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collagenopathies

Collagenopathies are a group of inherited disorders caused by defects in collagen genes or in the enzymes and processes that synthesize, modify, and assemble collagen fibers. These defects weaken connective tissues and can affect skin, joints, bones, blood vessels, eyes, and kidneys. The spectrum includes disorders caused by mutations in COL genes such as COL1A1 and COL1A2 (osteogenesis imperfecta and related connective tissue disorders), COL3A1 (vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome), COL5A1 and COL5A2 (classical Ehlers-Danlos syndrome), COL2A1 (Stickler syndrome, various chondrodysplasias), and COL4A3-5 (Alport syndrome). Some conditions involve other components of the collagen processing pathway, such as enzymes that modify hydroxylation and cross-linking of collagen chains.

Pathophysiology: Defects disrupt triple-helix formation, fibril assembly, or cross-linking, leading to reduced tensile strength and abnormal

Clinical features: Patients may have joint hypermobility and recurrent dislocations, skin that is unusually soft, fragile,

Diagnosis and management: Diagnosis relies on clinical evaluation, family history, and targeted genetic testing, with skin

tissue
architecture.
The
clinical
features
depend
on
which
tissues
express
the
affected
collagen
type
and
the
inheritance
pattern,
which
may
be
autosomal
dominant,
autosomal
recessive,
or
X-linked.
or
prone
to
bruising,
and
bone
fragility
with
fractures.
Vascular
fragility
and
organ
involvement
can
occur
in
specific
subtypes,
particularly
vascular
Ehlers-Danlos
syndrome;
eye
and
ear
involvement
are
seen
in
other
forms
such
as
Stickler
or
COL4-related
diseases.
biopsy
or
molecular
analysis
of
collagen
deposition
sometimes
used
to
support
the
findings.
There
is
no
cure;
management
focuses
on
reducing
complications
and
improving
quality
of
life
through
physical
therapy,
pain
management,
fracture
prevention,
wound
care,
and
monitoring
for
organ
involvement.
Genetic
counseling
is
often
recommended.