Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This report deals with a 26-year-old white woman exhibiting signs of both Kwashiorkor (
marasmus
, pallor, hypopigmentation of hair and
hepatomegaly
) and acrodermatitis enteropathica (eczematous dermatitis predominantly on acral areas). Clinical and laboratory examinations excluded malabsorption syndrome and glucagonoma syndrome and revealed hypoproteinemia and marked zinc deficiency. Psychiatric examination disclosed anorexia nervosa. Substitution therapy led to rapid clearing of the skin lesions.
...
PMID:Kwashiorkor-like zinc deficiency syndrome in anorexia nervosa. 9 54
Ultrasonographic, blinded assessment was made of the extent of hepatic steatosis in 55 children with severe malnutrition: undernutrition (n = 6),
marasmus
(n = 18), marasmickwashiorkor (n = 17), and kwashiorkor (n = 14). The children were examined on admission, in early recovery (considered as baseline), and again at discharge. Eleven healthy control children and eight of the previously malnourished children were studied as comparison groups. Both oedematous and non-oedematous malnourished children had significantly more steatosis than the comparison groups at each time. Children with oedematous malnutrition had significantly greater steatosis than non-oedematous children at admission. Half of the non-oedematous malnourished children had appreciable hepatic steatosis at both admission and at baseline. Hepatic fat was only slowly mobilised. The rate constant was 1.4 +/- 0.3%/day. One quarter of the children did not change steatosis grades during the period they were in hospital. There was no overall correlation between the extent of steatosis and liver size. Hepatic steatosis in childhood malnutrition is not confined to oedematous children: it is frequently present in marasmic and undernourished children. Its extent is not necessarily related to the degree of
hepatomegaly
and accumulated lipid is only slowly mobilised.
...
PMID:Ultrasonographic assessment of the extent of hepatic steatosis in severe malnutrition. 147 85
Six hundred and fifty seven hospitalized patients under five in Child Health Department Hospital Tembakau Deli Medan, from January 1988 until December 1988 had been investigated retrospectively. Severe PCM are found 12 (1.8%), consisting of 7 (58.3%) boys and 5 (41.7%) girls. Most cases were found at the age of 1-2 years (33.3%).
Marasmus
were found in 5 cases (41.7%), Marasmic kwashiorkor in 4 (54%), while Kwashiorkor in 3 cases (25%). Clinical features of the patients are as follow:
hepatomegaly
7 (58.3%), anorexia 6 (50%), old man face 5 (41.7%), subcutaneous fat decrease 5 (41.7%), thinsparse easily pick hairs 5 (41.7%), muscle hypotrophy 5 (41.7%), edema of the lower extremity 4 (33.3%), crazy pavement dermatosis 2 (16.7%). All patients were hospitalized combined with other diseases as chronic diarrhea 6 (50%), bronchopneumonia 5 (41.7%) and ascariasis 4 (33.3%). Mortality in 1 patient.
...
PMID:Clinical features of severe malnutrition at the pediatric ward of Tembakau Deli Hospital, Medan. 207 60
A retrospective study on severe malnutrition concerning children hospitalized at the Pediatric ward of Dr. Pirngadi Hospital, Medan from January 1 to December 31, 1988 was conducted. Patients less than five years old were included in this study. The purpose of this study was to know the incidence of severe malnutrition, its symptoms and signs, the immunization status, feeding pattern and socio-economic factors. Out of the 3370 hospitalized patients, 2453 (72.78%) were children under five years old. Of these, 312 (12%) suffered from severe malnutrition. It consisted of
marasmus
131 (41.9%), marasmic kwashiorkor 94 (30.1%) and kwashiorkor 87 (27.8%). The highest incidence was found in the age group of 0-2 years (58%). Clinical manifestation of
marasmus
were old man face (131 or 100%), muscular hypotrophy (118 or 71.9%) and decreased subcutaneous fat (116 or 71.1%) in marasmic kwashiorkor children 46 or 50% had their hair easily picked out, 45 or 46.3% showed hyperpigmentation and 48 or 52% had pretibial edema in the kwashiorkor group 29 or 63% had moon face, 52 or 60.4% showed crazy pavement dermatosis, 77 or 51.3% had
hepatomegaly
and 87 or 48% pretebial edema. Moon face was seen in 29 (63%), crazy Pavement Dermatosis in 52 (60.4%),
hepatomegaly
in 77 (51.3%), and pretebial edema in 87 (48%) of kwashiorkor cases. The accompanying diseases were mostly diarrhea (95%) and bronchopneumonia (22%). Immunization status showed that BCG comprised 50.6%, while DPT III and OPV III in 13.7% and 10.5% respectively and measles only 0.64%. More than half (59.6%) of them were breast-fed up to 6 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical features of severe malnutrition at the pediatric ward of Dr. Pirngadi Hospital Medan. 207 61
