Porphyrias
are a group of disorders caused by deficiencies of enzymes involved
in the production of heme.
Heme is a chemical compound that contains iron and gives blood its red color. Heme is the key component of several important proteins in the body. One of the proteins is hemoglobin, which enables red blood cells to carry oxygen.
Heme is produced in the bone marrow and liver through a complex process regulated by eight different enzymes. The enzymes work one after another in separate steps that take the starting compound through several different intermediate compounds (heme precursors, also called porphyrins), finally producing heme. If there is a deficiency in one of these enzymes, certain heme precursors may accumulate. They may accumulate in the bone marrow or liver, appear in excess in the blood, and get excreted in the urine or stool. The accumulated heme precursors cause symptoms. The specific heme precursors that accumulate and the symptoms that develop depend on which enzyme is deficient.
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Porphyrias are a number of different disorders, each caused by a deficiency in one of the heme production enzymes. Each enzyme deficiency is caused by damage to the gene (a mutation) responsible for the production of the enzyme in question. The damaged gene is almost always inherited from one of the parents or, rarely, both.
Porphyrias are commonly divided into two types:
Acute porphyrias cause intermittent attacks of abdominal, mental, and neurologic symptoms. These attacks are typically triggered by prescription drugs (including oral contraceptives), alcohol, exposure to organic solvents, and other factors such as fasting, infections, or stress. The most common acute porphyria is acute intermittent porphyria. Others include variegate porphyria, hereditary coproporphyria, and the extremely rare delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase-deficiency porphyria. Some acute porphyrias also cause skin (cutaneous) symptoms.
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Cutaneous
porphyrias cause symptoms involving the skin, usually when the skin is exposed to sunlight. In these porphyrias, certain porphyrins are deposited in the skin. When exposed to light and oxygen, these porphyrins generate a charged, unstable form of oxygen capable of damaging the skin. The skin becomes fragile and blistered. The most common cutaneous porphyria is porphyria cutanea tarda. Others include erythropoietic protoporphyria, and the extremely rare hepatoerythropoietic porphyria and congenital erythropoietic porphyria.
In many of the porphyrias of both types, the urine may take on a red or reddish brown discoloration. Sometimes the discoloration appears only after the urine has stood in light for about 30 minutes.
Last full review/revision August 2008 by Stig Thunell, MD, PhD
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