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)

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

Granulomatous hepatitis (GH) is an uncommon histopathologic diagnosis in dogs. On the basis of clinical reports, fungal infections appear to be the most common cause of GH in dogs, but many other potential causes have been identified. The medical records and histopathologic findings for 9 dogs with GH were reviewed to identify additional specific causes of GH in dogs. Diseases associated with GH included intestinal lymphangiectasia (n = 2), lymphosarcoma (n = 1), histiocytosis (n = 1), dirofilariasis (n = 1), and histoplasmosis (n = 1). In 1 dog, no other disease process was identified. Of the remaining 2 dogs, 1 had concurrent granulomatous pneumonitis of unknown cause, and the other had periportal hepatitis and temporal muscle wasting. All 9 dogs with GH had clinical evidence of liver disease, such as hepatomegaly, icterus, and ascites, or had high serum alkaline phosphatase and alanine aminotransferase activity. Because of the wide variety of potential causes of GH in dogs, an accurate diagnosis should be sought so that appropriate treatment can be chosen and an accurate prognosis given.
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PMID:Granulomatous hepatitis in dogs: nine cases (1987-1990). 840 37

The liver may react to different infectious and non- infectious agents, developing granulomatous lesions which characterize granulomatous hepatitis. Granulomas of the liver are circumscribed inflammatory lesions (size from 50 to 300 mm) composed of epithelioid cells, varied numbers of mononuclear cells and eosinophils and multinucleated giant cells. They represent a specialized cell-mediated immune response to a wide variety of etiological factors. A broad spectrum of microorganisms may trigger hepatic granulomas. M. tuberculosis is the more frequent agent (~ 44%). Granulomatous hepatitis is characterized by a febrile illness with systemic signs and symptoms such as fatigue, sweating, shivering, hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly, abnormalities in serum liver tests (aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase). Liver biopsy provides diagnostic information in approximately 15-30% of cases, identifying directly the microbial agent with special microbial stains and polymerase chain reaction or finding distinctive microscopic features, suggestive of specific microorganisms. In such cases appropriate therapy is possible. Unfortunately in one third of cases is impossible to reach aetiological diagnosis on histological criteria alone. In these cases a therapeutic attempt with steroids, effective in the idiopathic granulomatous hepatitis, may be useful.
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PMID:[Bacterial granulomatous hepatitis]. 1502 Aug 49