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)

Hepatobiliary neuroendocrine carcinoma was diagnosed in 17 cats in a period of 10 years. Seven tumors were of intrahepatic origin, one of which was a composite containing components of epithelial and neuroendocrine carcinoma. Nine tumors were of extrahepatic origin, and one tumor was located in the gall-bladder. The cats were adult and geriatric, and the male : female ratio varied according to tumor group. Hepatomegaly, anorexia, weight loss, and vomiting were the most common clinical signs observed in the cats with hepatic neuroendocrine carcinoma. The cats with extrahepatic neuroendocrine carcinoma showed these signs plus icterus (5/9) and high concentrations of hepatic enzymes. Histologically, the hepatic neuroendocrine carcinomas had two patterns, one with acinar structures separated by vascular stroma lined by cuboidal or columnar cells and the other solid with groups of anaplastic cells separated by vascular stroma. The composite tumor consisted of both bile duct carcinoma and neuroendocrine carcinoma. The extrahepatic neuroendocrine carcinomas and the gallbladder neuroendocrine carcinoma were characterized by solid sheets or groups of round to oval cells with vascular or fibrovascular stroma. Immunohistochemical examination of 10 of the neuroendocrine carcinomas revealed that all 10 stained with neuron-specific enolase; one bile duct carcinoma and the gallbladder carcinoma stained with chromogranin; four of five bile duct carcinomas and the gall bladder carcinoma stained with synaptophysin; and one bile duct carcinoma stained with gastrin. One cat with hepatic carcinoma had duodenal ulcer; in this cat, ultrastructural studies showed neurosecretory granules leading to the diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. In four cats in which necropsy was permitted, carcinomatosis (4/4), lymph nodes (4/4), lungs (2/4), and intestines (1/4) were the metastatic sites. Fourteen of the 17 cats were euthanatized during or immediately after surgery.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary neuroendocrine carcinoma in cats: a clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural study of 17 cases. 1587 79

Hepar lobatum carcinomatosum is an unusual cause of chronic liver failure, usually maskerading as cirrhosis. The pathogenesis of this syndrome is unclear. We report a case of liver failure revealing an occult lobular carcinoma of the breast, which offers the opportunity to gain further insight into the mechanisms of this rare cause of chronic liver disease. A 57-year-old woman, without history of malignancy, presented with hepatomegaly, ascites and altered liver tests (serum transaminase activity >5 N and hyperbilirubinemia). The transjugular liver biopsy performed at diagnosis showed an extensive fibrosis, containing scattered tumor cells, typical of metastatic lobular carcinoma of the breast. Four months later, after discovery of a rectal adenocarcinoma, a laparoscopy was performed; peritoneal carcinomatosis was discovered. A surgical biopsy of the liver was taken during the procedure: it showed histological features suggestive of chronic Budd-Chiari syndrome, with venocentric fibrosis and reversed lobulation. Intraluminal invasion of small hepatic veins and sinusoidal obstruction by neoplastic cells were observed. A small focus of lobular carcinoma was eventually discovered in the left mammary gland. The present case report expands the spectrum of clinical presentations associated with hepar lobatum carcinomatosum and points out to the importance of vascular injury in the pathogenesis of this rare cause of chronic liver disease.
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PMID:Hepar lobatum carcinomatosum revealing an occult metastatic lobular carcinoma of the breast. 2107 93

The distinction between tuberculous peritonitis and peritoneal carcinomatosis is extremely difficult in patients with omental cake appearance on computed tomography and elevated CA-125 level. A 21-year-old female presented with abdominal distention, diarrhea, nausea, fever, weight loss, and night sweats. Serum CA-125 level was 563 U/L (normal range: <35 U/L) and other tumor markers were within normal range. Radiologic studies showed massive ascites, smooth minimal thickening and increased contrast enhancement of peritoneum, omental nodularities, hepatomegaly, and right pleural effusion. No underlying malignancy that could cause this condition was detected clinically and radiologically. Ultrasound-guided omental tru-cut biopsy was performed to exclude carcinomatosis peritonei. Histopathologic examination showed small-medium-sized granulomas with caseous necrosis. Molecular microbiology tests of biopsy specimens confirmed diagnosis of tuberculosis. In conclusion, tuberculous peritonitis should be in differential diagnosis of a patient with ascites, omental nodularities and elevated serum CA-125 levels.
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PMID:Tuberculous peritonitis mimicking carcinomatosis peritonei: CT findings and histopathologic correlation. 3166 94