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)

Peliosis hepatis, an uncommon liver lesion characterised by blood-filled cavities bordered by hepatocytic plates, was found in 12 patients three to 17 months after renal transplantation. Hepatomegaly and portal hypertension were present in five of the six patients with major peliosis hepatis, and were absent in the other six with minor hepatic lesions. Alterations of centrilobular vein walls in some of these patients suggest that peliosis hepatis could be the result of a blockade or liver blood outflow at the junctions of sinusoids and centrilobular veins. The cause of these alterations might be azathioprine.
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PMID:Peliosis hepatis in recipients of renal transplants. 35 72

A study of liver abnormalities in 36 patients with mixed cryoglobulinemia in the absence of underlying infectious, connective tissue, or lymphoproliferative disorders revealed clinical or biochemical evidence of liver dysfunction in 84%. Hepatomegaly was detected in 77%, splenomegaly in 54%, and abnormalities in bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, or serum glutamic oxalacetic transaminase in 77%. Only four of the patients had overt liver disease. Of 15 biopsies from 12 patients, there was normal tissue structure in two, minimal nonspecific changes in one, portal fibrosis in three, chronic persistent hepatitis in one, chronic active hepatitis in two, chronic active hepatitis with cirrhosis in four, and postnecrotic cirrhosis in two. These findings, together with the previously reported high incidence of serologic evidence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, support the view that the syndrome of purpura, arthritis, and nephritis is often a consequence of immune-complex vasculitis secondary to HBV infection.
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PMID:Liver involvement in the syndrome of mixed cryoglobulinemia. 90 Jun 72

No more than 150 cases of neonatal leukemia had been reported in the literature. Seven additional cases are reported herein. The incidence of neonatal leukemia has been of one in 50,000. Its incidence among the group of neonates requiring hospitalization has been of 0.075%. The seven neonates with leukemia consist of five males and two females. Two of them had an associated Down's syndrome. Abdominal distension, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, cutaneous manifestations and purpura were the most frequent clinical findings in our patients. Severe anemia was present in only three patients. Thrombocytopenia was recognized in six of them. A high white blood cell count was present in five patients. The number of blast cells in their peripheral blood smear ranged between 16 and 100%. A remarkable myeloid dominance was observed. One patient died two hours after birth and his diagnosis was made at autopsy. Three patients were diagnosed before the age of three weeks. The three patients with myeloid leukemia were treated with DNR and Ara-C. A complete hematological remission was achieved in two of them. One patient died of a Pn. carinii pneumonia one month after the remission was induced. The remainder patient of this group had a Down's syndrome and the leukemia had been confirmed by hepatic biopsy. After two years of maintenance with Ara-C and Thioguanine he is alive and both, peripheral blood and bone marrow, remains normal. A lymphocitic leukemia was seen in only two patients. One was treated with prednisolone and VCR, and the other with prednisolone, VR and L-Asp. In both cases a good response to the chemotherapy was observed. Autopsy was performed in all patients who died but one. The pathological findings are analyzed. The low survival among patients with neonatal leukemia may be influenced by the toxic side effects of the used chemotherapy. All aspects of the medical treatment including drugs of choice and the usefullness of isolation devices are further discussed.
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PMID:[Neonatal leukemia. Report of seven cases (author's transl)]. 106 63

Four women of fertile age on long-term treatment with contraceptive steroids developed moderate liver damage and hepatomegaly. The liver histology showed a conspicuous periportal sinusoidal dilatation as the only abnormality. The clinical course of the liver damage was benign. The aetiology and pathogenic mechanisms of these changes, which were localized predominantly to Rappaport's Zone I, are unknown. Haemodynamic studies revealed no abnormalities. The connection to possible long-term action of oestrogens and gestagens on the liver, and the relation to peliosis and benign hepatic adenomas, are discussed.
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PMID:Liver disease with periportal sinusoidal dilatation. A possible complication to contraceptive steroids. 118 3

