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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The records of 104 patients with culture-proven enteric fever were reviewed and evaluated as to the clinical signs, laboratory findings, pathologic features and complications of the disease. One patient with fatal disseminated intravascular coagulation and enteric fever is also presented. Fever and bradycardia were the leading clinical signs followed by splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
and rose spots. The principal complications of enteric fever included anemia, typhoid
hepatitis
, relapse and bleeding. Evidence of typhoid
hepatitis
was present in 30% of the patients tested. The pathology consisted of typhoid nodules of variable frequency and size depending upon the severity of the condition. The relationship of typhoid
hepatitis
to relapse seems to be more than coincidental as four out of seven patients who had relapse had abnormal liver tests. The occurrence of disseminated intravascular coagulation in enteric fever is rare; however, awareness of such a potential complication may be life-saving to the patient.
...
PMID:Enteric fever: a clinicopathologic study of 104 cases. 64 89
Twenty infants and young children with hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) were admitted to hospital. None was diagnosed at admission. Referals were for vomiting of unknown aetiology (16X), pyloric stenosis or hiatus hernia (5X), toxic condition (3X), and
hepatomegaly
of unknown origin (5X). Feeding difficulties (20X), vomiting (18X), and failure to thrive (16X) were leading symptoms. The most frequent clinical findings were
hepatomegaly
(18X), pallor (14X), haemorrhages (13X). Ascites, oliguria, tachypnoea, fever, splenomegaly and rickets were less frequent. Laboratory findings were indicative of disturbed hepatic and renal tubular function and also of disturbed intermediary metabolism (hypokaliaemia, hypophosphataemia). However, hypoglycaemia was found in only 4 out of 15 patients tested. Differential diagnosis after hospital admission centered on metabolic disorders such as glycogenoses, galactosaemia, tyrosinosis, or Wilson's disease.
Hepatitis
, toxic hepatosis, liver tumour, intrauterine infection and sepsis were also considered. Eleven children had first ingested fructose within the first 6 weeks of life. The diagnosis was usually established only many weeks or months after first fructose intake and appearance of symptoms. This documents how difficult the diagnosis of this disease can be both in practice and in hospital. The course was severe in 11 children and lethal in 4. In only 5 patients was the course mild. The 16 survivors are doing well under fructose-exclusion diet. Irreversible visual impairment after intraocular haemorrhage occurred once. In each case HFI could have been suspected immediately, had a detailed nutritional history been taken. Practising paediatricians should know the composition of commonly used infant formulae. They should never prescribe sugared condensed milk for intractable vomiting prior to excluding HFI. Solution for intravenous infusion containing fructose and sorbitol are life-threatening for undiagnosed HFI patients.
...
PMID:Hereditary fructose intolerance in early childhood: a major diagnostic challenge. Survey of 20 symptomatic cases. 73
The hepatic manifestations were studied in 65 patients having uncomplicated primary attacks of vivax and falciparum malaria.
Hepatomegaly
due to a "non-specific reactive hepatitis" occurred in 57% of cases. Jaundice occurred in 15% of patients and was invariably associated with
hepatomegaly
. The clinical syndromes of jaundice and
hepatomegaly
in uncomplicated primary attacks of malaria have to be distinguished from those related to disorders like viral hepatitis, hepatic amoebiasis, typhoid
hepatitis
, infectious mononucleosis and Q fever. The causes for the jaundice and the pathogenesis for the hepatic lesions have been discussed.
...
PMID:Jaundice and hepatomegaly in primary malaria. 79 14
An epidemic of jaundice probably due to toxic
hepatitis
occurred in three adjoining districts of Northwest India during the period November and December, 1974. The dogs of the villages were affected first, then the human beings. Detailed clinical features, appropriate laboratory tests, and liver biopsies were studied. A retrospective epidemiological survey was carried out. The disease had a subacute onset starting with high fever, followed by rapidly progressive jaundice. Ascites appeared simultaneously and soon became quite massive.
Hepatomegaly
was recorded when ascites decreased. Liver function tests suggested cholestatic jaundice. The mortality rate in the hospital was 10%. Clinical features in dogs were similar, but mortality was almost 100%. Liver histology was characterized by (1) edema and collagenization of the central veins, never with thrombosis, (2) cholangiolar proliferation, (3) moderate to severe ballooning of the hepatocytes, (4) perisinusoidal fibrosis, (5) cholestasis, and finally, (6) cirrhosis with reverse lobulation. Etiology of this epidemic of
hepatitis
could not be unequivocally established. Critical analysis of the data suggests that some food toxin may have been a factor in the outbreak of this unusual epidemic of toxic
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Study of an epidemic of jaundice, presumably due to toxic hepatitis, in Northwest India. 83 97
We describe nine Spanish-American children from five families with an unusual hereditary lipid storage disease. The family origins were in two small southern Colorado towns. The clinical course varied, but all of the children were found to bruise easily and to have splenomegaly, while most had
hepatomegaly
. Post-natal jaundice and
hepatitis
occurred in four. Impairment of vertical gaze and intellectual and neurologic deterioration occurred in most of the patients, with the onset of the disease, usually in childhood. The bone marrow in all patients examined contained both foamy and sea-blue histiocytes. Sphingomyelinase levels in skin fibroblast cultures were greatly decreased in seven of the eight cases evaluated. It is believed that these patients have a sphingomyelin lipidosis and represent a variant of the Niemann-Pick disease. Clinical and enzymatic findings are compared with those of other cases in the literature.
...
