Bialbuminemia

Bialbuminemia is a hereditary disorder of protein metabolism associated with impaired albumin synthesis. Albumin is a major blood protein that performs many functions, such as transporting hormones, nutrients, and participating in immune reactions.

Bialbuminemia can manifest itself with various symptoms, depending on the degree of metabolic disorder. In some cases, symptoms may be minor and only appear during laboratory tests.

In other cases, bialbuminemia occurs with severe symptoms, such as anemia, weakness, decreased immunity, and impaired liver and kidney function. In such cases, medical attention and treatment are necessary.

Treatment of bialbuminemia includes nutritional correction, lifestyle changes, and drug therapy. In some cases, a liver or other organ transplant may be required.



**Bialbuminemia** is a disease in which there is an increased amount of low molecular weight protein - albumin - in the blood.

The name of the disease consists of two parts: the first is “bi” and the second is the name of the substance. *BiAlbuminAMIA*. In the first part, the stress falls on the first syllable. In this regard, the disease is also called biAlbuminuria. BiAlbuminemia is divided into the following types.

General information about the disease * - Monoglobulinemia, when only one type of albumin is produced in the body; * - Polyglobulinemia, or otherwise protein-fatty degeneration, in which, against the background of diseases of the liver or other organs, several types of proteins are produced at once. *Causes of the development of the disease Most often, this disease is associated with liver diseases, in which it cannot fully perform its functions. As a result, albin is released into the blood. Such signs are characterized as hepatoretiary. The following diseases may also be the cause:

1. Bilsado is diabetes mellitus in which insulin is not synthesized. Proteins appear in the serum in large quantities due to depletion of the pancreas; 1. Autoimmune - when immunobiological processes are disrupted, the organ does not perceive the production of normal protein; 1. Amyloidosis is a disease in which protein is deposited in the kidneys and connective tissues; 2. Malignant tumors - cancer of the kidney, stomach, lungs; 3. Vascular - blockage of the arteries, preventing normal blood flow; 4. Cardiovascular - pathologies of the heart vessels, which lead to their expansion; 5. Disorders associated with the immune system - when the body produces proteins that it feels dangerous to fight, the immune system attacks itself.