In order to determine the extent of liver abnormalities occurring during acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, the available histological analyses of liver samples (32 biopsies, 52 autopsies) from 71 AIDS patients, for the period 1982-1986, were studied retrospectively. Hepatomegaly was the most common clinical symptom (23 patients, 32.4%), while jaundice was rare, being seen in only 5 cases (7%). Progressive anicteric cholestasis was the most frequently observed biological anomaly (29/52, 55.7%). Ten patients had liver infections: 2 Mycobacterium tuberculosis, 8 Mycobacterium avium intracellulare. Cytomegalovirus was present in 3 patients and 1 individual was infected with Cryptococcus neoformans. Granulomatous hepatitis was associated with these infectious agents in 11 patients, but remained unexplained in 11 others. Three patients had cholangitis (2 with CMV inclusions, 1 unexplained). Among the 32 biopsies, 5 elucidated the origin of unexplained fever. Kaposi's sarcoma of the liver was found in 10/52 autopsy samples (19%) and hepatic lymphoma in 2 cases. Non-specific histological lesions were common: inflammation of the portal spaces (48 cases, 67.6%), steatosis (32 patients, 45%), peliosis hepatis (9 cases, 12.6%) and sinusoidal dilations (39 cases, 54.9%).
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PMID:[Hepatic involvement in AIDS. A retrospective clinical study in 71 patients]. 217 55

Vasculitis may accompany rheumatoid arthritis. One must distinguish between vascular involvement associated with the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis, isolated digital vasculitis, and the syndrome of clinical rheumatoid vasculitis. The cause of clinical rheumatoid vasculitis is unknown. High titers of rheumatoid factor, cryoglobulins, diminished circulating complement, an increased prevalence of HLA-DR4, and the pathologic findings suggest an immune etiology. However, similar, but perhaps less pronounced, abnormalities occur in uncomplicated rheumatoid arthritis, and these findings are not universal in complicating vasculitis. Classic cutaneous clinical manifestations include ischemic ulcers, digital gangrene, and palpable purpura. Mononeuritis multiplex is another classic presentation of rheumatoid vasculitis. Small digital infarctions may accompany other manifestations in clinical vasculitis or may occur alone as isolated digital arteritis, in which case the prognosis is relatively favorable. Weight loss, pleuritis, pericarditis, ocular inflammation, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, and Felty's syndrome have also been reported in association with rheumatoid vasculitis. Although renal involvement has been considered unusual in rheumatoid vasculitis, several studies suggest that this may be more common than previously recognized. Ideally, a biopsy or an angiogram confirms the diagnosis of rheumatoid vasculitis, but often the diagnosis rests upon the clinical picture. In general, blind biopsies are not helpful, although one series indicated that a blind rectal biopsy may be an exception to this rule. An elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, increased C-reactive protein level, anemia, thrombocytosis, hypoalbuminemia, and a positive rheumatoid factor are common laboratory findings. Leukocytosis, hypergammaglobinemia, leukocytopenia, an elevated creatinine level, and minimal abnormalities of the urinary sediment also occur in patients with rheumatoid vasculitis. However, these abnormalities overlap in patients with uncomplicated rheumatoid arthritis, and their role in distinguishing rheumatoid vasculitis from uncomplicated rheumatoid arthritis is limited. Other immunologic tests have no established clinical role in diagnosing rheumatoid vasculitis. Therapy depends upon the clinical manifestation of rheumatoid vasculitis. Uncomplicated rheumatoid arthritis deserves appropriate therapy, and general attention to nutrition, cessation of tobacco, and control of blood pressure are indicated for all patients. Isolated digital vasculitis generally requires no more than the usual treatment for uncomplicated rheumatoid arthritis. Appropriate dermatologic management is indicated for ischemic ulcers. Most clinical experience in managing more symptomatic rheumatoid vasculitis has focused on glucocorticosteroids, D-penicillamine, and cytotoxic immunosuppressive drugs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Vasculitis associated with rheumatoid arthritis. 218 61

A 29 year old Chinese female who presented with spontaneous purpura, was found to have gross hepatomegaly and thrombocytopenia. The thrombocytopenia responded to steroid therapy but relapsed when the dose of steroid was tapered down. Subsequent investigations revealed that the hepatomegaly was due to a large haemangioma of her liver. For symptomatic hepatic haemangioma, surgical excision is the treatment of choice; this was refused by the patient.
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PMID:Haemangioma-thrombocytopenia syndrome--a case report. 262 43

