Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013911 (emaciation)
1,059 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 33-year-old, HIV-1 positive, white, homosexual man was hospitalized in May, 1991, because of fever, cough, skin eruptions, anorexia, and weight loss during the previous 2 months. In October, 1990, he had traveled in Sumatra. On examination he was ill, tachypneic, normotensive with a temperature of 39.1 degrees Celsius. The spleen was substantially enlarged. Laboratory investigations showed: ALAT 72 U/I (normal 23 U/1), LDH 508 U/1 (normal 275 U/1). A bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage revealed yeast cells. Gastroscopy showed an ulcer in the hypopharynx and an erosion in the stomach. Biopsies of this ulcer demonstrated the presence of Penicillium marneffei. Biopsies of the liver showed the same organism. The patient was treated with amphotericin B induction therapy (1 dd 0.5 mg/kg for 21 days, total dose of 730 mg) in combination with flucytosine (3 dd 2500 mg, total dose 142 g in 19 days). In the following 2 weeks the temperature became normal, and the dyspnea and the skin eruptions disappeared, except for the mollusca contagiosa. The spleen diminished by 50%. LDH and ALAT became normal. Oral maintenance therapy followed with fluconazole (the first 3 months 400 mg daily, followed by 200 mg a day). 24 months later, no recurrence had been observed. Case 2 was a 28-year-old, HIV-infected, homosexual man, born in Suriname, who was hospitalized in October, 1991, with prolonged fever, dyspnea, and a painful throat. In March, 1991, he had traveled in rural Thailand. AIDS was diagnosed on the basis of cerebral toxoplasmosis in August, 1991. A biopsy of the ulcer in the oropharynx showed an active aspecific inflammation and also P. marneffei. Treatment with amphotericin B intravenously (0.5 mg/kg, total dose 1052 mg in 32 days) was commenced. The lesions in the oral cavity and throat, the lymph nodes, and the shortness of breath disappeared within a few days. Ten months later he died from emaciation caused by cryptosporidiosis.
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PMID:Disseminated Penicillium marneffei infection as an imported disease in HIV-1 infected patients. Description of two cases and a review of the literature. 820 1

A 68-year-old man who worked as an editor was admitted to Aichi Medical University Hospital due to dyspnea on exertion and emaciation. The patient had noticed rapid weight loss during diet therapy for diabetes mellitus that started in the beginning of July, 1993. Laboratory examinations revealed elevated levels of LDH and amylase in serum. Ultrasonography disclosed minimal ascites. Dyspnea on exertion developed in September, 1993. Chest roentgenography showed diffuse bilateral small nodular or reticular opacities. CT-guided percutaneous needle aspiration was done and cytologic examination of a specimen of lung tissue revealed papillary adenocarcinoma. The diagnosis was bronchiolo-alveolar carcinoma. Serum levels of amylase were elevated. The amylase isozyme pattern was of the salivary type. Serum levels of CA19-9 and CEA were also elevated. The patient died of respiratory failure on December 4, 1993. Postmortem examination revealed diffuse small nodules in both lungs. Examination of the nodules showed bronchiolo-alveolar cell carcinoma. The tumor cells stained positively for amylase (salivary type, not pancreatic type) CA19-9, and CEA by the avidin biotin complex method, but they were immunohistologically negative for AFP. We conclude that this lung cancer produced amylase, CA19-9, and CEA. We know of only a few reports of cases in which lung cancer produced both amylase and CA19-9.
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PMID:[Diffuse bronchiolo-alveolar cell carcinoma that produced both amylase and CA19-9]. 921 68