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)

The effect of ES upon hematopoiesis was studied following 4 to 24 weeks of administration in adult female mice. ES produced osteosclerosis, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly with an increase in splenic erythropoiesis mild anemai, and a relatively stable, moderately severe neutropenia. Intact and splenectomized mice failed to develop hepatic hematopoiesis to compensate for these blood changes. The neutropenia was characterized by a proportionally normal-sized marginal granulocyte pool and a reduced marrow granulocyte reserve in the marrow, cellularity, peroxidase-positive cells. CFU-S, and CFU-GM declined during 4 to 12 weeks of study in the same study period, splenic granulocytopoiesis increased as measured by these perameters, but it only partially compensated for the neutropenia. CSA was present in serum, and no inhibitors of in vitro granulocytopoiesis were detected. The direct addition of E3S to normal murine marrow cells in vitro failed to inhibit CFU=GM proliferation. Daily ES administration failed to inhibit in vivo granulocytopoiesis in diffusion chambers. These studies suggest that ES-induced neutropenia is not due to direct inhibition of CFU-S or CFU-GM proliferation or differentiation to mature granulocytes and by implication, suggest that it may be mediated through effects on the hematopoietic microenvironment.
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PMID:Estrogens and hematopoiesis: characterization and studies on the mechanism of neutropenia. 696 70

21 patients (10 male, 11 female) aged between 11 months and 29 years with Shwachman's syndrome are reviewed. All patients had exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. Haematological features included neutropenia in 19 (95%), anaemia in 10 (50%), and thrombocytopenia in 14 (70%); one patient developed erythroleukaemia. Severe infections occurred in 17 (85%) from which 3 (15%) died. Only one child exceeded the 3rd centile for height, and growth retardation was particularly evident in the older patients. All had skeletal abnormalities or delayed skeletal maturation, or both. Metaphyseal dyschondroplasia affected 13 of the older patients and was associated with skeletal deformities. Eight of 9 children under 2 1/2 years had rib abnormalities. Respiratory function tests in children under 2 years demonstrated reduced thoracic gas volume and chest wall compliance. Older patients had reduced forced expiratory volume and forced vital capacity. Neurological assessment showed developmental retardation or reduced IQ assessments, or both, in 85% of patients studied. Other neurological abnormalities included hypotonia, deafness, and retinitis pigmentosa. Neonatal problems had been present in 16 (80%) of the patients and 5 were of low birthweights. Hepatomegaly with biochemical evidence of liver involvement occurred in the younger patients and resolved with age. Other associated features included dental abnormalities, renal dysfunction, an icthyotic maculopapular rash in 13 (65%), delayed puberty, diabetes mellitus, and various dysmorphic features. These findings stress the diverse manifestations of the syndrome and extend knowledge on a number of aspects. Sibship segregation ratios support an autosomal mode of inheritance and an hypothesis for the pathophysiological basis of this syndrome is advanced.
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PMID:Shwachman's syndrome. A review of 21 cases. 743 69

Glycogen storage disease type 1b is a rare metabolic disorder which affects the transport system of glucose-6-phosphatase metabolism. As a result, hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, renal dysfunction and recurrent infections occur in affected patients. In this paper, the oral complications in three children with glycogen storage disease type 1b are discussed. Oral ulcers were a common finding, probably due to severe neutropenia and impaired neutrophil migration which characterises the onset of this rare disorder.
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PMID:Oral manifestations in glycogen storage disease type 1b. 777 66

This report describes the clinical spectrum and outcome of the hemophagocytic syndrome (HS) in 5 HIV infected patients. All 5 patients presented with fever, hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly, confusion or coma and respiratory symptoms. Severe anemia was associated with thrombocytopenia and with neutropenia in 4 cases. Diffuse intravascular coagulopathy was present in 2 cases. Liver function tests were abnormal in three patients. The diagnosis of HS was made 2 to 12 weeks after the onset of symptoms and required in most patients repeated examinations of the bone-marrow, showing infiltration by histiocytes with prominent phagocytosis of blood cells. In one case this infiltration was not seen in the bone-marrow but only in the liver and the spleen. Varicella, mycobacterium infection, oesophageal candidiasis, Kaposi sarcoma were observed in the evolution of 3 patients. Anaplastic large cell Ki-1 lymphoma was present in one case. Four patients died as a result of complications of HS. The one patient with lymphoma survived.
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PMID:[Hemophagocytic syndrome in HIV infection]. 824 41

