysomy on the X chromosome in men), Shereshevsky-Turner syndrome, cat cry syndrome, etc.

Hereditary diseases caused by mutations at the gene level belong to gene diseases. They can be monogenic (caused by mutation or absence of individual genes) or polygenic (caused by changes in many genes). Among monogenic diseases, there are pathologies with an autosomal dominant type of inheritance (Marfan syndrome, Recklinghausen’s disease, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, osteogenesis imperfecta, Albright’s disease, etc.), autosomal recessive transmission (phenylketonuria, galactosemia, ichthyosis, progeria) and hereditary diseases linked to gender (hemophilia, phosphate diabetes, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Hunter syndrome, Fabry’s disease).

Polygenic diseases are multifactorial in nature, i.e. a combination of genetic and environmental factors is important in their occurrence. These diseases are often treated as diseases with a hereditary predisposition. This group includes atherosclerosis, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, gastric ulcer and duodenal ulcer, allergic pathology.

Hereditary diseases can manifest themselves both immediately after the birth of a child, and at different stages of life. Some of them have an unfavorable prognosis and lead to early death, while others do not significantly affect the duration and even quality of life. The most severe forms of hereditary fetal pathology cause spontaneous termination of pregnancy or are accompanied by stillbirth.

Thanks to the success of the development of medicine, about a thousand hereditary diseases today can be detected even before the birth of a child using prenatal diagnostic methods. The latter include ultrasound and biochemical screening of the I (10-14 weeks) and II (16-20 weeks) trimesters, which are carried out to all pregnant women without exception. In addition, if there are additional indications, it may be recommended to undergo invasive procedures: chorionic villus biopsies, amniocentesis, cordocentesis. If the fact of severe hereditary pathology is reliably established, a woman is offered an artificial termination of pregnancy for medical reasons.

All newborns in the first days of their life are also subject to examination for hereditary and congenital metabolic diseases (phenylketonuria, adrenogenital syndrome, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, galactosemia, cystic fibrosis). Other hereditary diseases that are not recognized before or immediately after the birth of a child can be detected using cytogenetic, molecular genetic, biochemical research methods.

Unfortunately, a complete cure of hereditary diseases is currently not possible. Meanwhile, with some forms of genetic pathology, a significant prolongation of life and ensuring its acceptable quality can be achieved. Pathogenetic and symptomatic therapy is used in the treatment of hereditary diseases. The pathogenetic approach to treatment involves substitution therapy (for example, blood clotting factors in hemophilia), limiting the use of certain substrates in phenylketonuria, galactosemia, maple syrup disease, filling in the deficiency of a missing enzyme or hormone, etc. Symptomatic therapy includes the use of a wide range of medications, physiotherapy, rehabilitation courses (massage, exercise therapy). Many patients with genetic pathology from early childhood need correctional and developmental classes with a speech pathologist and speech therapist.

The possibilities of surgical treatment of hereditary diseases are mainly reduced to the elimination of severe malformations that interfere with the normal functioning of the body (for example, correction of congenital heart defects, non-infection of the upper lip and palate, hypospadias, etc.). Gene therapy of hereditary diseases is still rather experimental in nature and is still far from being widely used in practical medicine.

The main direction of prevention of hereditary diseases is medical and genetic counseling. Experienced geneticists will consult a married couple, predict the risk of offspring with hereditary pathology, and provide professional assistance in making a decision about childbirth.

Disease of Periodic Muscle Spasms

Disease of periodic muscle spasms is a hereditary form of myopathy characterized by a violation of calcium metabolism in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The main symptoms of the disease are painful spasms, especially during physical exertion, weakness of the leg muscles, general muscle weakness. Pathology is diagnosed on the basis of data from percussion and palpation…

Norrie Disease

Norrie disease is a genetic disease characterized by the appearance of pseudoglyoma of the retina of both eyes in the first months of a child’s life and other disorders and malformations. The symptoms of pathology are complete blindness, the presence of retinal hyperplasia and pigment epithelium of the iris, in some cases – progressive mental…

Niemann-Pick Disease

Niemann-Pick disease is a rare hereditary disease characterized by the accumulation of lipids in various organs and tissues, which leads to a violation of their functions. A distinctive feature is a pronounced clinical polymorphism. The most common are focal neurological symptoms, delayed neuropsychiatric development, hepatomegaly and splenomegaly. The diagnosis uses the determination of the activity…

Menkes Disease

Menkes disease (curly hair disease) is a rare genetic disease in which copper metabolism is disrupted in the body. Pathology has an X-linked recessive type of inheritance. Menkes disease is manifested by a lag in mental and physical development, brittle curly hair, cerebral neurodegenerative lesions. Diagnosis of the disease involves genetic analysis, the study of…

Lhermitte-Duclos Disease

Lhermitte-Duclos disease is a genetic pathology that leads to the development of a slow–growing tumor of the cerebellum, which can appear at any age of the patient. The main manifestations of the disease, in addition to the symptoms of damage to the cerebellum, are also hydro- and megalocephaly, skeletal malformations and gum hyperplasia. Diagnosis is…

Krabbe Disease

Krabbe disease is a genetically determined glycolipidosis that occurs with a predominant lesion of myelin fibers. The classic variant of pathology develops in the first half of life, manifests with hyperexcitability, febrile syndrome, muscle spasticity, seizures, delayed psychomotor development. Krabbe disease is diagnosed through cerebral MRI, ENMG, enzyme and molecular genetic studies. No specific therapy…

Cowden Disease

Cowden disease is a genetic disease, the main manifestation of which is the formation of benign tumors of internal organs, and the incidence of malignant neoplasms is also increased. Multiple hamartomas and cysts are formed in the gastrointestinal tract, mammary gland, organs of the reproductive system. Diagnosis  is partly based on the study of the…

Duncan’s Disease

Duncan’s disease is an X—linked lymphoproliferative syndrome, a rare primary immunodeficiency that manifests after infection with Epstein-Barr herpesvirus. It is manifested by a fulminant form of infectious mononucleosis, lymphoproliferative processes (leukemia, lymphoma), severe disorders of hematopoiesis. To detect pathology, genetic, histological, serological and immunological diagnostic methods are necessary. The most effective method of treatment is…

Gaucher Disease

Gaucher disease is a genetic disease characterized by a violation of lipid metabolism, insufficiency of lysosomal enzymes, accumulation of glycolipids in cellular structures. Symptoms are determined by the type of pathology. Common signs are an increase in the liver, spleen, and a decrease in blood clotting. In type I, disorders of the bone system are…

Von Gierke Disease

Von Gierke disease is a hereditary pathology that is caused by a deficiency of liver enzymes that transform glucose-6-phosphate into glucose. It proceeds with disorders of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, is characterized by hypoglycemia, accumulation of glycogen in the liver and kidneys. Symptoms include weakness, headaches, convulsions, nausea, vomiting, hypotension, shortness of breath, fever, decreased…