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

Actinomycin-D (Act-D) is a rare cause of veno-occlusive disease (VOD). Between 1993 and 1998, we managed 6 patients, all male, median age 19 months (range 6-48 months) who received Act-D for Wilms' tumour (n=4), clear cell sarcoma (n=1) or rhabdomyosarcoma (n=1). VOD presented with a median platelet count of 12 x 10(9)/l, INR 3.8, fibrinogen 16 mg/l, fibrinogen degradation products (FDPs) > or =80 microg/l, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) 6922 IU/l, bilirubin 47 micromol/l. In 3 cases, transient liver dysfunction and thrombocytopenia without neutropenia had been observed after a previous course of Act-D. All six children developed encephalopathy, hepatomegaly, ascites, reversed portal flow and renal impairment. All received mechanical ventilation and two required haemofiltration. The treatment was supportive. Severe Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome developed in 3 patients, all of whom died. 3 patients recovered. The outcome of VOD with multi-organ failure is poor. Intravascular coagulopathy precedes and characterises severe VOD during Act-D treatment.
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PMID:Veno-occlusive disease with multi-organ involvement following actinomycin-D. 1137 45

A 44-year-old female British travel guide suddenly had fever, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea develop during her stay in South India. Four days later she was transported to our hospital. At admission she had a high temperature, impaired respiration, and abdominal pain. Clinical examination revealed bilateral pleural effusion, hepatomegaly, and ascites. Two days later the patient showed a generalized macular rash with a conspicuous sparing of small islands of normal skin. Hemorrhagic erythema on the palms and soles as well as focal petechiae on the hard palate and scleral and conjunctival bleeding were also observed. Hypotension and renal insufficiency developed 1 week after the illness started. Laboratory investigations revealed highly elevated levels of hepatic enzymes, severe hemolytic anemia, decreased platelet counts, and abnormal coagulation values. The presumptive clinical diagnosis of dengue hemorrhagic fever was supported by serologic testing that disclosed sustained high titers of hemagglutination inhibition antibodies. Symptomatic therapy with substitution of volume and albumin, blood transfusions, and administration of antipyretics resulted in complete recovery within 6 weeks.
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PMID:Dengue hemorrhagic fever in a British travel guide. 1186 82

Mutations in the Wilson disease gene ATP7B, a P-type ATPase, are responsible for copper accumulation in the liver and other organs leading to Wilson disease (WD, OMIM 277900). Clinical manifestations of Wilson disease (WD) include chronic liver disease, acute hepatic failure or neuropsychiatric diseases. Since potent medical treatments are available to prevent disabling residual symptoms, early diagnosis is crucial. To demonstrate the clinical course and genetic findings, a male patient with a novel mutation in the ATP7B gene, a 10 base pair insertion in exon 6 (1927ins 10), and a second missense mutation in exon 13 (P992L) is reported. The patient presented with signs of chronic liver disease at the age of 10 years. Clinical findings included hepatomegaly, elevated liver enzymes and coagulopathy. A combination treatment with the copper chelating agent D-penicillamine and zinc acetate was started leading to normalization of liver function and no appearance of neurological signs or Kayser-Fleischer ring after 7 years follow-up. Truncating mutations of the ATP7B gene (insertions, deletions, nonsense mutations) leading to gross loss of C-terminal parts of the protein, thereby probably completely destroying the protein function, may correlate with a hepatic phenotype and early onset as seen in the patient presented.
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PMID:Disturbed copper transport in humans. Part 2: mutations of the ATP7B gene lead to Wilson disease (WD). 1193 61

In neonates, inborn errors of metabolism can produce all the major signs of liver dysfunction - jaundice, coagulopathy, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, ascites and encephalopathy. The significance of encephalopathy in the neonate is different from that in older patients; it is usually due to a specific abnormality such as hypoglycaemia rather than being a non-specific indicator of liver failure. Attention is focused on five neonatal presentations: unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia, cholestatic jaundice with otherwise good liver function, severe liver dysfunction (jaundice, coagulopathy persisting after vitamin K, and ascites), hepatomegaly with hypotonia+/- cardiomyopathy; and hepatosplenomegaly. The metabolic disorders presenting in these ways are listed alongside specific clinical features that can aid differential diagnosis and tests that can be used to confirm or refute the diagnosis. Diagnosis is important because treatment can be dramatically effective, e.g. withdrawal of galactose in galactosaemia. Even when treatment is not effective it is often possible to offer prenatal diagnosis for future pregnancies.
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PMID:Inborn errors presenting with liver dysfunction. 1206 38

A term newborn infant developed hypovolaemic shock shortly after birth. She was pale with gross hepatomegaly. She required multiple boluses of intravenous fluids, blood products as well as inotropic support. Blood investigations showed persistent thrombocytopenia, anaemia and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC). She also developed heart failure. She finally succumbed on the eleventh day of life. Autopsy revealed haemangiomatosis involving the liver, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, kidneys and adrenals.
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PMID:Diffuse neonatal haemangiomatosis: a rare cause of haemorrhagic shock and refractory coagulopathy in the newborn. 1244 Feb 78