The predominantly heterosexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Africa suggests that pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) could develop into a significant child health problem in this region. To assist clinicians in recognizing HIV infection in African children, the clinical features of 185 children with symptomatic HIV-related disease diagnosed at the 2 central hospitals in Harare, Zimbabwe, from April 1986-July 1987 were enumerated. In this period, 185 such cases were diagnosed. 83 (47%) involved children 0-12 months of age and another 61 (35%) represented children 13-24 months old. The male/female ratio was 1.0:1.03. The most frequently recorded clinical feature (52% of cases) was generalized lymphadenopathy, with or without hepatosplenomegaly. 45% of HIV-infected children presented with respiratory symptoms and pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray. Failure to thrive was present in 38% of cases. Also relatively common were
hepatomegaly
and splenomegaly (35% and 26%, respectively). Chronic, recurrent diarrhea was present in 21%. Less frequently observed (under 10% of cases) clinical findings were maculopapular eczematoid rashes, parotid swelling, chronic suppurative otitis media, chronic mucopurulent rhinitis, meningitis, and encephalopathy. 3 main clinical modes of presentation were identified--children with failure to thrive or
marasmus
in association with chronic diarrhea and developmental delay, those with generalized lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly, and children who present with chronic cough with pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of symptomatic human immuno-deficiency virus in children. 226 23
In Lesotho's central hospital 55 (25%) of 218 admissions for severe PEM died during 1981 and 1982. Most deaths (62%) occurred in the first week. The most important causes of death were acute GE and pneumonia in
marasmus
and kwashiorkor, respectively. The cause of death remained obscure in 16 children, however. In
marasmus
a poor prognosis was significantly associated with the finding on admission of a temperature less than 36.5 degrees C (P less than 0.05), apathy (P less than 0.01) and a depigmented skin (P less than 0.05), while in marasmic kwashiorkor only the finding of the latter was significantly (P less than 0.05) associated with death. In non-survivors with kwashiorkor the following characteristics were observed significantly more often: complaints of diarrhoea and/or vomiting on admission (P less than 0.05), the finding of apathy, pallor, skin defects and
hepatomegaly
on admission (P less than 0.01), and the finding of a low serum albumen, Na+ and K+ in the first days (P less than 0.05). Irritability was significantly (P less than 0.05) more common in survivors with kwashiorkor. Xerophthalmia was observed only once. Infections were diagnosed in 86% of all and giardiasis in 28% of 146 children. Twenty-eight children contracted measles of whom 5 died. Severe PEM still carries a high mortality despite hospitalisation. The findings confirm the need for intensive management of severe PEM.
...
PMID:Severe protein energy malnutrition in Lesotho, death and survival in hospital, clinical findings. 310 Dec 51
HIV infection was present in 18 out of 40 (45%) consecutive malnourished children aged 2 to 29 months in pediatric wards of Bujumbura, Burundi. No difference was observed within and between the seropositive and seronegative groups for sex and anthropometric measures. HIV seropositive cases could be explained by a HIV seropositive mother (83%) or by a transfusion history (17%). The onset of
marasmus
was earlier in the HIV seropositive group (5 cases observed less than 6 months old compared to none of the other group, Fischer's exact test: P = 0.026). A more complex clinical picture was seen in the HIV seropositive cases (12/18 compared to 4/22, Fischer's exact test: P = 0.004) with the presence of
hepatomegaly
, adenopathy, thrush, dyspnoea and skin disorders. No difference was observed concerning fever and diarrhoea. HIV seropositive group tended to show a higher hospitalisation frequency and did not well respond to high protein-energy diet: 7 were discharged without gain weight compared to none of the other group (Fischer's exact test: P = 0.011). These results suggest a high rate of vertical transmission mother-child for HIV infection and a frequent association of malnutrition and HIV infection in hospitalized children in Burundi. Marasmic children less than 6 months old should be highly suspected of HIV infection.
...
