Serzhan's Syndrome

Sergeant syndrome (also known as E.E. Sergeant syndrome) is a rare and not fully understood disease that manifests itself in the form of a special clinical picture in which all the main systems of the body fail. This syndrome can occur in people of all ages and genders, but is usually most common in children and adolescents. Sergeant's syndrome was first discussed in 1921 after the research of the British scientist E.E. Sergeant, after whom this disease was named.

The main symptoms of Sergeant's syndrome are pronounced signs of food intolerance and degeneration of cells of the nervous system. Patients with this disease have intestinal tract abnormalities, liver and kidney abnormalities, nerve damage, hypothyroidism, and cardiac abnormalities. Common symptoms of Sergeant's syndrome also include symptoms associated with a defective immune system, such as frequent respiratory tract infections and fungal skin infections.