PMID:Nine cases of sphingomyelin lipidosis, a new variant in Spanish-American Children. Juvenile variant of Niemann-Pick Disease with foamy and sea-blue histiocytes. 90 82
Besides lymphodenopathy and splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
may also be detected in 25-50% of children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. This is particularly evident in patients with complete Still's syndrome. The
hepatomegaly
increases during relapse situations and disappears during remissions. Transient icterus, elevation of aminotransferases and delayed bromsulfalein excretion have been reported, particularly in patients with complete Still's syndrome, and indicate impairment of liver function. Liver biopsies have been performed only rarely and show nonspecific infiltrations of portal fields with lymphocytes and, in a few cases, "autoimmune"
hepatitis
and even cirrhosis with portal hypertension. Plasma cell
hepatitis
with affection of joints can be readily differentiated from juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: the synovitis is merely transiet and disappears with institution of steroid therapy. As in the adult, severe liver dysfunction leads to remission of arthritis. Amyloidosis should be considered in every case of long-lasting
hepatomegaly
.
...
PMID:[Liver pathology in juvenile chronic polyarthritis]. 91 83
Liver disease in children with alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and protease inhibitor type ZZ does not necessarily carry a bad prognosis. Fourteen of our 18 patients presented with the neonatal
hepatitis
syndrome and four had
hepatomegaly
without jaundice. Although four patients have died of cirrhosis and its complications, and three have severe liver disease, most of the 11 others, of whom four are over 13 years of age, have relatively little clinical, biochemical, or histologic evidence of liver disease. Persistent elevation of SGOT during the third year of life and renal or pulmonary problems were associated with a poor prognosis. Liver biopsy early in the course of the disease was not helpful prognostically but was useful in assessment of the severity of liver disease and demonstration of alpha1AT storage, alpha1AT deficiency was found in 29% of our patients who presented with the neonatal
hepatitis
syndrome. One of seven apparently healthy Pi type ZZ sibs of our patients had significant liver disease which had not been suspected previously.
...
PMID:Liver disease associated with alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency in childhood. 108 17
This report describes the clinical, biochemical, and hepatic morphologic findings in ten children with severe serum alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency. Genetic protease inhibitor (Pi) phenotyping, using acid-starch gel and crossed antigen-antibody electrophoresis, demonstrated Pi phenotype ZZ in all our cases. In eight patients, manifestations of liver disease appeared during the first year of life. The case reports show that alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency should be suspected in any child with neonatal
hepatitis
, unexplained
hepatomegaly
or splenomegaly, or cirrhosis. In our report, one infant is normal at age 6 months, and one infant had progressive hepatic damage that culminated in liver failure and death at age 6 months. The variable clinical course and prognosis for infants with severe alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency is well illustrated by these two infants.
...
PMID:alpha1-Antitrypsin deficiency and liver disease in children. 108 88
One hundred fifteen asymptomatic Australia antigen (HBSAg) carriers, discovered by routine testing of volunteer blood donors in Toronto, were investigated and followed for up to 30 months. The carrier state seems to be largely host-dependent, and its prevalence is modified by ethnic origin, sex, and age. A high prevalence of carriers was found in persons coming from Mediterranean countries and the Orient. The carrier state was 3 times more common in males than in females, and the majority of the carriers were under 30 years of age. Family clustering of HBSAg-positive individuals was observed. All carriers were asymptomatic and only one gave a history of jaundice in the past. Seven gave a history of intravenous drug use. Four had moderate
hepatomegaly
. Fifty-four had some abnormality in their liver function tests. The SGPT was the most frequently abnormal test and correlated best with the histological findings. Twenty of 29 liver biopsies showed features of chronic benign persisting
hepatitis
. All patients remained well during the follow-up period. In no patient was there evidence of deterioration or progression in either their clinical state, liver function, or pathological findings. Only 1 of the 115 carriers became HBSAg-negative over the period of observation.
...
PMID:Clinical and epidemiological significance of the HBSAg (Australia antigen): carrier state. 111 53
The clinical and hematological features of 100 patients with sickle cell anemia are reviewed. The heart was enlarged and a murmur was heard in nearly 80 percent of patients. Pneumonia and pulmonary infarction occurred in 43 percent and 12 percent of patients, respectively. Musculoskeletal involvement included the hand-foot syndrome (15 percent), leg ulcers (55 percent), aseptic necrosis ofbone (11 percent), and osteomyelitis (4 percent). Symptoms and signs related to the gastrointestinal system included jaundice (55 percent),
hepatomegaly
(50 percent), splenomegaly (23 percent),
hepatitis
(11 percent) and gallstones (9 percent). Three patients underwent cholecystectomy and three patients had their spleens removed. Pyelonephritis occurred in 17 patients, priapism in five and hematuria in seven. Nineteen women had 39 pregnancies, of which 35 resulted in the birth of healthy infants. At least 328 painful crises occurred in 73 patients. There were also 13 hemolytic crises, eight sequestration crises, and five aplastic crises. A trail of alkali therapy in 33 crises in children failed to produce beneficial effects greater than hydration and analgesics alone as used in the control group. Laboratory findings in the 100 patients were comparable to those previously reported in the literature. The renal concentrating defect in most patients was confirmed. There were six deaths: hepatic coma secondary to post-transfusion
hepatitis
, thrombosis of inferior vena cava, congestive heart failure, exsanguination from erosion of the pancreaticoduodenal artery, extensive bronchopneumonia, and pulmonary infarction.
...
PMID:Sickle cell anemia- clinical manifestations in 100 patients and review of the literature. 113 Apr 36
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