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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary (AL, amyloid light-chain) amyloidosis is a plasma cell disorder in which deposits of amyloid light-chain protein cause progressive organ failure. It is important to recognise that amyloidosis is a dynamic process and chemotherapy-induced reduction of the activity of the plasma cell clone reduces the supply of the amyloid precursor protein and can result in a major regression of the deposits. The most common target organ is the kidney and renal amyloidosis manifests as proteinuria or nephrotic syndrome. Proteinuria is seen in three quarters of patients. Amyloid related nephrotic syndrome and renal failure are potentially reversible. Fatigue, congestive heart failure,
hepatomegaly
,
peripheral neuropathy
, orthostatic hypotension, carpal tunnel syndrome and macroglossia are other common features. The median survival is one to two years. Conventional-dose melphalan as standard treatment can prolong the median duration of survival by about ten months, but the clinical response rates with improvement of impaired organ function are low. Up-front high-dose chemotherapy with autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation is much more effective and can result in a major improvement in the clinical condition of patients. However, the toxicity related to this treatment can be relevant due to impaired organ function. Conventional-dose chemotherapy consisting of vincristine, doxorubicin and dexamethasone or high-dose dexamethasone or interferon-alpha are other possible approaches to treatment. The improvement of patient condition with an effective conventional-dose chemotherapy may increase the tolerability of high-dose chemotherapy and reduce transplantation related problems.
...
PMID:Novel approaches to the treatment of primary amyloidosis. 1106 Aug 11
The proband is a 50 year-old woman born from a consanguineous marriage. She has been suffering from angina pectoris since the age of 38 and underwent coronary bypass surgery for three-vessel disease at 48. The presence of low plasma levels of total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (2.4 and 0.1 mmol/l) and apo AI (<15 mg/dl), associated with corneal lesions and a mild splenomegaly suggested the diagnosis of Tangier disease. However, none of the other features of Tangier disease, including
hepatomegaly
, anemia and
peripheral neuropathy
, were present. The analysis of the dinucleotide microsatellites located in chromosome 9q31 region demonstrated that the proband was homozygous for the alleles of D9S53, D9S1784 and D9S1832. The mother and son of the proband, both with low levels of HDL cholesterol, shared one of the proband's haplotypes, whereas neither of these haplotypes was present in the normolipidemic proband's sister. The sequence of ATP-binding cassette transporter 1 (ABC1-1) cDNA obtained by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) of total RNA isolated from cultured fibroblasts showed that the proband was homozygous for a C>T transition in exon 13, which caused a tryptophane for arginine substitution (R527W). This mutation was confirmed by direct sequencing of exon 13 amplified from genomic DNA. It can be easily screened, as the nucleotide change introduces a restriction site for the enzyme Afl III. R527W substitution occurs in a highly conserved region of the NH2 cytoplasmic domain of ABC1 protein. R527W co-segregates with the low HDL phenotype in the family and was not found in 200 chromosomes from normolipidemic individuals.
...
PMID:A point mutation in ABC1 gene in a patient with severe premature coronary heart disease and mild clinical phenotype of Tangier disease. 1125 60
Patients with unexplained heart failure,
hepatomegaly
, nephrotic syndrome, or
peripheral neuropathy
should be evaluated for primary systemic (amyloid light-chain, or AL) amyloidosis by first seeking evidence of a clonal plasma cell disorder with serum and urine immunofixation studies, as well as a bone marrow biopsy. Immunostaining of the marrow biopsy for lambda and kappa isotypes will usually demonstrate a dominant clonal population of plasma cells if immunofixation studies are negative (less than 10% of cases). Tissue diagnosis of amyloidosis should be sought by biopsy of the abdominal fat or an involved organ. In addition, patients with stable myeloma or monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance who develop such conditions or become progressively ill should be evaluated for amyloidosis. We recommend that newly diagnosed patients with AL amyloidosis, who meet criteria for autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation, be considered for high-dose melphalan with stem cell support. Criteria usually include adequate cardiac, pulmonary, and hepatic function. AL amyloidosis patients treated with autologous transplantation frequently achieve durable complete remissions of the plasma cell disease and marked improvement in amyloid-related organ dysfunction. AL amyloidosis patients with dominant cardiac amyloid, who are without symptomatic pleural effusions and have no history of cardiac syncope or symptomatic arrhythmias, may be considered for autologous transplantation but are at increased risk of peritransplant mortality. Autologous transplantation should not routinely be offered to patients with dominant cardiac amyloid with recurrent effusions or histories of syncope or arrhythmias or to patients older than 50 years of age with more than two major organ systems involved (eg, heart, kidneys, liver, and peripheral nerves). We recommend that AL patients with isolated advanced cardiac or hepatic amyloidosis be considered for solid organ replacement followed by autologous transplantation. Otherwise, AL patients who are elderly or ineligible for autologous transplantation may be treated with oral melphalan (Alkeran, GlaxoWellcome, Middlesex, UK) and prednisone; however, because the response rate is only about 25% and the prognosis poor, such patients might also be enrolled on clinical trials of emerging therapies.
