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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 67-year-old man with a 3-month history of jaundice presented with
hepatomegaly
. Laboratory studies revealed abnormal liver tests with raised bilirubin. Renal function was normal. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography revealed normal extrahepatic bile ducts. Liver biopsy showed severe bilirubinostasis and a typical bile infarct. Laminar and globular deposits of PAS-positive diastase-resistant non-congophilic material were observed in the sinusoidal walls. In addition, congophilic material was detected in the portal tracts. Immunohistochemistry revealed the presence of lambda-light chain deposits both in the sinusoids and in the portal tracts. Collagens type I and IV and fibronectin appeared markedly increased in the perisinusoidal space. On electron microscopy, the deposited material in the Disse spaces was mainly composed of fibrils indistinguishable from amyloid, admixed with small amounts of granular electron-dense material. The similarities of light chain deposition disease and
AL amyloidosis
are discussed.
...
PMID:Light chain deposition disease of the liver associated with AL-type amyloidosis and severe cholestasis. 190 Oct 75
The morbidity and lethality of
AL amyloidosis
is caused by the deposition of lg light chains as fibrillar amyloid protein in vital organs, disrupting their function, and not by the generally low burden of clonal plasma cells that produce the paraproteins. Survival of patients with
AL amyloidosis
is no more than 1 to 2 years from the time of diagnosis with current management approaches. Clearly, more effective therapies are needed for this rapidly lethal disease. Five patients were treated with dose-intensive melphalan and blood stem cell support and followed for a period of 1 year. Patients were diagnosed with
AL amyloidosis
by tissue biopsy and categorized by performance status and organ involvement. Their plasma cell dyscrasias were evaluated with immunofixation electrophoresis of serum and urine specimens, quantitative serum lgs, and immunohistochemical staining of bone marrow biopsy specimens. After treatment with dose-intensive intravenous melphalan followed by infusion of autologous growth-factor-mobilized blood stem cells, clinical evaluations and plasma cell studies were repeated at 3 and 12 months. Three men and 2 women aged 38 to 53 years were treated. Median performance status (SWOG) was 2 (1 to 3), and clinical presentations included nephrotic syndrome (n = 1), symptomatic cardiomyopathy (n = 1), gastrointestinal involvement with polyneuropathy (n = 2), and
hepatomegaly
(n = 1). With a median follow-up of 13 months (12 to 17 months), all five patients are well and have shown stable or improved performance status and clinical remission of organ-related dysfunction, including a 50% reduction in daily proteinuria with no change in creatinine, reversal of symptoms of cardiomyopathy and reductions of posterior wall and septal thickening, reversal of polyneuropathy and gastric atony, and resolution of
hepatomegaly
by computed tomographic scan. In 3 of the 5 patients (60%) at 12 months after treatment, plasma cell dyscrasias could not be detected. Dose-intensive chemotherapy with intravenous melphalan and growth-factor-mobilized blood stem cell support is feasible therapy for patients with
AL amyloidosis
, even when there is clinical evidence of cardiac involvement. At least some patients with
AL amyloidosis
achieve complete remission of their plasma cell dyscrasia, improvement in performance status, and clinical remission of organ-specific disease after this form of treatment.
...
PMID:Dose-intensive melphalan with blood stem cell support for the treatment of AL amyloidosis: one-year follow-up in five patients. 883 79
The symptoms of amyloidosis depend on the type of precursor, the amount of deposits and their location. In systemic amyloidosis almost every organ may be involved. Cardiac involvement is severe, especially in
AL amyloidosis
, responsible for restrictive cardiomyopathy with right ventricular failure, leading rapidly to death. Renal amyloid deposition causes nephrotic syndrome with hypertension and renal failure. Neurological complications include peripheral neuropathy with dysautonomia cerebral involvement (dementia, cerebral haemorrhages). Arterial deposits are common in systemic senile amyloidosis, and may cause ischaemia. Osteo-articular damage is mainly seen in patients on long-term haemodialysis.
Liver enlargement
is often the only manifestation of hepatic amyloidosis. Digestive tract involvement includes macroglossia deposits in salivary glands and disturbances in gastrointestinal motility. Pulmonary amyloidosis causes nodular or interstitial infiltrates. Cutaneous lesions are various. Localized amyloidoses include goiter, breast and vesical involvement which can be difficult to differentiate from neoplasm, as well as ocular amyloidosis mimicking posterior uveitis.
...
PMID:[Localizations and consequences]. 945
AL amyloidosis
was diagnosed in a 56-year-old woman with spontaneous purpura, macroglossia and
hepatomegaly
, a serum IgGk monoclonal gammopathy and a 25% plasma cell bone marrow infiltration. She was started on high-dose treatment consisting of four monthly cycles of VID chemotherapy, then underwent a stem cell collection after priming with cyclophosphamide + G-CSF. Myeloablative therapy was with melphalan and busulfan. Hematologic recovery was fast and uncomplicated. At follow-up 22 months from ASCT, the patient shows a complete remission of the clonal plasma cell disorder, normalization of liver size and alkaline phosphatase level and a significant improvement in the signs of vascular and soft tissue amyloid infiltration.
...
