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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Observations on the clinical effects of venesection therapy in 85 treated, as compared with 26 untreated, patients with idiopathic haemochromatosis showed decreased pigmentation and hepatomegaly together with a return to normal tests of liver function in half the patients who had abnormal tests at presentation. Control improved in 28 per cent of those patients with diabetes mellitus, although some patients developed it during the period of observation, despite venesection. Portal hypertension, testicular atrophy and arthropathy were not improved. In only 12 patients was there sufficient reaccumulation of iron after the initial course of venesection to merit further treatment. Rates of iron accumulation in these patients varied between 1-4 mg and 4-8 mg per day and chelatable iron levels were noted to be inappropriately high in relation to body iron stores during the early stages of the reaccumulation period. Life table data shows that the percentage survival five and ten years after diagnosis was 66 and 32 per cent respectively for the treated patients, and 18 and 6 per cent respectively for the untreated patients, both statistically highly significant differences (p less than 0-01). Possible clinical differences such as age of presentation, the presence of diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis, clinical hepatic failure and hepatoma between the treated and untreated groups that might otherwise have weighted survival in favour of the treated group were corrected by the use of covariant analysis. This gave mean log survival values of 4-15 and 2-88 for the treated and untreated patients respectively, equivalent to 63-4 months and 17-8 months, a highly significant difference (p less than 0-01). Ten patients, all of whom had cirrhosis at the time of diagnosis, died of malignant hepatoma between three and 15 years after completing venesection therapy. There was also a high rate of death from neoplasms in a variety of other sites--22 per cent in the venesected group, strikingly higher than that rate predicted for a similarly aged population using national cancer mortality rates.
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PMID:Long term results of venesection therapy in idiopathic haemochromatosis. 18 63

A 65 years old, female patient with acquired aplastic anemia secondary to frequent exposure to hair dye. While on treatment with anabolic steroids hormone became jaundiced and developed hepatomegaly eight months later. During laparotomy the liver was enlarged, hard, with multiple whitish nodules on its surgace but was otherwise normal. Liver biopsy showed hepatocellular carcinoma, there were not cirrhosis niether hemochromatosis. A review of the related literature was done and discussed on the experimental and clinical evidences that suggested that androgens may play same role on the etiology of liver cancer.
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PMID:[Androgenic therapy and hepatocellular carcinoma. Report of a case]. 22 17

Four cases of hepatic angiosarcoma are reported with a review of 99 other cases in the English literature. Angiosarcoma of the liver is associated with chronic exposure to thorotrast, vinyl chloride, arsenicals, radium and possibly copper and with chronic idiopathic hemochromatosis. Although 40% of patients have hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis at autopsy, the nature of the association between chronic liver disease and hepatic angiosarcoma is unknown. The clinical presentation of hepatic angiosarcoma is nonspecific with abdominal pain, weakness and weight loss common complaints and with hepatomegaly, ascites and jaundice common findings. Liver function tests are usually abnormal but there is no one liver function test or set of tests specific for the tumor. The occurrence of thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of hepatic angiosarcoma and may be related to local consumption of clotting factors and formed blood elements in the tumor. Catastrophic intraabdominal bleeding is also characteristic and occurs in one-fourth of all cases. This complication is likely related to the high incidence of clotting abnormalities and the vascular nature of the neoplasm. Selective hepatic arteriogram and open liver biopsy are the foundations of diagnostic evaluation. Percutaneous liver biopsy should be avoided. Failure to appreciate the possibility of hepatic angiosarcoma in the proper clinical setting, leading to blind percutaneous biopsy, may result in failure to make the diagnosis at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Survival of patients with hepatic angiosarcoma is brief; only 3% live longer than 2 years. Treatment of the tumor to date is empirical. There are probably a few patients who might benefit from radical surgery with curative intent. For all others chemotherapy is indicated. Adriamycin is active against hepatic angiosarcoma, but optimal dose and mode of administration require further investigation. Further study is also required to delineate the cause of hepatic angiosarcoma in the 60% of cases without definite epidemiologic association.
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PMID:The clinical features of hepatic angiosarcoma: a report of four cases and a review of the English literature. 36 8

The preceding discussions outline the various forms of cirrhosis that may be encountered in the elderly population. Cirrhosis is not uncommon in older patients. Although it has been stated that most cirrhosis in the elderly is due to alcohol, these assumptions are perhaps overestimations. In the authors' experience, many older patients are inappropriately labeled with alcoholic liver disease--presumed guilty until proven otherwise--and have subsequently been shown to have nonalcoholic liver disease. Careful investigation is required. Hepatotoxic drug exposure (e.g., to alpha methyldopa, nitrofurantoin, or isoniazid) should be ruled out, and hepatitis B and hepatitis C serology obtained. Primary biliary cirrhosis may occur in both sexes, and thus antimitochondrial antibody should be assayed. Severe heart disease may result in cardiac cirrhosis in the elderly, with ascites and hepatomegaly. Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, primary sclerosing cholangitis, idiopathic hemochromatosis, and chronic autoimmune hepatitis may result in advanced cirrhosis in the elderly; appropriate serum studies should be obtained. If questions remain and if therapy may be changed, liver biopsy can be performed. A recent study suggested, however, that the risk of hemorrhage from liver biopsy in the elderly may be increased, especially if malignancy is present. The era of treatment for liver diseases has arrived. Colchicine, methotrexate, ursodeoxycholic acid, and others have shown promise in the treatment of PBC, primary sclerosing cholangitis, and alcoholic liver disease. Corticosteroids may be lifesaving in autoimmune liver disease. Phlebotomy remains the treatment of choice for hemochromatosis in any age group. Interferons and other antiviral agents are being used in chronic type B and type C hepatitis. Treatment of the complications of cirrhosis in the elderly may be safely accomplished. Advanced age is not a contraindication to variceal sclerotherapy. Vasopressin, however, may be contraindicated in the elderly patient if there is an underlying history of atherosclerotic coronary or peripheral vascular disease. Large-volume paracentesis and peritoneal venous shunting can afford symptomatic relief of ascites, even in the geriatric population. Finally, as noted previously, advanced age is no longer to be considered an absolute contraindication for liver transplantation. The evaluation of liver disease in the elderly may be diagnostically challenging, and its treatment rewarding.
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PMID:Liver diseases in the elderly. 185 64

