Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four children had progressive degeneration of the cerebral cortex, with hepatic cirrhosis. They and four previously described ones, are representative of a distinct form of hepatocerebral degeneration. Onset of the neurological disorder is between ages 1 and 3 years, at times with mild developmental delay. Explosive onset of intractable convulsions, leaving the child in a stuporous and demented state, is characteristic. Generalized
hypotonia
or hemiparesis were observed in several affected children. Clinical evidences of hepatic disease, including ascites and jaundice, occurred late, if at all. The illness ended fatally within ten months of onset of convulsions. Pathological findings in the brain are neuronal loss and gliosis, in a pattern that is indistinguishable from that in degeneration of the cerebral gray matter in infancy (Alpers disease). The hepatic lesions consist of cirrhosis or of subacute
hepatitis
, with superimposed fatty infiltration of hepatocytes. The disorder is genetically determined, with recessive inheritance.
...
PMID:Infantile diffuse cerebral degeneration with hepatic cirrhosis. 125 62
A case is presented in which cytomegalovirus was isolated from the amniotic fluid at 36 weeks' gestation in a pregnancy complicated by cytomegalovirus
hepatitis
at 10 weeks of gestation. Abnormalities noted in the newborn infant included an undescended testis, right equinovarus, and
hypotonia
. All cultures revealed cytomegalovirus. Subsequent immunoglobulin studies, chest x-ray film, and bone films were all normal.
...
PMID:Isolation of cytomegalovirus from the amniotic fluid during the third trimester. 626 81
Peroxisomes or microbodies are peculiar subcellular organelles with an important role in the metabolism of a variety of different organic compounds. Particularly they are an important site of bile acids synthesis. Some hepatic diseases, mainly cholestatic, can to be reconnected at disorders of bile acids synthesis by these organelles. From the biochemical point some diseases present alterations of the cholesterol side chain (Zellweger syndrome, pseudo-Zellweger syndrome, infantile Refsum's disease, neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy), other diseases present errors involving the steroid nucleus (familial giant cell
hepatitis
). Zellweger disease or cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome is characterized clinically by skeletal changes, muscle
hypotonia
, renal cysts, psychosomatic retardation and persistent cholestasis and from the ultrastructural standpoint by the virtual absence of liver cell peroxisomes. Pseudo-Zellweger disease shows many of the clinical features of Zellweger disease but differs from this condition on account of the presence of abundant peroxisomes in the liver cells. Infantile Refsum's disease and neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy show typical clinical disorders and liver damage leading to cirrhosis. "Familial giant cell hepatitis" is characterized by jaundice from the first days of life, hepatosplenomegaly, cholestasis, lack of physical malformations. The disorder is due to defective biosynthesis of the bile acids with formation of allo-bile acids.
...
PMID:[Liver pathologies due to peroxisome disorders]. 818 91
Mosaic trisomy 14 in liveborns is rare and may be accompanied by uniparental disomy in the euploid cell line. We report the case of a 6 month old male with growth failure, microcephaly, macroglossia, developmental delay,
hypotonia
, congenital heart disease, neonatal
hepatitis
, cryptorchidism, talipes equinovarus, limb length asymmetry, bilateral overriding of 1st by 2nd toe, and extended abnormal pigmentation in a linear-whorl distribution. The proband's karyotype in peripheral lymphocytes and skin fibroblasts was mos47,XY,+14/46,XY. Parental blood chromosomes were normal. Molecular analysis excluded uniparental disomy in the euploid cell line of the proband.
...
