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)

Case records of HIV infected patients were analyzed for identifying neurological manifestations. Eight patients (7 males) were identified to have probable HIV encephalopathy (in a period of 24 months) as per the CDC revised classification system. Their ages ranged from one year to ten years. The neurological manifestations noted included-developmental delay (2 cases), seizures (6 cases), acute onset alteration of sensorium (4 cases), aphasia (2 cases), loss of vision (2 cases), focal neurological deficits (6 cases), brisk deep tendon reflexes (7 cases), extensor plantar responses (5 cases) and signs of cerebellar dysfunction (2 cases). Other clinical features included growth failure, microcephaly, fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, pneumonia, otorrhea and oral candidiasis. Cerebrospinal fluid studies were normal. The neuroimaging features included cerebral atrophy and ventricular dilatation, cerebral infarction, basal ganglia calcification and cerebellar atrophy. Childhood HIV infection may have a variety of neurological abnormalities. HIV infection should be suspected in children presenting with unexplained neurological manifestations and growth failure.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations of HIV infection. 1265 56

Inherited neutropenia is characterized by a decrease in the absolute number of circulating neutrophils and an increased susceptibility to infections. The current study was performed to determine the clinical and laboratory findings of Iranian patients with inherited neutropenias. Records of 26 patients (14 male, 12 female) with inherited neutropenia were reviewed in this study. The patients had been referred to Children's Medical Center, a referral center for immunodeficiency disorders in Iran, during a 22-year period (1981-2003). Primary immunodeficiency disorders of these patients were as follows: cyclic neutropenia (8 patients), Shwachman-Diamond syndrome (7 patients), Kostmann syndrome (6 patients), and Chediak-Higashi syndrome (5 patients). The mean absolute neutrophil count of patients was 398.2 +/- 259.3 cells/mm (range 74-1,152/mm) at the first visit. Twenty-one patients showed severe, four moderate, and one mild neutropenia. Sixteen of these patients had leukopenia, seven anemia, two thrombocytopenia, and one monocytosis. The most common presenting complaints in these patients were oral ulcer, otitis, pneumonia, diarrhea, cutaneous abscess, and oral candidiasis. The patients first manifested symptoms of infection suggesting neutropenia at a median age of 7.5 months (range 1 month to 10 years). During follow-up, respiratory infections developed in 24 cases, oral manifestations in 20 patients. The most common infections, in descending order of frequency, were otitis media, abscesses, pneumonia, oral ulcers, acute diarrhea, cutaneous infections, oral candidiasis, and periodontitis. Less frequent infections were sinusitis, cystitis, conjunctivitis, meningitis, and osteomyelitis. Nonspecific symptoms (hepatomegaly and splenomegaly) were also detected in 10 patients and 1 patient, respectively. Three patients died of recurrent infections. The infectious manifestations both at presentation and during follow-up in inherited neutropenia were similar. Although inherited neutropenias are rare, recurrent infections always deserves further evaluation for detecting such disorders.
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PMID:Congenital neutropenia and primary immunodeficiency disorders: a survey of 26 Iranian patients. 1601 23

This study compared the clinical presentations of 58 episodes of cryptococcosis in 50 patients and 26 episodes of penicillosis in 25 patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) between June 1994 and June 2004, and assessed the safety of discontinuation of secondary prophylaxis for endemic fungal infections in those patients responding to highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART). Neurological symptoms were seen more commonly in patients with cryptococcosis, whereas respiratory symptoms, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly, and non-thrush-related oral presentations were seen more commonly in patients with penicillosis. Patients with penicillosis were more likely to have abnormal chest radiography results and radiographic presentations of interstitial lesions, cavitations, fibrotic lesions and mass lesions. At the end of the study, maintenance antifungal therapy had been discontinued in 27 patients with cryptococcosis and in 18 patients with penicillosis in whom the median CD4 count had increased to 186 cells/microL (range, 9-523 cells/microL) and 95 cells/microL (range, 15-359 cells/microL), respectively, after HAART. Only one episode of penicillosis recurred (a relapse rate of 1.72/100 person-years; 95% CI, 1.44-2.10/100 person-years) after a median follow-up duration of 35.3 months (range, 2.6-91.6 months). No relapses occurred in patients with cryptococcosis after a median follow-up duration of 22.3 months (range, 1-83.4 months). These findings suggest that there are differences in the clinical presentations between endemic cryptococcosis and penicillosis in patients with HIV infection, and that it is safe to discontinue secondary antifungal prophylaxis for cryptococcosis and penicillosis in patients responding to HAART.
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PMID:Endemic fungal infections caused by Cryptococcus neoformans and Penicillium marneffei in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus and treated with highly active anti-retroviral therapy. 1652 16

LRBA deficiency was first described in 2012 as an autosomal recessive disorder caused by biallelic mutations in the LRBA gene (OMIM #614700). It was initially characterized as producing early-onset hypogammaglobulinemia, autoimmune manifestations, susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease, and recurrent infection. However, further reports expanded this phenotype (including patients without hypogammaglobulinemia) and described LRBA deficiency as a clinically variable syndrome with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. We present the case of a female patient who presented with type 1 diabetes, psoriasis, oral thrush, and enlarged liver and spleen at the age of 8 months. She later experienced recurrent bacterial and viral infections, including pneumococcal meningitis and Epstein Barr viremia. She underwent two consecutive stem cell transplants at the age of 8 and 9 years, and ultimately died. Samples from the patient and her parents were subjected to whole exome sequencing, which revealed a homozygous 1-bp insertion in exon 23 of the patient's LRBA gene, resulting in frameshift and premature stop codon. The patient's healthy mother was heterozygous for the mutation and her father tested wild-type. This finding suggested that either one copy of the paternal chromosome 4 bore a deletion including the LRBA locus, or the patient inherited two copies of the mutant maternal LRBA allele. The patient's sequencing data showed a 1-Mb loss of heterozygosity region in chromosome 4, including the LRBA gene. Comparative genomic hybridization array of the patient's and father's genomic DNA yielded normal findings, ruling out genomic copy number abnormalities. Here, we present the first case of LRBA deficiency due to a uniparental disomy (UPD). In contrast to classical Mendelian inheritance, UPD involves inheritance of 2 copies of a chromosomal region from only 1 parent. Specifically, our patient carried a small segmental isodisomy of maternal origin affecting 1 Mb of chromosome 4.
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PMID:LRBA Deficiency in a Patient With a Novel Homozygous Mutation Due to Chromosome 4 Segmental Uniparental Isodisomy. 3038 43


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