The clinical manifestations of primary or idiopathic hemochromatosis include mainly hepatomegaly, diabetes mellitus, and hypogonadism. Most investigators postulated that the hypogonadism is caused by pituitary dysfunction and that the deposition of iron in the testes is of little importance. We found not only pituitary failure in a 45-year-old man with idiopathic hemochromatosis (low LH and FSH levels, no response to GnRH) but could also detect by light microscopy deposition of iron in capillary endothelial cells and in the perivascular space of the testicular tissue. Electron microscopic study of tissue from the testes showed intracytoplasmic hemosiderin deposits in capillary endothelial cells. Abundant lipofuscin granules were present in Sertoli cells and Leydig cells. The serum testosterone levels were also lowered. In our opinion, the androgenic deficiency in idiopathic hemochromatosis is not only caused by pituitary failure but also by testicular dysfunction due to deposits of hemosiderin and lipofuscin in the testes.
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PMID:Idiopathic hemochromatosis in a 45-year-old infertile man. 312 99

The diagnosis of primary cancer of the liver was reviewed in 75 patients. A definitive diagnosis was made during life in 63% and in a further 20% this condition was suspected though histological confirmation was obtained only at necropsy. The most common presenting complaints were abdominal pain and weight loss and the most frequent findings hepatomegaly and ascites. Less than one-half of the patients were jaundiced and when present it was usually mild. An arterial bruit was heard over the liver in 25% of the patients. A sudden and unexplained deterioration in a patient known to have cirrhosis or haemochromatosis should raise the possibility of a primary hepatic tumour; this occurred in 24% of our patients.Alpha-fetoprotein was found in the serum of 11 out of 18 cases. The presence of a mass in the liver was frequently confirmed by liver scan, portal venography, or hepatic arteriography, but these showed no features diagnostic of a primary tumour. Liver scan also proved useful in localizing the lesion for biopsy purposes. Definitive diagnosis is dependent on the histological demonstration of the features of the tumour. This can frequently be achieved by percutaneous needle biopsy, which was positive in 38 out of 57 patients. Wedge biopsies were positive in a further nine patients.
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PMID:Diagnosis of primary cancer of the liver. 512 43

The spleen was assessed in 10 patients with sickle cell disease studied with computed tomography (CT) for abdominal pain and/or unexplained fever. Patients with homozygous sickle cell anemia were found to have small, densely calcified spleens with occasional low-density infarcts. Five of six had hepatomegaly, and there was one case each of hepatic abscess, infarcts, and hemochromatosis. All patients with heterozygous sickle cell disease were found to have splenomegaly, with a variety of findings including acute hemorrhage, acute and chronic infarcts, rupture, and possible sequestration. It was concluded that CT is useful for evaluating the status of the spleen and liver in symptomatic patients with sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Computed tomography of the spleen and liver in sickle cell disease. 661 Oct 49

A 12-year-old girl with congenital dyserythropoietic anemia, type I, was diagnosed as having hemochromatosis. Deferoxamine was given subcutaneously for 14 months. Iron overload, as measured by liver iron and serum ferritin levels, was reduced substantially, liver function tests improved, and hepatomegaly decreased. Toxicity was negligible.
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PMID:Use of subcutaneous deferoxamine in a child with hemochromatosis associated with congenital dyserythropoietic anemia, type I. 707 63

Hepatic disease was diagnosed in 11 mynah birds. The most common clinical signs were dyspnea, weight loss, and abdominal swelling, usually accompanied by ascites. Radiography (9 birds) revealed hepatomegaly and ascites in most cases, and laboratory testing (6 birds) revealed hypoproteinemia and high activity of liver enzymes in all cases. Histologic examination (6 birds) revealed variable amounts of iron granule accumulation in hepatocytes, indicating hemochromatosis. Therapy consisted of administration of diuretics and abdominocentesis in dyspneic birds. All birds died, with survival time ranging from 1 day to 1 year.
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PMID:Hepatopathy associated with excessive iron storage in mynah birds. 732 6

We identified 35 homozygotes for hemochromatosis through pedigree studies. Thirteen were asymptomatic. Arthropathy was present in 20, hepatomegaly in 19, transaminasemia in 16, skin pigmentation in 15, splenomegaly in 14, cirrhosis in 14, hypogonadism in six, and diabetes in two. No homozygote was in congestive failure. Only one had the triad of hepatomegaly, hyperpigmentation, and diabetes. Serum iron was increased in 30 of 35, transferrin saturation was increased in all 35, serum ferritin in 23 of 32, urinary iron excretion after deferoxamine in 28 of 33, hepatic parenchymal cell stainable iron in 32 of 33, and hepatic iron in 27 of 27. Iron loading was 2.7 times greater in men than in women. No female had hepatic cirrhosis. Diagnosis of asymptomatic hemochromatosis is important because organ damage may be prevented by early therapy. Clinical diagnosis of early hemochromatosis is difficult. Persons with unexplained elevation of transferrin saturation should be studied for hemochromatosis.
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PMID:Homozygosity for hemochromatosis: clinical manifestations. 743 83


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