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)

A 34-year-old obese woman with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection diagnosed a year earlier was seen because of nausea, vomiting, and intermittent diarrhea for 3 weeks. Her current medications included zidovudine. Physical examination revealed tachypnea and tender hepatomegaly. Computed tomography of the abdomen showed hepatomegaly with fatty infiltration. Liver enzymes were within normal range except for elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). The serum bicarbonate value was low, with a lactate level three times normal. The tachypnea and dyspnea worsened as lactate concentrations rapidly increased to 15 times normal. Although her Po2 and cardiac index were initially adequate, the patient had acute respiratory failure. She died with multiorgan dysfunction, including hepatic failure, severe lactic acidemia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and renal failure. Autopsy revealed hepatomegaly and massive steatosis. Physicians should consider lactic acidosis in patients taking zidovudine and having unexplained tachypnea, dyspnea, and low serum bicarbonate concentrations.
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PMID:Zidovudine-associated type B lactic acidosis and hepatic steatosis in an HIV-infected patient. 1021 65

In a personal series of 107 patients, we describe clinical presentations, methods of recognition and therapeutic management of inherited fatty acid oxidation (FAO) defects. As a whole, FAO disorders appear very severe: among the 107 patients, only 57 are still living. Including 47 siblings who died early in infancy, in total 97 patients died, of whom 30% died within the first week of life and 69% before 1 year. Twenty-eight patients presented in the neonatal period with sudden death, heart beat disorders, or neurological distress with various metabolic disturbances. Hepatic presentations were observed in 73% of patients (steatosis, hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, hepatomegaly, Reye syndrome). True hepatic failure was rare (10%); cholestasis was observed in one patient with LCHAD deficiency. Cardiac presentations were observed in 51% of patients: 67% patients presented with cardiomyopathy, mostly hypertrophic, and 47% of patients had heart beat disorders with various conduction abnormalities and arrhythmias responsible for collapse, near-miss and sudden unexpected death. All enzymatic blocks affecting FAO except CPT I and MCAD were found associated with cardiac signs. Muscular signs were observed in 51% of patients (of whom 64% had myalgias or paroxysmal myoglobinuria, and 29% had progressive proximal myopathy). Chronic neurologic presentation was rare, except in LCHAD deficiency (retinitis pigmentosa and peripheral neuropathy). Renal presentation (tubulopathy) and transient renal failure were observed in 27% of patients. The diagnosis of FAO disorders is generally based on the plasma acylcarnitine profile determined by FAB-MS/MS from simple blood spots collected on a Guthrie card. Urinary organic acid profile and total and free plasma carnitine can also be very helpful, mostly in acute attacks. If there is no significant disturbance between attacks, the diagnosis is based upon a long-chain fatty acid loading test, fasting test, and in vitro studies of fatty acid oxidation on fresh lymphocytes or cultured fibroblasts. Treatment includes avoiding fasting or catabolism, suppressing lipolysis, and carnitine supplementation. The long-term dietary therapy aims to prevent periods of fasting and restrict long-chain fatty acid intake with supplementation of medium-chain triglycerides. Despite these therapeutic measures, the long-term prognosis remains uncertain.
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PMID:Recognition and management of fatty acid oxidation defects: a series of 107 patients. 1040 81

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.
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PMID:Novel approaches to the treatment of primary amyloidosis. 1106 Aug 11

Generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) is uncommon in children, and serious renal and liver complications arising from GPP are rarely reported. We describe a Chinese boy who had suffered from recurrent exacerbations of GPP from the age of 1 year. He developed IgA nephropathy at the age of 9 years. He also had recurrent episodes of oliguric renal failure, hepatomegaly and cholestasis associated with severe exacerbations of GPP. These complications progressed despite early antibiotics and supportive therapy, but responded promptly to intravenous methylprednisolone therapy. Ultimately, acitretin was given and he has successfully been in remission for a year.
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PMID:Renal failure and cholestatic jaundice as unusual complications of childhood pustular psoriasis. 1207 99