PMID:[Malnutrition and HIV infection in children in a hospital milieu in Burundi]. 313 33
The medical history, clinical features and investigations of 145 children with kwashiorkor were compared with 113 marasmic kwashiorkor, 158 marasmic children and 186 nutritionally normal controls of similar age admitted to hospital in Khartoum. Factors in the group with protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) which could relate to aetiology include: a history of prolonged illness and anorexia, frequent and prolonged episodes of diarrhoea and recent measles. The delay in achievement of developmental milestones in PEM children probably reflects the frequent and chronic illnesses in this group. An episode of previous oedema was reported in 22 per cent of marasmic kwashiorkor, 12 per cent of kwashiorkor and 12 per cent of marasmic children. Though hair and mucosal changes and
enlarged liver
were more common in the marasmic kwashiorkor and kwashiorkor groups, they were also common in marasmic children. There was no significant difference in behaviour (apathy, irritability, anorexia) between kwashiorkor and marasmic children. The classical skin changes of kwashiorkor were only seen in the oedematous children. The mortality was 19 per cent in kwashiorkor, 35 per cent in marasmic kwashiorkor, and 14.5 per cent in the marasmic group. The major differences between
marasmus
and kwashiorkor children were that the kwashiorkor children were reported larger at birth, achieved more normal developmental milestones, were taller and had larger head circumference than the marasmic children. The implications of these findings in relation to aetiology are discussed.
...
PMID:Protein-energy malnutrition in northern Sudan: clinical studies. 314 Nov 44
To determine the clinical factors that are of prognostic importance in protein-energy malnutrition (PEM), 150 patients admitted into the paediatric wards at the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria, were studied. Detailed clinical history, anthropometry and biochemical investigations were done immediately on admission. Case fatality rate decreased with age: 75% and 33% in those aged 12 months and below, and 30 to 36 months, respectively. The mortality in
marasmus
, kwashiorkor and marasmic-kwashiorkor were 35%, 47% and 60%, respectively.
Hepatomegaly
on admission had no significant impact on prognosis, but mortality increased with increasing
hepatomegaly
. Growth failure on admission, as measured by weight-for-age, weight-for-height and mid-upper-arm circumference were significantly associated with poor prognosis (p < 0.01, p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively). Hypokalaemia and hyponatraemia were each separately associated with poor prognosis. When both electrolytes were low, more patients died (81%) than when both were normal (24%) (p < 0.001). Similarly, hypoproteinaemia and hypoalbuminaemia were associated with poor prognosis singly and in combination. When both serum proteins and albumin were low, the mortality was 32%, and there were no deaths when both were normal. The outcome in severe PEM is still poor. Good clinical precision in identifying clinical and biochemical prognostic factors, early intervention and good subsequent management are important in reducing mortality in PEM.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in severely malnourished hospitalized Nigerian children. Anthropometric and biochemical factors. 811 61
This case control study includes all children aged 12-36 months admitted to the pediatric unit of Sanou Souro Hospital for clinical malnutrition in Bobo-Biolasso, Burkina Faso in 1990 and early 1991. Cases numbered 273 persons, and matched controls numbered 173. 75% of cases have a diagnosis of
marasmus
, 10% have a diagnosis of kwashiorkor, and 15% have a diagnosis of marasmic kwashiorkor, Mortality includes 50% (14 cases) of the kwashiorkor cases and 30% of each of the other types of malnutrition. All cases show a poor anthropometric status (-4.2 among
marasmus
cases, -2.75 among kwashiorkor cases, and -3.80 among marasmic kwashiorkor cases). Only 2% show clinical malnutrition. The primary diagnoses are for diarrhea (78%), vomiting (46%),
hepatomegaly
(25%), dyspnoea (14%). and lymphadenopathy (14%). 35% are aged 12-17 months, 38% are aged 18-23 months, 18% are aged 24-29 months, and 9% are aged 30-36 months. 53% are male. 72% are in receipt of home follow-up visits. Of the 77 not followed up, 30 died. Cases and controls are grouped by feeding patterns (solid foods without breast milk, solid foods and breast milk and without or without porridge, and no solid foods). More malnutrition cases occur among children in the group with no solid food (11 with breast milk and/or other milk or porridge and 7 with porridge only). Those eating solid food with breast milk have a reduced odds of malnutrition. The case-control analysis indicates that more malnutrition occurs among those receiving breast milk or other milk. But with controls for age and supplementation the results indicate that children not receiving breast milk are twice as likely to suffer clinical malnutrition (odds ratio of 2.37), and the occurrence varies with age. Logistic regressions with control for confounding factors indicate that children without breast milk have three times the risk of malnutrition. Prolonged breast feeding and solid food supplements are associated with a 70% reduction in the rate of clinical malnutrition. Caution is urged in accepting wholly the findings due to the potential for reverse causality.
...
PMID:Prolonged breast-feeding: no association with increased risk of clinical malnutrition in young children in Burkina Faso. 831 89
1
2
Next >>