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)

Hepatomegaly and steatosis are common findings in children with cystic fibrosis and are most often attributed to malnutrition. An infant fed a carnitine-free soy formula is described. Massive hepatomegaly and steatosis developed in the baby at a time of severe viral respiratory illness, prolonged fasting, hypoglycemia, and hypoketonuria. The infant was found to have secondary plasma carnitine deficiency and excessive loss of carnitine in the urine as part of a more generalized renal tubular dysfunction accompanying vitamin D deficiency and secondary hyperparathyroidism. With correction of the metabolic abnormalities and institution of a high carnitine diet, the hepatomegaly disappeared, plasma carnitine returned to normal levels, and the renal carnitine loss ceased. The findings suggest that secondary carnitine deficiency may play a role in fatty infiltration of the liver in patients with cystic fibrosis, especially during times of severe fasting stress.
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PMID:Massive hepatomegaly, steatosis, and secondary plasma carnitine deficiency in an infant with cystic fibrosis. 202 May 30

A 11.5 month-old girl with recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia and lactic acidosis was identified as having fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency. The diagnosis may be realised with a simple way by an oral fructose tolerance test and the activity dosage of this enzyme in white blood cells. The fructose and sucrose-free diet and avoidance of prolonged fasting resulted in a decrease of hepatomegaly and normal values of lactate between the episodes.
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PMID:[Hypoglycemia and hyperlactacidemia in relation with a new case of fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency. Determination of enzymatic activity in leukocytes]. 301 28

3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A lyase deficiency (HMG-CoA lyase) is an inborn error of leucine catabolism which often leads to life-threatening illness in the neonatal period. The cardinal clinical features include severe infantile hypoglycemia, metabolic acidosis, hepatomegaly, lethargy or coma and apnea. Hyperammonemia is variable. There is a characteristic absence of ketosis. Considerable heterogeneity has been observed in clinical and biochemical presentation. Acute episodes of illness have been mistaken for Reye syndrome. The pattern of organic acids in the urine includes large amounts of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaric, 3-methyl-glutaconic, 3-methylglutaric and 3-hydroxyisovaleric acids. Smaller, but appreciable levels of glutaric, adipic and other dicarboxylic acids may also be excreted in the urine. Lactic acid may be present in sizable amounts at times of acute illness. The primary defect is a deficiency of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A lyase, a key enzyme in the cycle of ketogenesis.
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PMID:3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A lyase deficiency: review of 18 reported patients. 306 29

In order to study the long term outcome of hepatic glycogen storage diseases, a national retrospective inquiry gathered 76 patients older than 12 years. In adolescents and adults, hypoglycemia, failure to thrive, pubertal delay, hepatomegaly and metabolic disturbances are major in type I, intermediary in type III and mild in type "VI+IX". Spontaneous improvement of these symptoms is noted in older patients. Beside these classical signs, anemia, high blood pressure, renal failure and persistent hypercholesterolemia were reported in some type I glycogen storage disease and bad school and professional results in type III. The knowledge of these complications should lead to a better management of these patients.
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PMID:[Long-term course of hepatic glycogenosis. A retrospective study of 76 cases]. 306 69

Depending on its etiology hypoglycemia appears after short or prolonged periods of fasting and shows different metabolite and hormonal patterns. In children it is caused by a disturbed homoeostasis of blood glucose (hormonal disorders, decreased activity of glycogenolysis or gluconeogenesis), by a primarily decreased ketogenic activity, or by a deranged adjustment of ketogenesis and carbohydrate metabolism. For the diagnostic procedure the age at manifestation, periods of fasting as well as signs and symptoms (f.e. hepatomegaly, growth retardation, somnolence) have to be carefully evaluated. Based on the extent of ketonemia the hypoglycemic syndromes can be classified into ketotic and hypoketotic forms. Hyperinsulinism, defects in fatty acid oxydation, glycogen storage disease I and postprandial hypoglycemias belong to the second category. In diagnosing hypoglycemia analysis of metabolite (glucose, lactate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, free fatty acids, carnitine) and hormonal (insulin, cortisol, growth hormone) patterns during hypoglycemic episodes is of outstanding importance. Urine has to be analysed for abnormal organic acids in order to demonstrate disturbed fatty acid oxydation. Rarely, loading tests with intermediates of carbohydrate metabolism are necessary. Suspected enzyme deficiencies have to be demonstrated in appropriate tissues (liver biopsy, erythrocytes, fibroblasts).
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PMID:[Diagnostic procedures in pediatric hypoglycemias]. 307 Mar 65

