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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hepatic venocclusive disease (VOD) is a frequent complication of bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Analysis of 13 cases observed during a 3-year period in our BMT center shows that VOD is associated with a constant peripheral thrombocytopenia and refractoriness to platelet transfusion. These signs appear in the very early stage of VOD, five to ten days before the classical signs, painful hepatomegaly and sudden weight gain. Analysis of platelet consumption, frequency of platelet transfusion and platelet recovery, and examination of known causes of peripheral thrombocytopenia (mainly allo- and autoimmunization, disseminated intravascular coagulation [DIC] and splenomegaly) lead to the conclusions that this association is not coincidental. The exact mechanism of platelet consumption in VOD is unknown.
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PMID:Thrombocytopenia in venocclusive disease after bone marrow transplantation or chemotherapy. 351 36

The survival of 137 consecutive chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients, diagnosed between 1960 and 1982 and followed up at the Hematology Clinic of the Chaim Sheba Center, was correlated with demographic, clinical and laboratory data. The median survival time of the whole group was 104 months. Older age, hepatomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia and increased percent of lymphocytes in the peripheral blood at diagnosis were all associated with shorter survival. On the other hand, splenomegaly or lymph node enlargement did not influence survival. When divided according to both Rai's and the International Workshop staging systems, the survival of our patients seemed to be better than that reported in most previously published series of similar patients. We assume that this is related to a conservative approach to the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients in this center.
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PMID:Survival and prognostic factors in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 359 7

The authors have studied the case of a female patient with rheumatoid polyarthritis, who developed a lymphocytic proliferation in the blood, the marrow, and the liver, associated with a neutropenia. Several similar cases have been recently reported in the literature. The cellular proliferation is made of large granulous lymphocytes and the study of membrane markers enables to find the following homogeneous phenotype: E rosette+, CD8+, HNK-1+, FcR+, CD4-luminal diameter "divided by degrees - -, IgS-, HLA class II-. This lymphocytic sub-population produces little interleukin-2, responds weakly to mitogens (PHA, CON A, PWM), and inhibits the response of normal lymphocytes to the same mitogens. These lymphocytes have a weak natural killer activity but, on the contrary, develop a very strong cytotoxic activity which is antibody-dependent. Clinically, splenomegaly, anemia and infections are frequent and hepatomegaly or thrombopenia more rare. Adenopathies are never present. The evolution is chronic in nature and not very aggressive, although the lymphocytic proliferation is monoclonal in origin, as demonstrated in molecular biology studies. The neutropenia might be secondary to an inhibiting effect of lymphocytes on the granular precursors of the bone marrow. There is a definite association between this lympho-proliferative syndrome and rheumatoid polyarthritis, and this association appears to be different from the Felty's syndrome.
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PMID:[Characterization of chronic lymphocytic proliferation in a female patient having rheumatoid polyarthritis with neutropenia]. 361 55

This retrospective review of 136 children with idiopathic thrombocytopenia assesses the prognostic significance of various presenting parameters and the effect of therapy. Initial haemoglobin, white cell count, actual platelet count, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly and lymphadenopathy had no significant effect upon the final outcome. Cases of acute I.T.P. were associated with a higher incidence of preceding infection, a shorter history of bleeding and a preponderance of males. The presence of greater than 20 per cent lymphocytes in the bone marrow was associated with a longer time to achieve a normal platelet count (p = 0.05). Steroid therapy shortened the time for acute cases of I.T.P. to obtain a normal platelet count (p = 0.05), but had no effect on long-term prognosis. Chronicity occurred in 25 children (18%) and nine of these had spontaneous remissions. Immunosuppressive therapy was ineffective, but nine out of 12 children were cured by splenectomy. Mortality was 0.7 per cent (one death) and general morbidity was low.
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PMID:Idiopathic thrombocytopenia in childhood. Edinburgh experience 1962-82. 379 80

Clinical and biological data were evaluated using Desu univariate analyses or Cox multivariate analyses in a series of 1,777 chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients from an Italian Cooperative Group. In univariate analyses, age and sex of patients, presence of bone marrow (BM; greater than or equal to 50%), and peripheral blood (PB; greater than or equal to 60,000/microL) lymphocytosis, anemia (hemoglobin [Hb] less than 11 g/dL), thrombocytopenia (less than 100,000/microL), direct Coombs' test positivity, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and extent of lymph node involvement were shown to be of significant prognostic value. Multivariate analyses, through a stepwise procedure, showed that the most important prognostic variables are Hb, hepatomegaly, lymph node involvement, PB lymphocytosis, and age and sex of patients. Further covariates would produce an improvement having a nonsignificant P value. Based on the results of multivariate analyses, a four-step staging using the significant variables of the Cox model is proposed.
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PMID:Prognosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: a retrospective multicentric study from the GIMEMA group. 381 5

Nineteen cases of canine acute leukemia were diagnosed during a 4-year period. Two main categories were identified on the basis of cytologic, hematologic, and clinical features: acute lymphoid leukemia and acute myelogenous leukemia. Clinical features included history of weight loss, anorexia, shifting limb lameness, and incoordination. Physical findings were characterized by hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, mild generalized lymphadenopathy, and pallor. Ocular lesions were found in 29% of dogs with acute myelogenous leukemia. Hematologic abnormalities included anemia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia, leukemia, and leukoerythroblastic reactions. Results of therapy were discouraging.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic aspects of acute leukemias in the dog. 385 21