PMID:Mosaic trisomy 14 with hepatic involvement. 925 57
The possibility of amplification of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) DNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for the diagnosis of HCMV central nervous system (CNS) infection in infants was studied. Single-step PCR, nested PCR and PCR-Digene were used to assay CSF specimens from 37 patients. Criteria for patient inclusion in the study were: 1. clinical manifestations suggesting CMV neuroinfection such as seizures, hypertonia,
hypotonia
, intracranial calcification, microcephaly, chorioretinitis; 2. any of the following symptoms: anaemia, hepetomegaly, prolonged cholestatic jaundice, or
hepatitis
, splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, intrauterine hypotrophy; 3. serologic presentation, and/or positive results for CMV infection obtained by single-step PCR and PCR-Digene in urine and/or blood. PCR-Digene results were positive in 6 CSF samples. Four CSF samples were positive by nested PCR and 1 CSF sample by single step PCR. We found that the double PCR was about ten or more times more sensitive than single PCR and the PCR-Digene was only three times more sensitive than nested-PCR. The results were correlated with serology. Thirty-three out of 37 examined patients were seropositive (ELISA IgG); ELISA IgM gave positive results in 9 patients. In control studies, cells infected with other members of the herpes virus family were negative with these methods, which suggest that amplification combined with primers from the IE and the L-region of CMV is specific. In conclusion, nested-PCR seems to be the best method for early diagnosis of CMV infection in CSF due to an absence of false positive results and its high specificity and sensitivity.
...
PMID:Detection of cytomegalovirus in infant cerebrospinal fluid by conventional PCR, nested PCR and PCR-Digene. 1193 Sep 94
A boy presented with lactic acidosis, hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, generalised icterus, and muscle
hypotonia
in the first weeks of life. At the age of 2 months, neonatal giant cell
hepatitis
was diagnosed by light microscopy. Electron microscopy of the liver revealed an accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and steatosis. Skeletal muscle was normal on both light and electron microscopy. At the age of 5 months, the patient died of liver failure. Biochemical studies of the respiratory chain enzymes in muscle showed that cytochrome-c oxidase (complex IV) and succinate-cytochrome-c oxidoreductase (complex II + III) activities were (just) below the control range. When related to citrate synthase activity, however, complex IV and complex II + III activities were normal. Complex I activity was within the control range. The content of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was severely reduced in the liver (17% to 18% of control values). Ultracytochemistry and immunocytochemistry of cytochrome-c oxidase demonstrated a mosaic pattern of normal and defective liver cells. In defective cells, a reduced amount of the mtDNA-encoded subunits II-III and the nuclear DNA-encoded subunits Vab was found. Cells of the biliary system were spared. Immunohistochemistry of mtDNA replication factors revealed normal expression of DNA polymerase gamma. The mitochondrial single-stranded binding protein (mtSSB) was absent in some abnormal hepatocytes, whereas the mitochondrial transcription factor A (mtTFA) was deficient in all abnormal hepatocytes. In conclusion, depletion of mtDNA may present as giant cell
hepatitis
. mtTFA and to a lesser degree mtSSB are reduced in mtDNA depletion of the liver and may, therefore, be of pathogenetic importance. The primary defect, however, is still unknown.
...
PMID:Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in the liver of an infant with neonatal giant cell hepatitis. 1195 53
We report studies of a Croatian boy, a proven case of human S-adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy) hydrolase deficiency. Psychomotor development was slow until his fifth month; thereafter, virtually absent until treatment was started. He had marked
hypotonia
with elevated serum creatine kinase and transaminases, prolonged prothrombin time and low albumin. Electron microscopy of muscle showed numerous abnormal myelin figures; liver biopsy showed mild
hepatitis
with sparse rough endoplasmic reticulum. Brain MRI at 12.7 months revealed white matter atrophy and abnormally slow myelination. Hypermethioninemia was present in the initial metabolic study at age 8 months, and persisted (up to 784 microM) without tyrosine elevation. Plasma total homocysteine was very slightly elevated for an infant to 14.5-15.9 microM. In plasma, S-adenosylmethionine was 30-fold and AdoHcy 150-fold elevated. Activity of AdoHcy hydrolase was approximately equal to 3% of control in liver and was 5-10% of the control values in red blood cells and cultured fibroblasts. We found no evidence of a soluble inhibitor of the enzyme in extracts of the patient's cultured fibroblasts. Additional pretreatment abnormalities in plasma included low concentrations of phosphatidylcholine and choline, with elevations of guanidinoacetate, betaine, dimethylglycine, and cystathionine. Leukocyte DNA was hypermethylated. Gene analysis revealed two mutations in exon 4: a maternally derived stop codon, and a paternally derived missense mutation. We discuss reasons for biochemical abnormalities and pathophysiological aspects of AdoHcy hydrolase deficiency.