PMID:Improvement of amyloid-related symptoms after autologous stem cell transplantation in a patient with hepatomegaly, macroglossia and purpura. 1046 36
Patients with unexplained heart failure,
hepatomegaly
, nephrotic syndrome, or peripheral neuropathy should be evaluated for primary systemic (amyloid light-chain, or AL) amyloidosis by first seeking evidence of a clonal plasma cell disorder with serum and urine immunofixation studies, as well as a bone marrow biopsy. Immunostaining of the marrow biopsy for lambda and kappa isotypes will usually demonstrate a dominant clonal population of plasma cells if immunofixation studies are negative (less than 10% of cases). Tissue diagnosis of amyloidosis should be sought by biopsy of the abdominal fat or an involved organ. In addition, patients with stable myeloma or monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance who develop such conditions or become progressively ill should be evaluated for amyloidosis. We recommend that newly diagnosed patients with
AL amyloidosis
, who meet criteria for autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation, be considered for high-dose melphalan with stem cell support. Criteria usually include adequate cardiac, pulmonary, and hepatic function.
AL amyloidosis
patients treated with autologous transplantation frequently achieve durable complete remissions of the plasma cell disease and marked improvement in amyloid-related organ dysfunction.
AL amyloidosis
patients with dominant cardiac amyloid, who are without symptomatic pleural effusions and have no history of cardiac syncope or symptomatic arrhythmias, may be considered for autologous transplantation but are at increased risk of peritransplant mortality. Autologous transplantation should not routinely be offered to patients with dominant cardiac amyloid with recurrent effusions or histories of syncope or arrhythmias or to patients older than 50 years of age with more than two major organ systems involved (eg, heart, kidneys, liver, and peripheral nerves). We recommend that AL patients with isolated advanced cardiac or hepatic amyloidosis be considered for solid organ replacement followed by autologous transplantation. Otherwise, AL patients who are elderly or ineligible for autologous transplantation may be treated with oral melphalan (Alkeran, GlaxoWellcome, Middlesex, UK) and prednisone; however, because the response rate is only about 25% and the prognosis poor, such patients might also be enrolled on clinical trials of emerging therapies.
...
PMID:Primary systemic amyloidosis. 1205 64
Primary amyloidosis
is a plasma cell dyscrasia in which insoluble immunoglobulin light chain fragments are produced and polymerize into fibrils that deposit extracellularly, causing visceral organ dysfunction and death. The disorder is rare. Its recognition requires understanding the association between nephrotic syndrome, cardiomyopathy, peripheral neuropathy, and
hepatomegaly
with amyloidosis. The most important screening test for amyloidosis is immunofixation of the serum and urine to detect a monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain. All patients need the diagnosis confirmed histologically. The least invasive source of tissue for amyloid detection is the subcutaneous fat. The most important prognostic factor is whether there is cardiac involvement, which is best assessed by echocardiography with Doppler studies. Therapies used include oral melphalan/prednisone and high-dose corticosteroids. High-dose chemotherapy followed by stem cell reconstitution seems to provide the highest reported response rates. Transplant is associated with unique morbidities not seen in the transplantation of patients with other hematologic malignancies.
...
PMID:Primary systemic amyloidosis. 1205 72
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.
...
PMID:Kidney and liver involvement in monoclonal light chain disorders. 1211 97
Primary amyloidosis
is a systemic disorder caused by the clonal production and tissue deposition of immunoglobulin light chain proteins. The disease symptoms are typical of multisystem failure. Common presenting features include nephrotic syndrome,
hepatomegaly
, sensomotor peripheral neuropathy and, in the case of cardiac involvement, congestive heart failure. This last sign appears very seldom as alone, without any others. Cardiac involvement generally denotes a poor prognosis, regardless of the method of treatment. The median survival rate from onset of congestive heart failure is 6 months. Only the patients with earliest diagnosis made and advanced treatment (chemotherapy, autologous stem-cell transplantation, heart transplantation) introduced have the chance of the lengthening of life. The authors present a case of 52-year-old man with a primary amyloidosis, who suffered from severe, not responding to treatment, congestive heart failure. Because of lack of the other organ involvement symptoms, the correct diagnosis was made very late. The authors place emphasis on a simple diagnostic tool such as the correlation between the low voltage in the limb ECG leads and the echocardiographic sings of left ventricular hypertrophy. The combination of specific ECG, echocardiographic findings and positive extracardiac tissue biopsy may be sufficient to reach correct diagnosis. These examinations are easy accessible in non-specialist hospitals.
...
PMID:[Primary cardiac amyloidosis -- condition which can be diagnosed by a cardiologist]. 1675 38
Primary (AL) amyloidosis is the most common form of systemic amyloidosis seen in current clinical practice. The symptoms of the disease are usually vague, special features are seen in fewer than one fifth of patients, and the combination of organs and systems involved provides a clue for the diagnosis. We describe a patient in whom asymptomatic
hepatomegaly
, cardiomegaly, hyperlipidaemia and elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level were found during routine examination; the final diagnosis was primary systemic
AL amyloidosis
with severe cardiomyopathy, resulting in a fatal outcome within eight months from the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Unusual initial presentation of primary systemic (AL) amyloidosis with severe cardiomyopathy and fatal outcome. 1724 12
Light-chain (AL) amyloidosis is the most common form of systemic amyloidosis and is associated with an underlying plasma cell dyscrasia. The disease often is difficult to recognize because of its broad range of manifestations and what often are vague symptoms. The clinical syndromes at presentation include nephrotic-range proteinuria with or without renal dysfunction,
hepatomegaly
, congestive heart failure, and autonomic or sensory neuropathy. Recent diagnostic and prognostic advances include the serum free light-chain assay, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, and serologic cardiac biomarkers. Treatment strategies that have evolved during the past decade are prolonging survival and preserving organ function in patients with this disease. This review outlines approaches to diagnosis, assessment of disease severity, and treatment of
AL amyloidosis
.
...
PMID:Light-chain (AL) amyloidosis: diagnosis and treatment. 1769 66
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