Veno-occlusive disease (VOD) of the liver was diagnosed in 8 patients with Wilms' tumour and peliosis hepatis (PH) in one. Fever of obscure origin, vague abdominal pain, hepatomegaly or hepatosplenomegaly, severe anaemia or sudden, unexplained drop in haemoglobin, thrombocytopenia, increasing serum transaminase levels, jaundice and ascites recorded within the first weeks or months of tumour diagnosis should arise suspicion of non-metastatic vascular hepatopathy. General or focal decreased accumulation of isotope at liver scintigraphy belong to the early radiologic findings. Sonography and CT may show a generalized irregular echogenicity or attenuation but no unequivocal metastases. One patient with PH had multiple low attenuating foci in both liver lobes and angiographically abnormal pooling of contrast medium in the liver. It is important to recognize these conditions as alternatives to suspected liver metastases, which as a rule develop much later yet on occasions may have very similar radiologic appearances. Therefore the relation in time between tumour diagnosis, initial operation and development of obscure hepatic manifestations is of critical significance for the recognition of VOD or PH. In these patients chemotherapy and irradiation must be discontinued without delay. If the disorders are adequately treated the prognosis may be considered fair.
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PMID:Veno-occlusive disease and peliosis of the liver complicating the course of Wilms' tumour. 300 Jan 41

A case report is presented of a 43-year-old woman with generalized peliosis hepatitis that developed during longterm use of oral contraceptives (OCs). The patient had been in good health until the last 2 years when she began to experience vague epigastric pains and a feeling of abdominal distension. Several months prior to admission, she had started to complain of itching and fatigue. There was no history of dark urine, white stools, or hepatitis. On physical examination, no jaundice or cutaneous stigmata of chronic liver disease were observed. Laboratory studies showed a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate and hematological blood count. A radionuclide study of the liver showed hepatomegaly; especially the left lobe was enlarged. A computerized tomographic scan of the liver showed multiple areas of decreased density in both of the enlarged lobes. There was no evidence of a tumor. Selective transfemoral angiography of the celiac artery also showed hepatic enlargement but no signs of a space-occupying lesion. At laparoscopy, the liver was grossly enlarged and had a lumpy appearance, but again there were no signs of a tumor. No evidence of veno-occlusive disease or hepatocellular adenoma was found. The diagnosis was peliosis hepatitis. The OCs were withdrawn, and the patient was discharged. Regular follow-up in the outpatient department showed no decrease in the size of the liver. The alkaline phosphatase level rose. The fatigue became worse, and cholestyramine was prescribed for progressive itching. In September 1980, the patient was admitted for reevaluation. A repeated CT scan and angiography of the liver again yielded no evidence of a tumor. Esophagoscopy showed the presence of varices grade 2. The liver at laparoscopy had the same appearance as it had in 1976. Histological examination of a biopsy specimen showed occasional dilated sinusoids and locally marked periportal and intralobular fibrosis. No regeneration nodules were found. The diagnosis was liver fibrosis. The patient's condition deteriorated gradually in the following years. She experienced increasing fatigue. Steatorrhea developed, and the patient lost weight. She needed increasing doses of cholestyramine and oral supplementation of vitamins A, D, and K. She was admitted for a 3rd time in February 1985. Esophagoscopy revealed varices grade 4. A CT scan of the liver showed no change. The patient successfully underwent an orthotopic liver transplantation in January 1987. The diagnosis of peliosis hepatis was well documented in this patient.
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PMID:Generalized peliosis hepatis and cirrhosis after long-term use of oral contraceptives. 312 33

Peliosis hepatis is described in a renal transplant recipient and in a patient who was receiving long-term haemodialysis. This uncommon liver lesion has been reported in a number of patients, including 18 renal transplant recipients and two patients with chronic renal failure. However, its cause, clinical features, natural history and clinical significance remain to be determined. We emphasize that, although it is rare, peliosis hepatis should be considered in long-term haemodialysis and renal transplant patients who exhibit hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly and/or disordered liver function (in particular, elevation of hepatic alkaline phosphatase levels).
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PMID:Peliosis hepatis in a renal transplant recipient and in a haemodialysis patient. 354 May 50


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