...
PMID:Primary systemic amyloidosis. 1205 64
Primary amyloidosis is a plasma cell dyscrasia in which insoluble immunoglobulin light chain fragments are produced and polymerize into fibrils that deposit extracellularly, causing visceral organ dysfunction and death. The disorder is rare. Its recognition requires understanding the association between nephrotic syndrome, cardiomyopathy,
peripheral neuropathy
, and
hepatomegaly
with amyloidosis. The most important screening test for amyloidosis is immunofixation of the serum and urine to detect a monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain. All patients need the diagnosis confirmed histologically. The least invasive source of tissue for amyloid detection is the subcutaneous fat. The most important prognostic factor is whether there is cardiac involvement, which is best assessed by echocardiography with Doppler studies. Therapies used include oral melphalan/prednisone and high-dose corticosteroids. High-dose chemotherapy followed by stem cell reconstitution seems to provide the highest reported response rates. Transplant is associated with unique morbidities not seen in the transplantation of patients with other hematologic malignancies.
...
PMID:Primary systemic amyloidosis. 1205 72
Amyloidosis is an uncommon plasma-cell dyscrasia with an incidence of eight patients per million per year. It is often difficult to recognize because of the myriad symptoms and vague nature of the clinical presentation. Symptoms include fatigue, dyspnea, edema, paresthesias, and weight loss. Clinical syndromes at presentation include nephrotic-range proteinuria with or without renal insufficiency, cardiomyopathy,
hepatomegaly
, symptomatic
peripheral neuropathy
, and autonomic failure. Recent advances have occurred in evaluation of patients by using the free light chain assay and new prognostic assessments with cardiac biomarkers. Newly developed therapeutic strategies, involving high-dose and intermediate-dose chemotherapy, have evolved in the last 3 years. This paper reviews a diagnostic pathway clinicians can use to diagnose the disorder, assess a patient's prognosis, and logically plan a therapeutic strategy.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis. 1602 46
Amyloidosis is a rare plasma cell proliferative disorder. The annual incidence in Olmsted County, Minnesota, is 8 in 1,000,000 patients. This is a difficult disorder to diagnose, because the symptoms at presentation are vague and include dyspnea, paresthesias, edema, weight loss, and fatigue. The clinical syndromes at the time of presentation include nephrotic-range proteinuria with or without renal failure, cardiomyopathy, "atypical multiple myeloma,"
hepatomegaly
, and autonomic or
peripheral neuropathy
. The serum immunoglobulin free light chain assay has been an important step forward in classifying systemic amyloidosis as an immunoglobulin light chain form and in monitoring therapy. Recently, the importance of serum cardiac biomarkers in assessing outcome has been recognized. New therapies developed over the past 5 years include high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell reconstitution, combinations of alkylating agents with dexamethasone, and, most recently, thalidomide.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis: diagnosis and management. 1635 26
Primary amyloidosis is a systemic disorder caused by the clonal production and tissue deposition of immunoglobulin light chain proteins. The disease symptoms are typical of multisystem failure. Common presenting features include nephrotic syndrome,
hepatomegaly
, sensomotor
peripheral neuropathy
and, in the case of cardiac involvement, congestive heart failure. This last sign appears very seldom as alone, without any others. Cardiac involvement generally denotes a poor prognosis, regardless of the method of treatment. The median survival rate from onset of congestive heart failure is 6 months. Only the patients with earliest diagnosis made and advanced treatment (chemotherapy, autologous stem-cell transplantation, heart transplantation) introduced have the chance of the lengthening of life. The authors present a case of 52-year-old man with a primary amyloidosis, who suffered from severe, not responding to treatment, congestive heart failure. Because of lack of the other organ involvement symptoms, the correct diagnosis was made very late. The authors place emphasis on a simple diagnostic tool such as the correlation between the low voltage in the limb ECG leads and the echocardiographic sings of left ventricular hypertrophy. The combination of specific ECG, echocardiographic findings and positive extracardiac tissue biopsy may be sufficient to reach correct diagnosis. These examinations are easy accessible in non-specialist hospitals.