A male child presented at 5 months of age with vomiting, diarrhoea, hypoglycaemia and hepatomegaly. Histology on a frozen liver biopsy suggested glycogen storage disease (GSD), while biochemical analyses confirmed an elevated glycogen content and normal activities of the GSD enzymes with the proviso that a variant of GSD 1 should be considered. The patient presented at 9 months of age with severe lactic acidosis and hypoglycaemia. A glucagon tolerance test and galactose load test on the patient produced no glycaemic response. A second biopsy was obtained and appropriately handled for the investigation of variants of the glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme (G6Pase) complex. Results showed that the patient had a deficiency of two transport proteins of the G6Pase complex, namely glucose-6-phosphate translocase and pyrophosphate translocase, i.e. GSD 1b/1c beta. These results were confirmed by additional kinetic analyses which provided confirmation of the double translocase deficiency. Evidence for inhibitors to these translocases was not found. The patient's treatment has resulted in the hypoglycaemia now being well controlled; however, at 3 years of age, height and weight are markedly lagging and he is moderately developmentally delayed. Neutropenia has not been found and neutrophil function is normal. Double enzyme deficiencies are very rare and possible explanations which might lead to this phenotype are considered. This, to the authors' knowledge, is the first report of a double translocase deficiency causing GSD type 1.
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PMID:Multiple transport protein defects in a patient with glycogen storage disease type 1: GSD 1b/1c beta. 859 36

A 7-month-old infant presented at a tertiary centre with a 6-day history of a skin rash, fever and diarrhoea. Clinical features included pyrexia, kwashiorkor, extensive ulcerating skin lesions suggestive of ecthyma gangrenosum, hepatomegaly, meningismus, neutropenia and iron deficiency anaemia. Blood and skin aspirate cultures yielded a positive growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Apart from severe protein energy malnutrition, no other causes of immunodeficiency were found. He responded well to parenteral antibiotic therapy with gentamicin and piperacillin.
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PMID:Community-acquired Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in an infant. 889 49

A 41-year-old patient with dermatitis herpetiformis (DH) developed steroid-resistant blebs as a sign of exacerbating DH. The skin symptoms were resolved after 2 weeks of oral administration of diaminodiphenyl sulphone (DDS). However, 3 weeks after the start of DDS, he suffered from edematous eruption on the cheeks and neck, enlargement of the pharynx, systemic lymphoadenopathy and hepatomegaly. In addition, his leukocyte count increased rapidly from 10.1 x 10(9)/l with 13% monocytes just before the start of DDS, to 24.6 x 10(9)/l with 28% monocytes. Bone marrow aspirate showed trilineage dysplasia and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) was diagnosed. The patient died from septic shock during neutropenia following cytotoxic chemotherapy. In this case, CMML was complicated with DH and the administration of DDS accelerated the progression of CMML with the manifestations of DDS syndrome. Although DDS is a well-established drug for DH, DDS should be used with great caution when a hematological malignancy coexists.
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PMID:Rapid progression of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia following diaminodiphenyl sulphone treatment for dermatitis herpetiformis. 940 Dec 85

In an attempt to evaluate various clinical and laboratory features available within 24 h of admission, prior to the Widal test and bacteriological culture results as potential diagnostic aids in typhoid fever, we undertook a retrospective unit-based case control study in 90 febrile adult and paediatric patients admitted to King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban, South Africa with an initial diagnosis of typhoid fever. A total of 30 blood culture-proven typhoid fever patients (cases) were matched to 60 patients confirmed as not having typhoid fever (controls) by age, sex, race and severity of illness on admission. Features significantly associated with a final diagnosis of typhoid fever were: a pre-admission duration of fever > or = 7 days (odds ratio (OR) 6.9); hepatomegaly (OR 3.2); a normal leucocyte count (OR 10.8); a leucocyte count of < 10.0 x 10(3)/mm3 (OR 30.2); and leucopenia due to absolute neutropenia with a relative lymphocytosis (OR 11.8). Although the sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of any of these features cannot be used reliably to distinguish typhoid fever from other non-typhoidal febrile illness, it is concluded that leucopenia due to absolute neutropenia with relative lymphocytosis, when present, is highly suggestive of typhoid fever. A leucocyte count of > 10.0 x 10(3)/mm3 (OR 0.03) provides strong presumptive evidence against such a diagnosis.
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PMID:The early diagnosis of typhoid fever prior to the Widal test and bacteriological culture results. 958 36

The microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) complex regulates the final step in glucose production from glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis. Glycogen storage disease type 1c (GSD-1c) results from deficient activity of the phosphate/ pyrophosphate transporter of this complex and is associated with neutropenia as well as hepatomegaly and hypoglycaemia. Using three affected subjects from a single highly consanguineous family, we have used homozygosity mapping to localise the gene responsible for GSD-1c to a 10.2 cM region on 11q23.3-24.2. The maximum lod score was 3.12. GSD-1c is therefore distinct from GSD-1a, which has been shown previously to be caused by mutations in the G6Pase gene on chromosome 17.
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PMID:Localisation of the gene for glycogen storage disease type 1c by homozygosity mapping to 11q. 959 17

Type Ib glycogenosis is a rare glycogen storage disorder resulting from a defect in the enzyme, glucose-6-phosphatase microsomal translocase. We report a case of Type Ib glycogenosis in an 18 month-old male child who presented with a history of hypoglycemic seizures and recurrent infections and had a massive hepatomegaly, recurrent hypoglycemia, hyperuricemia, hypertriglyceridemia, neutropenia and fasting lactacidemia which decreased sharply on glucose administration.
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PMID:Type Ib glycogenosis. 1077 88


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