Four infants had noninfectious intractable diarrhea, vomiting, anasarca, hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, and malnutrition within the first 3 months of life. Their parents originated from the same Northeastern part of Quebec, and consanguinity was found in two kindreds. Diarrhea was secretory in three infants (mean stool volume 87 ml/kg/day, Na+ 108 mEq/L, Cl- 85 mEq/L). Hypoalbuminemia (mean 2.0 gm/dl), present in all infants, appeared to be secondary to a protein-losing enteropathy, which was documented in two infants. Histologic examination of the upper small intestine showed only mild to moderate villous atrophy. The remarkable findings were those of cystic dilation of the crypts and acute inflammation of crypts and lamina propria, all of which were most prominent in the colon and terminal ileum; the changes were progressive over time. Mild lymphangiectasia was found in all of the patients. Congenital hepatic fibrosis, present in all, was associated in one patient with a nonfunctional multicystic kidney. Prolonged total parenteral nutrition, intravenously administered albumin, antisecretory agents, and antibiotics were unsuccessful in controlling the disease. Although a total colectomy was followed by a temporary decrease in stool output and normalization of serum albumin concentration in one infant, the patients died between 4 and 21 months of age.
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PMID:Secretory diarrhea with protein-losing enteropathy, enterocolitis cystica superficialis, intestinal lymphangiectasia, and congenital hepatic fibrosis: a new syndrome. 308 May 72

A 3-month-old girl presented with anorexia, failure to thrive and drowsiness. She was mildly icteric with hepatomegaly and peripheral oedema. Disordered liver function tests were associated with the biopsy appearances of a giant cell hepatitis and with a Fanconi syndrome. At the age of 16 weeks she collapsed with profound hypoglycaemia. Fasting also provoked hypoglycaemia with lactic acidaemia. She became increasingly irritable and hypotonic and, although initially liver and renal function improved, she deteriorated and died of hepatocellular failure and septicaemia. A post-mortem revealed massive fatty degeneration of the liver. The activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in her cultured skin fibroblasts was 16% of controls. Her brother died at the age of 4 weeks of sudden infant death syndrome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase deficiency. 308 95

Hepatic glycogenosis, heterogeneous in their type, appear in children as an hepatomegaly discovered during manifestations of hypoglycemia and/or growth disorders, sometimes in the course of a systematic physical examination. A usually late puberty determines a transient aggravation of the height insufficiency. Persistence of a marked hepatomegaly and the development of lever adenomas are characteristic of type I glycogenosis. There, the metabolic imbalance (hyperlipoproteinemia and hyperuricemia, especially), lead to severe vascular and renal complications. Haematologic and sometimes infectious disorders may be added. In type III glycogenosis, the danger depends less on the liver fibrosis, usually minimal, than on the frequently associated cardio-vascular involvement. Type VI glycogenosis, usually have a favorable course. Current therapeutic progresses and a better care should result in a marked improvement of the evolution in type I and probably type III.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of hepatic glycogenoses]. 316 8

A four-month-old boy affected by glycogen storage disease type I is presented. The child suffered from hepatomegaly, lactic acidosis, fasting hypoglycemia and failure to thrive. He had repeated infectious and cyclic neutropenia. Immunoglobulin and chemotactic neutrophil motility was impaired. Liver biopsy showed increased amounts of glycogen in hepatic cells as assessed by morphological and biochemical grounds. The activity of glucose-6-phosphatase as well as other glycogenolytic enzymes was normal in the frozen liver. The aforementioned characteristics suggested the diagnosis of glycogen storage disease type Ib. The child was first treated by enteral continuous feeding and later on by frequent meals during the daytime and enteral continuous feeding during the night time, improving the hypoglycemia as well as the other biochemical and metabolic abnormalities.
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PMID:[Present-day status of glycogenosis Ib. Report of a new case]. 319 58

In the past 10 years we have examined 20 children with inflammatory liver disease associated with high serum titers of anti-liver-kidney microsome antibody (anti-LKM). The first hepatic symptoms were progressive fatigue and jaundice, the fortuitous finding of hepatomegaly or splenomegaly with raised transaminase activity, or an acute hepatitis-like illness. At the time of diagnosis, hepatomegaly was present in 18 children, splenomegaly in 16, jaundice in nine, and ascites in two. Serum alanine transferase activities were elevated in all but two, who had already received steroids. Serum total gammaglobulin values were greater than 2.0 gm/dl in 16 children, prothrombin activity less than or equal to 60% in six, and serum titer of anti-LKM between 1:100 and 1:100,000. All children but one had cirrhosis, and histologic signs of aggressivity were present in 14. In 11 children one or more extrahepatic diseases were present, including type 1 diabetes, vitiligo, glomerulonephritis, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, hypoglycemia with hyperinsulinism, autoimmune thyroiditis, chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis with hypoparathyroidism, and multiple cutaneous and visceral telangiectasias. Treatment with prednisone and azathioprine improved the liver condition in 16 of the 18 patients given treatment. In eight of them discontinuation of treatment resulted in rapid relapse; 14 are still receiving treatment and have stable hepatic function with follow-up from 8 months to 6 1/2 years. Only two are free of treatment. Four children died, two in spite of immunosuppressive therapy, one during a relapse, and one of extrahepatic disease. These results indicate that this autoimmune inflammatory liver disease may have onset early in life, with several clinical patterns; is frequently associated with certain types of extrahepatic manifestations of autoimmune origin; and is a potentially fatal disease for which immunosuppressive treatment must be started early.
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PMID:Liver disease associated with anti-liver-kidney microsome antibody in children. 395 Aug 19


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