Hepatic hemangioendothelioma (HE) is a tumor that presents in infancy and toddler. It manifests hepatomegaly, abdominal mass, jaundice, abdominal distention, or high output cardiac failure. We reviewed patients with HE in our hospital in the past 15 years (from July 1986 to June 2001). The diagnosis was made by the histology specimen or various imaging studies. There were thirteen patients (9 males, 4 females) enrolled in our study. Their ages ranged from neonate to 2 years old. The common clinical manifestations included abdominal distention (53%), congestive heart failure (38.5%), abdominal mass (30.8%), jaundice (30.8%), and skin hemangioma (23.1%). Nine patients had serum alanine aminotransferase examination and were abnormal in 2. Anemia was noted in 7 of 13 (53.8%) patients, thrombocytopenia and hyperconsumptive coagulopathy were found in 4 and 5 patients, respectively. Serum alpha-fetoprotein was elevated in 4 of 7 patients. Abdominal ultrasonography (n = 13) showed heterogeneous and hypoechoic lesions in the liver. Computed tomography (n = 11) revealed central hypointensity with peripheral enhancement after contrast of the liver masses. Magnetic resonance imaging studies of the hepatic masses (n = 3) showed decreased signal intensity on T1 images and high signal intensity on T2. Most patients were treated with steroid. Other management included interferon, chemotherapy, embolization and/or surgery. Four patients were managed conservatively. Among the other nine patients, four patients died of sepsis, hepatic failure, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy or tumor rupture with hemorrhagic shock. HE appears to be a histologically benign tumor but may have a poor outcome because of complications. For its management, steroid is a first-line medication. Other methods of treatment were interferon, hepatic artery embolization, chemotherapy and surgery. Long term follow up is needed for the evaluation of treatment response.
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PMID:Hepatic hemangioendothelioma in children: analysis of thirteen cases. 1280 Mar 77

A Japanese boy had clinical features of congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ia (CDG Ia, also known as carbohydrate-deficient-glycoprotein syndrome, previously), and enzymatic and molecular assay of phosphomannomutase confirmed this diagnosis. During infancy, the patient showed delayed mental and motor development, hypotonia, ataxia, hepatomegaly, liver dysfunction, abnormal coagulation system and cerebellar hypoplasia. At present, though he is 3 years and 8 months old, he cannot utter meaningful words or sit by himself. These findings suggested that he had one of the severe phenotypes of Japanese CDG Ia. Mutational analysis demonstrated heterozygosity for the missense mutation in exon 4 (P113L) and a novel nonsense mutation in exon 7 (R194X). We report his clinical course and the results of molecular assay, and discuss correlation between clinical severity and genotype.
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PMID:Novel nonsense mutation (R194X) in the PMM2 gene in a Japanese patient with congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ia. 1312 99

Systemic amyloidosis with hepatic involvement is a rare disorder, which is characterized by the deposits of amyloid fibrils in the liver. The prognosis is poor and the median survival is 13 months. Bleeding problems resulting from coagulopathy frequently complicates systemic amyloidosis. We present two patients with a severe factor X deficiency and hepatomegaly as the presenting abnormalities of systemic amyloidosis. One of the patients was treated with high dose melphalan chemotherapy and autologous stem cell reinfusion, resulting in a normalization of the liver enzyme tests and the factor X level. The diagnosis and treatment of systemic amyloidosis with hepatic involvement and the management of the multifactorial coagulopathy in these cases is discussed.
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PMID:Successful treatment of systemic amyloidosis with hepatic involvement and factor X deficiency by high dose melphalan chemotherapy and autologous stem cell reinfusion. 1496 36

Hepatic lymphoma metastasis is rare, and should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of hepatic malignancy. A 52-year-old man presented with a four-day history of fever, fatigue, yellowish skin and nausea. His past medical history was unremarkable. There was no history of alcohol intake or medications. His physical examination revealed generalized jaundice and hepatomegaly. His blood tests showed liver failure and coagulopathy. Abdominal ultrasonography illustrated hepatomegaly. A further work-up included bone marrow and liver biopsy. The pathology report was B-cell lymphoma. He was treated with chemotherapy, and his laboratory findings during follow-up showed steady improvement. In conclusion, lymphoma metastasis to liver can be a cause of liver dysfunction. A high index of suspicion is required for the diagnosis. We emphasize the importance of obtaining tissue sample in all patients with suspicious lesion in any organ to avoid missing the rare but curable pathologies.
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PMID:Hepatic lymphoma metastasis presenting with severe acute liver failure: a rare case. 1533 18

Recent advances in immunologic techniques have lead to increased recognition of primary immunodeficiencies. A review of patients with suspected immunodeficiencies in a Taiwan tertiary hospital from January 1985 to October 2004 and molecular/genetic analyses done on some patients were investigated. Of the 403 patients selected based on the International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, 37 patients with PID (8 females and 29 males) were identified: 17 (46%) with antibody production deficiencies, nine (24%) with defective phagocyte function, four (11%) with combined B and T cell immunodeficiencies, seven (19%) with T cell deficiencies, but none with primary complement deficiencies. Those with secondary immunodeficiencies were excluded from the study. Recurrent sinopulmonary infections (62%) were the most common clinical manifestation, followed by sepsis (57%), severe skin infection (40%), splenomegaly/hepatomegaly (27%), central nervous system dysfunction (22%), chronic diarrhea (22%), and failure to thrive (19%). Seven (19%) patients died, five of infections, one of disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and one of hepatocellular carcinoma. Six novel mutations were found from 11 agreed patients. This is the first report on primary immunodeficiencies in Taiwan covering a 20-year period.
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PMID:Distribution and clinical aspects of primary immunodeficiencies in a Taiwan pediatric tertiary hospital during a 20-year period. 1582 93


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