Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A rare case of ischemic stroke related to Herpes zoster infection of the eye and documented arteritis in an HIV-positive patient is analyzed. The woman, aged 32, who was born in Angola and lived in Zaire, was diagnoses at the Hospital Universitario de Santa Maria, Lisbon. She presented with a 5-month history of sudden hemiplegia, 4 months after onset of herpes zoster ophthalmicus. Among extensive diagnosis tests, she was positive for HIV by ELISA and Western blot, hepatomegaly, and generalized lymphadenopathy. She has left Herpes zoster ophthalmicus with ptosis bulbi and mottled discoloration of the skin over the distribution of the 1st division of the left trigeminal nerve, and right spastic hemiparesis. Her helper T-cell count was 952/cubic mm, and her T-cell ratio was 0.9. She had anemia, hypoalbuminemia, positive serology for cytomegalovirus, Herpes simplex, Epstein Barr virus, and hepatitis B. She had no bacterial infections, but her stool contained Trichuris trichiura eggs and giardia lamblia cysts. Her cardiovascular system and cerebrovascular fluid were negative. Computed tomography of the head showed an old left capsular infarct. Cerebral angiography showed arteritis of the left choroidal artery with occlusion. She was treated with metronidazole and mebendazole, and had surgery for removal of the left eye with a prosthetic replacement. Strokes are common in AIDS patients, resulting from fungal infections, endocarditis, infectious or non-infectious emboli, or arteritis from herpes zoster infections. This is the 1st published case of hemiplegia and Herpes zoster in a European or African patient with HIV-1.
...
PMID:Herpes zoster and controlateral hemiplegia in an African patient infected with HIV-1. 186 23

Fascioliasis has a cosmopolitan distribution and is prevalent in sheep-raising countries. Now, it is an increasingly important parasite of man in the Mediterranean countries. In Dakahlia G., human fascioliasis has imposed itself as a parasitic health problem. In this paper, 23 human cases were selected to throw some light on the signs, symptoms and diagnosis of the disease. It was concluded that painful hepatomegaly, fever, anaemia and marked eosinophilia are tetrad suggesting fascioliasis in patient who has consumed watercress as green salade. Data concerning treatment and follow up will be published later.
...
PMID:Human fascioliasis: a parasitic health problem in Dakahlia Governorate, Egypt. 187 80

The authors make a review of recent data in the literature and compare them to their own cases between 1983 and 1988. They analyzed eight patients with idiopathic myelofibrosis confirmed with bone marrow biopsy of the posterior iliac wrist with Jamshidi's needle. Most patients were between 55 and 60 years old (5 male and 3 female). Major symptoms were weakness and bleeding (6/8 cases), weight loss and bone distress (4/8 cases). In general, physical signs were splenomegaly and anemia (7/8 cases), hepatomegaly (5/8 cases), and jaundice (2/8 cases). Laboratory features were variable. Most cases were diagnosed in an advanced stage of the disease. Therapy with busulfan, prednisone, oxymetholone and radiotherapy of the spleen was used alone or in combination to relieve compressive abdominal symptoms. This review shows that idiopathic myelofibrosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of patients with hepatosplenomegaly and anemia.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic myelofibrosis]. 188 77

Thirty-nine patients with chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL) in blastic crisis (BC) were studied from 1981 to 1988 at the Hematology Service of the General Hospital of Mexico. The patients were from 18 to 80 years old. Twenty-one patients (54%) were in lymphatic BC and 18 patients (46%) corresponded to BC myeloid. All the patients were treated with different chemotherapy schedules. Only three patients in lymphoid BC and two in myeloid BC achieved complete remission. The longest remission time was 24 weeks and the longest survival 36 weeks. The clinical and laboratory features, such as age, anemia, bleeding, fever, bone pain, adenopathy, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, extramedullary infiltration, leukocyte count, hemoglobin, platelets, blast cells, in peripheral blood and bone marrow, basophils, and morphology and cytochemistry stains characteristic in bone marrow, were compared between the two groups of patients. None of the clinical and laboratory findings studied were significantly different between the two types of BC, except the evolution time from the diagnosis to the BC, which was more than than two years for most of the patients in lymphoid BC. We also studied the prognosis factors related to survival time. There were no clinical or laboratory differences among the patients who survived more than or less than 14 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Chronic granulocytic leukemia in blastic crisis. Prognostic factors. 189 82

Seventy children from 7 months to 15 years old have been treated for malaria at Hospital Trousseau (Paris) during years 1987 and 1988. Thirty nine of them were living in France usually. The infection was one chiefly in Africa (68 cases), and by P. falciparum in 78% of children. The digestive symptoms were frequent (40/70); splenomegaly was observed in 40 children and hepatomegaly in 31. Anemia was present in 59 cases and mild thrombopenia for 31 cases. The C. reactive protein raised in 92% of cases. The diagnosis was late in 31 patients. Only one cerebral malaria case was observed. The chemoprophylaxis was unfitted or absent in 74% of children living in Paris. The chloroquino-resistance was clinically present in 17 cases and the mefloquine was more often used during 1988 year.
...
PMID:[Malaria of importation in the child: epidemiological, clinical and therapeutic analysis. Apropos of 70 cases observed in a pediatric hospital in Paris]. 191 46