...
PMID:S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase deficiency in a human: a genetic disorder of methionine metabolism. 1502 24
The aim of this study was to illustrate the difficulties in establishing a diagnosis of mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) disorders based on clinical grounds in combination with intermediate activities of the MRC enzyme complexes. We reviewed retrospectively all medical and laboratory records of patients initially considered likely to have MRC disorders on clinical grounds, and subsequently diagnosed with other disorders (n = 20; 11 males, 9 females). Data were retrieved from hospital records, referral letters, and results of enzymatic analysis at a reference laboratory. Clinical symptoms included developmental delay, epilepsy,
hypotonia
, movement disorder, spastic quadriplegia, tetany, microcephaly, visual problems, carpopedal spasms, dysmorphism, hearing loss, muscle weakness and rhabdomyolysis, and fulminant
hepatitis
. Blood and cerebrospinal fluid lactate levels were elevated in 13/20 and 9/20 respectively. One or more MRC complex activities (expressed as ratios relative to citrate synthase and/or complex II activity) were less than 50% of control mean activity in 11/20 patients (including patients with deficiencies of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, pantothenate kinase, holocarboxylase synthetase, long-chain hydroxy acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, molybdenum co-factor, and neonatal haemochromatosis). One patient had a pattern suggestive of mitochondrial proliferation. We conclude that intermediate results of MRC enzymes should be interpreted with caution and clinicians should be actively looking for other underlying diagnoses.
...
PMID:Decreased activities of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes in non-mitochondrial respiratory chain diseases. 1641 69
Deoxyguanosine kinase (DGUOK) catalyzes the first step of the mitochondrial deoxypurine salvage pathway, the phosphorylation of purine deoxyribonucleosides. Mutations in the DGUOK gene have been linked to inherited mtDNA depletion syndromes, neonatal liver failure, nystagmus, and
hypotonia
. Previously, we reported the first case of a heterozygous unclassified c.592-4_c.592-3delTT alteration in a patient with DGUOK deficiency without the demonstration of its pathogenicity (Dimmock et al., 2008). This alteration was predicted to cause aberrant splicing based upon two computer algorithms. We now report a homozygous c.592-4_c.592-3delTT mutation found in two affected siblings of asymptomatic consanguineous parents. The proband presented with symptoms of idiopathic
hepatitis
, liver dysfunction, nystagmus, and retinal blindness. This individual died at 6months of age due to liver failure. This individual's affected sibling presented similarly and has remarkable elevations of tyrosine, methionine, and alanine. Many organic acids were elevated in urine, including lactic acid, Krebs cycle intermediates, and para-hydroxy compounds; ketone bodies were also present. RNA studies support aberrant splicing. Sequencing of cDNA detected exon 5 skipping in the two affected siblings, but not in the normal control. These results indicate that the homozygous c.592-4_c.592-3delTT is deleterious and responsible for the DGUOK deficiency. The parents were subsequently confirmed to be carriers of this mutation. In summary, we have demonstrated that c.592-4_c.592-3delTT is a pathogenic splice acceptor site mutation leading to DGUOK deficiency.
...
PMID:A novel c.592-4_c.592-3delTT mutation in DGUOK gene causes exon skipping. 1990 May 89
We describe the case of a Sardinian female child affected by SMARD1, a genetic composite heterozygote, in whom a new nonsense mutation (R788X) was found. A sister was affected by generalized muscular
hypotonia
and died from respiratory insufficiency at the age of 9 months, before a diagnostic definition had been formulated. Our patient died at 6 months due to respiratory insufficiency. At autopsy some differences with previous published cases were observed. In fact, our case is to the best of our knowledge the first report of giant cell
hepatitis
and myocarditis in SMARD1-affected patients, although this could be a chance association.
...
PMID:A new nonsense mutation of the IGHMBP2 gene responsible for the first case of SMARD1 in a Sardinian patient with giant cell hepatitis. 2085 32
1
2
Next >>