The prognostic importance of patient pretreatment clinical and laboratory features was investigated in a group of 303 patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive benign-phase chronic myelogenous leukemia. Intensive chemotherapy was given to 97 patients, and 78 underwent an early elective splenectomy. The overall median survival time, dated from hospital admission, was 39 months. Patient characteristics associated with shortened survival were age 60 years or older, black race, the presence of hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, symptoms, weight loss, and poor performance status. Adverse blood and bone marrow parameters were anemia, thrombocytosis or thrombocytopenia, a high proportion of peripheral blasts plus promyelocytes or of basophils, a high proportion of marrow blasts or basophils, decreased marrow megakaryocytes, and cytogenetic abnormalities in addition to the Philadelphia chromosome. Several of these factors were interrelated. A multivariate regression analysis demonstrated that the combination blood basophilia, race, additional cytogenetic abnormalities, age and marrow basophilia had the strongest predictive relationship to survival time. This resulted in a model segregating patients into low-, intermediate-, and high-risk groups, with median survivals of 53, 39, and 25 months, respectively. Another model was derived that did not include the marrow features and identified splenomegaly and platelet counts as adding to the prognosis prediction by blood basophilia, race, and age. Evaluation of the effect of therapy, after adjusting for differences in prognostic characteristics, showed that intensive chemotherapy was associated with survival prolongation among patients at intermediate and high risk of death. We conclude that a combination of pretreatment factors identifies different risk subcategories in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia and is helpful in assessing overall prognosis and treatment effect.
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PMID:Chronic myelogenous leukemia: a multivariate analysis of the associations of patient characteristics and therapy with survival. 386 97

Young rats were force-fed a lysine + arginine-devoid diet or a complete diet for 3 days, and selected biochemical and morphologic studies were conducted. Rats force-fed the experimental diet in comparison with those force-fed the control diet for 3 days showed decreased body weight gain, hepatomegaly with periportal fatty liver, pancreatic and splenic atrophy, and enhanced 14C-leucine incorporation into hepatic proteins. Differences in the experimental animals were observed in the free amino acid levels of serum (decreased lysine, arginine, and ornithine) and liver (decreased ornithine), in blood chemistries (decreased levels of ammonia N2, uric acid, cholesterol, protein, albumin, alkaline phosphatase, LDH and SGOT) and in hematologic findings (leukocytopenia and thrombocytopenia after a morning feeding). The experimental findings in young rats force-fed the lysine + arginine-devoid diet were compared with those reported to develop in children with lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI), an autosomal recessive defect in diamino acid transport. Children with LPI as described by others reveal a number of similarities as well as a number of differences in comparison to the findings in the experimental animals. The comparison suggests that some of the pathological manifestations of LPI may be related to a deficiency of diamino acids but others must be due to different alterations in this complex human disease.
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PMID:Chemical pathology of diamino acid deficiency: considerations in relation to lysinuric protein intolerance. 393 96

Visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in widely scattered areas of the world. To better characterize the South American form of the disease, the clinical and laboratory manifestations of 29 patients admitted to hospital (18 male and 11 female patients, mean age 4.9 years), were assessed in an endemic area in northeastern Brazil. Fever, weight loss, pronounced splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia, relative neutropenia, hypoalbuminemia and hypergammaglobulinemia were found in the majority of patients. Symptoms were often present for two or more months before diagnosis. Secondary infections complicated many cases; there were ten cases of pneumonia and half of the patients had one or more intestinal parasites. The average length of hospital stay was 27 days; all patients were treated with meglumine antimoniate (Glucantime). The mortality rate was 3%. American visceral leishmaniasis remains an important disease among children living in endemic areas.
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PMID:American visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar). 402 31

Fifteen patients (11 males, four females; median age 57) manifested a disease characterized by (1) the histopathologic features of Castleman's disease, plasma cell type, in lymph node biopsies; (2) predominantly lymphadenopathic disease, involving multiple, preferentially peripheral nodal groups; (3) varied manifestations of multisystemic involvement (such as constitutional symptoms; splenomegaly and hypergammaglobulinemia; elevated ESR, anemia, and thrombocytopenia; hepatomegaly and altered liver function tests (LFTs); signs of renal disease); and (4) idiopathic nature. Two main patterns of evolution were recognized: persistent, with sustained clinical manifestations, and episodic, with recurrent exacerbations and remissions. Seventy-three percent of patients had infectious complications, and 27% developed malignancies. Complete remissions were obtained occasionally with antineoplastic agents and with splenectomy but not with glucocorticosteroids alone. The median survival time is 30 months; 60% of patients have died. Median follow-up in the six surviving patients is 97+ months. A review of 50 cases in the literature revealed similar clinical and laboratory features. Despite some similarities with autoimmune diseases, the main features of this process seem to best fit a hyperplastic-dysplastic lymphoid disorder in a setting of immunoregulatory deficit.
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PMID:A systemic lymphoproliferative disorder with morphologic features of Castleman's disease: clinical findings and clinicopathologic correlations in 15 patients. 403 67


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