Autoimmune hemolytic anemia and severe giant cell hepatitis is an very uncommon association. Two patients aged 5 months and 2 years developed severe anemia, jaundice, hepatomegaly and splenomegaly. Laboratory tests demonstrated autoimmune hemolytic anemia and elevated amino-transferases. Diffuse giant cell transformation and distorted architecture was seen in liver biopsy. One patient had a cytomegalovirus infection. Early steroid therapy did not prevent fatal course with liver failure in one patient.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune hemolytic anemia associated with severe giant cell hepatitis]. 204 9

Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory granulomatous disorder affecting any part of the gastrointestinal tract, particularly the terminal ileum and the colon. Familiar complications are strictures, fistulae, perforation, haemorrhages and malabsorption due to multiple resections. A patient with two rare complications of Crohn's disease is described. A 16-year-old female with ileocaecal Crohn's disease presented with anaemia and ileus. This ileus was caused by some 40 tablets of ferrosulphate with a non-soluble matrix, in the presence of an existing stenosis of the ileum due to Crohn's disease. An ileocaecal resection was performed. During an exacerbation of Crohn's disease she developed hepatic vein thrombosis with a Budd-Chiari syndrome (upper abdominal pain, hepatomegaly and ascites). Prescription of tablets with a non-soluble matrix is contraindicated in patients with a partial stenosis of the intestine. Patients with active Crohn's disease are predisposed to thromboembolic complications. Hepatic vein thrombosis in our patient may have been the result of hypercoagulability during the exacerbation of her disease.
...
PMID:[Intestinal obstruction caused by non-absorbable tablets and Budd-Chiari syndrome in a patient with Crohn's disease]. 204 72

Scurfy (sf) is a spontaneous, sex-linked, recessive mutation that maps to the extreme proximal portion of the X chromosome, about 2 centimorgans from sparse fur (spf). Hemizygotes for sf manifest several clinical disorders, evident at 14 days of age, including scaliness and crusting of the eyelids, ears, and tail, runting, reddening and swelling of the genital papilla, anemia, cachexia, and early death (average, 24 days). Our studies indicate that the phenotype of hemizygous scurfy is not, as has been suggested, a model for human X-linked ichthyosis, but appears to be a disease primarily affecting the lymphoreticular, and possibly the hematopoietic, systems. Gross lesions include marked splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, enlarged lymph nodes, and variable thickening of the ears. The characteristic histologic lesion is a lymphohistiocytic proliferation and infiltration of peripheral lymph nodes, spleen, liver, and skin. In routine hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections, these lesions efface lymph node architecture, thicken the dermis, and form nodular portal infiltrates in the liver. Scurfy lesions characteristically contain a population of large blastlike cells with round to oval nuclei, a vesicular chromatin pattern, and prominent single nucleoli. Mixed perivascular infiltrates of lymphocytes, macrophages, and granulocytes sometimes are found in kidney, heart, pancreas, lung, and mesenteries. There is excessive hematopoiesis in the liver and spleen. Cells expressing B220 or Thy-1 antigens localize to appropriate areas in the lymph nodes and spleen, but are rare in the portal infiltrates and are absent from the skin. There is a marked, polyclonal increase in serum IgG, severe Coombs'-positive anemia, and leukocytosis with atypical mononuclear cells. Scurfy mice are negative for antinuclear antibodies. Despite their morphologically aberrant lymphoreticular system, scurfy mice can exist in a conventional environment without evidence of opportunistic infection. Raising scurfy mice in a specific-pathogen-free environment does not alter disease expression. Thus, while our findings indicate that scurfy disease may be the result of immune dysfunction, it is not a classic immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:X-linked lymphoreticular disease in the scurfy (sf) mutant mouse. 205 95

A series of 27 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) was analysed to determine the clinical and pathologic features, the natural history and the prognostic factors. The clinical features of these patients included the following: mean age 53.77 years; symptoms due to cytopenias 100 per cent; hepatomegaly 44.5 per cent; splenomegaly 11 per cent. Almost all patients with MDS presented anemia; additional cytopenias were present in many patients. The bone marrow was hypocellular in 1/3 of cases. The patients have been classified according to the French-American-British (FAB) Group criteria: there were 11 patients with refractory anemia, 11 patients with refractory anemia with sideroblasts and 5 patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts. The mean survival was 19 months, 9 patients died: death was due to infection or hemorrhage in 7 cases and to evolution to acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) in 2 cases (10.5%). Thrombocytopenia, the Bournemouth scoring system and FAB classification were independent prognostic factors.
...
PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndromes. A clinico-biological analysis of 27 cases]. 207 37

In this study we examined the clinical and laboratory findings of 80 in-patients. There is an important difference between sexes (p greater than 0.05). Comparison of ages showed that 7-30 age is more vulnerable than the older group. We found clinical symptoms of fever, chills, headache, abdominal pain, disturbances in bowel function, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and lassitude in the first two weeks more frequently when compared with the 3rd, 4th, 5th weeks of illness (p less than 0.001). Where physical finding of rose spots, discordant pulse rate are important in the first two weeks (p less than 0.001). Abdominal discomfort is an important symptom both in the first two and in the last three weeks (% 40.3 and % 36 respectively). Hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, were found more frequently in the last three weeks. According to laboratory findings of anemia, leukopenia, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate and positive blood and feces cultures there is no important difference between the first two and last three weeks (p greater than 0.05). Increase in polynuclear leucocytes is important for the first two weeks, and increase in lymphocytes is important in the last three weeks (p less than 0.001). Positivity of group agglutination tests is 57%, in the first two weeks and 83% in the last three weeks. This difference is found to be important.
...
PMID:[Comparison of symptoms and clinical and laboratory findings in the first and last weeks of typhoid fever]. 208 33


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>