We conducted a case record study comparing liver tests abnormalities in 20 malaria-related acute renal failure cases without cerebral malaria, 52 cerebral malaria cases without other organ impairment, 189 cases of nonsevere malaria associated with a high parasite burden, and 131 cases of mild Plasmodiumfalciparum malaria. Jaundice and hepatomegaly were significantly associated with renal failure (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 3.3, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3-8.6, P = 0.01; and AOR, 1.7 95% CI, 1.13-2.4, P = 0.01) but not with cerebral malaria (AOR, 1, 95% CI, 0.5-2, P = 0.8; and AOR, 1.08, 95% CI, 0.8-1.8, P = 0.5). Patients with acute renal failure were significantly older and had increased liver abnormalities compared with other groups. Although an increase in the proportion of mature schizonts over ring forms was significantly associated with cerebral malaria, it did not seem to have affected acute renal failure. These results suggested that cytoadherence was not the main determinant for renal failure and that jaundice itself may have potentiated the effects of hypovolemia.
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PMID:Association of hepatomegaly and jaundice with acute renal failure but not with cerebral malaria in severe falciparum malaria in Thailand. 1179 81

We report a case of a female neonate with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome who manifested upper airway obstruction soon after birth and suffered from intractable hypoglycemia and abdominal distention caused by nephromegaly. She was delivered at 31 weeks of gestation with 2480 g and was diagnosed as Beckwith-Wiedeman syndrome, manifesting macroglossia, hepatomegaly, nephromegaly and omphalocele. Her trachea was intubated 30 minutes after birth due to upper airway obstruction. At 12 days of life, glossopexy was performed to relieve the airway obstruction. Although tracheal extubation was successfully accomplished 12 days later, 21 days after the glossopexy she manifested apnea and hypoxia and required tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation again. We suspected hypoglycemia or central apnea to be the cause of apnea and started the administration of somatostatin analog as a treatment for hypoglycemia. In addition to the apnea, abdominal distention caused by nephromegaly exacerbated her respiratory condition. At 69 days of life she died of sepsis complicated with disseminated intravascular coagulation and renal failure. A needle biopsy at autopsy revealed nephroblastomatosis.
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PMID:[A neonate with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome who developed upper airway obstruction after glossopexy]. 1184 Jun 63

Monoclonal light chains (LCs) are responsible for a wide spectrum of renal and hepatic diseases, that above all include amyloid light-chain (AL) amyloidosis and light chain deposition disease (LCDD). Amyloid deposits stain for Congo red on light microscopy and have fibrillar aspect on electron microscopy, whereas deposits in LCDD are positive using monotypic LCs on immunofluorescence and have a granular aspect on electron microscopy. Sometimes fibrillar and granular deposits are observed in the same organ or in different organs of the same patient. Kidney and liver involvement is a frequent finding, both in primary amyloidosis (AL amyloidosis) or in LCDD. Renal manifestations include proteinuria, nephrotic syndrome, and progressive renal failure. End-stage renal disease requiring dialysis is observed in about 20% of patients with AL amyloidosis and in 70% of patients with LCDD. The mean survival time is about 12 to 18 months in AL amyloidosis and 34 months in LCDD. The most important prognostic factor is severe cardiac involvement, which reduces the mean survival to only 6 months. Hepatic manifestations include hepatomegaly, portal hypertension, ascites, intrahepatic cholostatic jaundice, and hepatic insufficiency. The mean survival of patients with liver damage is 14 months, but it is reduced to 5 months in patients with cholostatic jaundice. Contemporary kidney and liver involvement is usually observed on histologic examination, less frequently as clinical manifestation. No specific treatment exists for AL amyloidosis and LCDD, and the prognosis remains severe. The aim of treatment is to suppress proliferation of the abnormal clone of plasma cells and remove tissue deposits. The regimens, including melphalan-prednisone (MP) or vincristine-doxorubicin-dexamethasone (VAD), are used both in AL amyloidosis or in LCDD with some effectiveness. New approaches, especially the use of 4'-iodo-4'deoxydoxorubicin, could achieve better results. Dialysis seems to not worsen the outcome in both diseases because survival of patients on dialysis is not different from that of patients not reaching uremia. Also, kidney and liver transplantation is effective, though amyloidosis or LCDD may occur in transplanted organs. The most interesting therapeutic approach is autologous-blood stem-cell transplantation, which may produce a complete remission of the plasma-cell dyscrasia and a substantial improvement of clinical manifestations related to LC deposits.
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PMID:Kidney and liver involvement in monoclonal light chain disorders. 1211 97

The hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a unique form of acute renal failure with entirely normal renal histology in advanced liver disease. Its diagnosis is made by exclusion of all causes of renal failure and by all the five major criteria as set by the International Ascites Club. The presence of hepatomegaly, poor nutritional status, and oesophageal varices at endoscopy are associated with a high risk of HRS. The liver tests, the Child-Pugh score, are of no value in prediction of its occurrence. Contraction of the effective blood volume, which may lead to renal hypoperfusion with preferential renal cortical ischaemia, is proposed pathogenesis of the condition. Because understanding of the pathogenesis of HRS is incomplete, therapy is supportive only. Optimal fluid management is vital as there is almost invariably a reduction in effective arterial blood volume. Dopamine, frusemide and haemofiltration may be helpful in management of fluid overload but do not affect renal function. TIPS has been used successfully in small series of patients. The vasopressin analog also has been used with early excellent response. The treatment of HRS has been discouraging and the only proven cure for HRS is liver transplantation at this point of time.
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PMID:Hepatorenal syndrome: pathophysiology and treatment. 1224 Aug 52

Urea Cycle Disorders (UCD) is an inborn error of urea synthesis in which ammonium and other nitrogenous precursors of urea accumulate leading to episodic coma and a high mortality rate. Therapy with peritoneal dialysis, essential amino acids or their nitrogen-free analogues has increased survival. The authors report 5 cases of urea cycle disorders, all of whom developed and were rescued from hyperammonemic coma. However, the eventual outcome was quite variable. Argininosuccinate lyase deficiency (ALD) Case 1. A 2 month old male infant, a product of a consanguineous marriage (Suphanburi province); developed poor feeding on day 7, lethargy, convulsion, hepatomegaly and respiratory alkalosis leading to respiratory failure and coma. Hyperammonemia, elevation of glutamic acid and argininosuccinic acid and its anhydrides confirmed the diagnosis of ALD. He is now 9 years old and severely retarded. Case 2. A male infant with history of lethargy, poor feeding on day 3, treated as sepsis and required respiratory support for 6 days; subsequently readmitted at age 2 weeks with vomitting, lethargy, seizure activity and hyperammonemia, and was treated by a local pediatrician in Songkhla province. There was a history of parental consanguinity and he was referred to Siriraj Hospital on day 64 with severe essential amino acid deficiency and acrodermatitis enteropathica with markedly elevated plasma citrulline level. In spite of aggressive treatment; the patient developed sepsis and he expired on day 78. Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTC) Case 3. An eleven-month-old male infant, the product of a non-consanguineous marriage, developed neonatal onset of hyperammonemia on day 5 after poor feeding, lethargy, hypothermia, seizure, apnea and coma. He was rescued from neonatal hyperammonemic coma on day 9 after aggressive treatment, but expired at eleven months of age after overwhelming sepsis. Case 4. A male infant, sibling of case 3 was referred to Siriraj Hospital on day 8 with hyperammonemia and coma. In spite of intensive genetic counseling given after the birth of their first child with OTC, the couple chose to have another baby without informing any physician. The baby developed vomiting and lethargy on day 2; subsequently hyperammonemia was noted. In spite of aggressive treatment given; hepatic dysfunction, renal failure and disseminated intravascular coagulation defects occurred on day 15. He expired on day 18 after parental permission for discontinuation of all treatment. Argininosuccinate synthetase deficiency (ASS) or Citrullinemia. Case 5. A seven week old female infant, the product of a consanguineous marriage and of Pakistani ethnic origin; developed intermittent vomiting from day 6. Initial diagnoses included ruminations, sepsis and pyloric stenosis for which she was operated on (day 30); however, vomiting continued; subsequently seizures, hyperammonemic coma developed and she was rescued from hyperammonemic coma within 30 hours. Significant elevations of citrulline and L-glutamine were demonstrated. She was discharged in excellent condition to her home in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates.
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PMID:Urea cycle disorders in Thai infants: a report of 5 cases. 1240 52

Generalised oedema of short onset without evidences of cardiac or renal failure in two diabetic patients, irrespective of diabetes type with common features of non-hepatomegaly, without altered liver enzymes, absence of viral markers, absence of diabetic angiopathy, poor glycaemic control and improvement with glycaemic care are reported. Both the patients had certain biochemical and hepatic histologic features in common.
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PMID:Atypical hepatic pathology associated with diabetes mellitus--report of two cases. 1240 34


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