...
PMID:[Primary cardiac amyloidosis -- condition which can be diagnosed by a cardiologist]. 1675 38
Arsenicosis is a multisystem disorder, with virtually no system spared from its vicious claw; though its predominant manifestations are linked to cutaneous involvement. Cutaneous effects take the form of pigmentary changes, hyperkeratosis, and skin cancers (Bowen's disease, squamous cell carcinoma, and basal cell epithelioma). Peripheral vascular disease (blackfoot disease), hypertension, ischemic heart disease, noncirrhotic portal hypertension,
hepatomegaly
,
peripheral neuropathy
, respiratory and renal involvement, bad obstetrical outcome, hematological disturbances, and diabetes mellitus are among the other clinical features linked to arsenic toxicity. The effects are mediated principally by the trivalent form of arsenic (arsenite), which by its ability to bind with sulfhydryl groups present in various essential compounds leads to inactivation and derangement of body function. Though the toxicities are mostly linked to the trivalent state, arsenic is consumed mainly in its pentavalent form (arsenate), and reduction of arsenate to arsenite is mediated through glutathione. Body attempts to detoxify the agent via repeated oxidative methylation and reduction reaction, leading to the generation of methylated metabolites, which are excreted in the urine. Understandably the detoxification/bio-inactivation process is not a complete defense against the vicious metalloid, and it can cause chromosomal aberration, impairment of DNA repair process, alteration in the activity of tumor suppressor gene, etc., leading to genotoxicity and carcinogenicity. Arsenic causes apoptosis via free radical generation, and the cutaneous toxicity is linked to its effect on various cytokines (e.g., IL-8, TGF-beta, TNF-alpha, GM-CSF), growth factors, and transcription factors. Increased expression of cytokeratins, keratin-16 (marker for hyperproliferation) and keratin-8 and -18 (marker for less differentiated epithelial cells), can be related to the histopathological findings of hyperkeratosis and dysplastic cells in the arsenicosis skin lesion.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis, clinical features and pathology of chronic arsenicosis. 1917 78
Immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis is a protein deposition disorder where the precursor protein represents a monoclonal immunoglobulin light or heavy chain. Deposition in viscera results in restrictive cardiomyopathy, nephrotic range proteinuria, demyelinating
peripheral neuropathy
,
hepatomegaly
and malabsorption syndrome. Diagnosis requires biopsy with Congo red staining. Invasive biopsies are not required generally. It is essential that after a histologic diagnosis is obtained, the tissue is validated to have an immunoglobulin light chain composition so patients are spared unnecessary chemotherapy. The disease prognosis and patient monitoring are linked to serialized measurement of cardiac biomarkers and immunoglobulin-free light chains. Most patients require cytotoxic chemotherapy. For some patients, this therapy involves stem cell collection and myeloablative chemotherapy; for others, chemotherapy includes an alkylator and a corticosteroid; and for some, it involves addition of a novel agent in the form of an immunomodulatory drug or a proteasome inhibitor. Delays in diagnosis continue to be an obstacle to initiating effective therapy. Early mortality rates remain high. Effective chemotherapy can result in reversal of organ dysfunction and recovery. Reductions in light chain production translate to improved survival.
...
PMID:How to manage primary amyloidosis. 2186 40
POEMS syndrome is a rare paraneoplastic syndrome due to a plasma cell dyscrasia, which includes
peripheral neuropathy
, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal plasma cell proliferation and skin changes. Elevated levels of VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) in the serum of patients are suggested to play a pivotal role in the pathophysiology. A 60-year-old male presented with POEMS syndrome and painful edema, skin thickening of the distal extremities and livid-erythematous discoloration. The sclerotic changes resulted in a severe limitation of joint flexibility. Furthermore, the patient showed clubbing, white nails and a facial lipoatrophy. In addition to the skin changes, the patient was diagnosed with polyneuropathy, monoclonal gammopathy (type lambda), high elevated VEGF-levels,
hepatomegaly
, lymphadenopathy, hypothyreosis, hypogonadism and thrombocytosis in the course of POEMS syndrome. Treatment with 4 cycles of bortezomib and dexamethasone resulted in improvement of symptoms.
...
PMID:[POEMS syndrome. An interdisciplinary clinical challenge]. 2191 31
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