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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This report concerns a 3-month-old girl with rapidly progressive psychomotor retardation,
hepatomegaly
, vacuolated lymphocytes, minimal bone dysplasia and normal excretion of acid mucopolysaccharides. A deficiency of acid beta-galactosidase was demonstrated in isolated leucocytes and in a liver biopsy. The diagnosis of generalized
gangliosidosis
due to deficiency of beta-galactosidase was also based on the absence of the enzyme activity from cultured fibroblasts. The diagnosis was confirmed on autopsy at 16 months by typical histology, electron microscopy and biochemistry of the organs. beta-galactosidase deficiency has been demonstrated in various clinical conditions ranging from generalized
gangliosidosis
with severe mental retardation to clinical pictures resembling Morquio's disease and normal intelligence. The heterogeneity of the clinical manifestations in beta-galactosidase deficiency could be explained by different residual activities of a structurally mutated enzyme towards its various substrates.
...
PMID:Generalized gangliosidosis: acid beta-galactosidase deficiency with early onset, rapid mental deterioration and minimal bone dysplasia. 6 26
Two cases of
gangliosidosis
due to aggregates of Gm1 are described. The first patient was a female infant with noticeable retardation in psychomotor development, coarse facies,
hepatomegaly
, and X-rays showing skeletal anomalies in the large bones, vertebral column, cranium and ribs. She died at the age of 10 months of a septic condition. The second patient was a male infant; deterioration in psychomotor development was first noticed 8 months after birth and this progressed slowly to arrive at a vegetative state with convulsions and myoclonus. The child died at the age of 4 years. There were no signs of enlargement of visceral organs but a cherry red stain was observed in the ophthalmologic examination. In the first case, necropsy revealed the presence of a deposit substance in the histiocytes of the hepatic sinusoids, spleen, pancreas, thymus, septi and pulmonary alveoli, intestinal lamina propria, epithelial cells of the renal glomeruli, and in the neurons and glial cells of the brain. The same deposits were observed only in the neurons and glial cells in the second case. Ultrastructural examination showed the presence of typical cytoplasmic membranous bodies in the central nervous system of both patients. The beta-galactosidase activity in the urine of both patients during life was zero. There was a higher than normal total amount of gangliosides in brain tissue samples from both (1906.7 and 2459.9 NANA/g respectively) as compared with normal values (724.0). This increase was proportional to the rise in Gm1 ganglioside (76.8 and 89.6 percent molar respectively) as compared to control (27.0). These clinical, morphologic, and biochemical data characterize both types 1 and 2 of
gangliosidosis
due to Gm1 aggregates.
...
PMID:[Gm1 gangliosidosis types 1 and 2 (author's transl)]. 10 76
A case of GM1-
gangliosidosis
with high activity of hepatic neutral beta-galactosidase is reported. GM1-beta-galactosidase was deficient. Ganglioside GM1 was accumulated in the liver of this patient. Clinically this Japanese girl started convulsive seizures at 5 months of age, had
hepatomegaly
, and macular cherry-red spots, but lacked gargoylelike clinical characteristics. Correlation of clinical and biochemical data is discussed.
...
PMID:Gmi-gangliosidosis. A variant with high activity of hepatic neutral beta-galactosidase. 81 72
We have detected a disorder in Korat cats (initially imported from Thailand) that is analogous to human Sandhoff's disease. Pedigree analysis indicates that this disease in an autosomal recessive disorder in the American Korat. Postmortem studies on one affected cat showed
hepatomegaly
that was not reported in the only other known feline model of GM2-
gangliosidosis
type II. Histologic and ultra-structural evaluation revealed typical storage vacuoles. There was a marked deficiency in the activity of hexosaminidase (HEX) A and B in affected brain and liver as compared to controls. Electrophoresis of a liver extract revealed a deficiency of normal HEX A and B in the affected animals. The blocking primary enzyme immunoassay verified the presence of antigenically reactive HEX present in affected cat livers in quantities slightly elevated with respect to the normal HEX concentration in control cats. In leukocytes, obligate heterozygotes had intermediate levels of total HEX activity with a slight increase in the percent activity due to HEX A. Indeed, 4 of 11 phenotypically normal animals in addition to four obligate heterozygotes appear to be carriers using this assay. Affected brain and liver compared with control brain and liver contained a great excess of bound N-acetylneuraminic acid in the Folch upper-phase solids; thin-layer chromatography showed a marked increase in GM2-ganglioside. In summary, we have characterized the pedigree, pathology, and biochemistry of a new feline model of GM2-
gangliosidosis
which is similar to but different from the only other known feline model.
...
PMID:Characterization of a new model of GM2-gangliosidosis (Sandhoff's disease) in Korat cats. 404 Sep 27
The clinical, biochemical, pathological and neuroradiological findings of a 2-year-old Saudi boy with infantile G(M1)
gangliosidosis
are reported. The patient had a progressive neurologic deterioration, manifesting with developmental regression, sensorimotor and psychointellectual dysfunction and generalized spasticity that started at 4 months of age. Cherry-red macula, facial dysmorphia,
hepatomegaly
, exaggerated startle response to sounds, skeletal dysplasia, and vacuolated foamy lymphocytes that contain finely fibrillar material in addition to lamellar membranes and electron-dense rounded bodies were seen. MRI of the brain demonstrated mild diffuse brain atrophy and features of delayed dysmyelination and demyelination. Brain FDG PET scan revealed a mild decrease in the basal ganglia uptake, and moderate to severe decrease in thalamic and visual cortex uptake, and an area of increased glucose uptake in the left frontal lobe, probably representing an active seizure focus. The functional changes indicated by FDG PET scan and the structural abnormalities shown on MRI were found to be complementary in the imaging evaluation of infantile G(M1)
gangliosidosis
.
...
PMID:Cerebral fluorine-18 labeled 2-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET), MRI, and clinical observations in a patient with infantile G(M1) gangliosidosis. 1059 59