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)

Focal nodular hyperplasia and adenoma of the liver together represent approximately 2% of all primary hepatic tumors and tumor-like lesions in childhood. This study reports the clinical and pathologic features of focal nodular hyperplasia in three children, all females between 27 months and 15 years of age with asymptomatic hepatomegaly. In contrast, massive hemoperitoneum from a ruptured, hemorrhagic mass was the presentation of the hepatic adenoma in a 14-year-old girl. There was no history of administration of steroids in these four children. Angiography in two cases (one case each of focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatic adenoma) revealed hypervascular lesions with abnormal tortuous vessels suggesting a malignant tumor. Pathologically, the adenoma and focal nodular hyperplasia were readily distinguishable and the necessity for this differentiation was reviewed. All four patients are currently doing well.
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PMID:Focal nodular hyperplasia and adenoma of the liver. A pediatric experience. 23 73

Primary tumors of the liver infrequently develop in patients with a normal liver or in those who have not been exposed to one of several tumor-producing compounds. Hepatocellular adenoma was one of the rarest liver tumors prior to the use of oral contraceptives (OCs). Now the annual incidence in longterm users is estimated at 3-4/100,000. An adenoma that follows OC use is one that often regresses with discontinuation. Focal nodular hyperplasia is a nonencapsulated solitary lesion that has a fibrotic stellate center in which large thick-walled arteries are the source of the blood supply, and occurs most often in women during the menstrual age, and there is no evidence that OCs have increased their frequency. Adenomatous hyperplasia occurs occasionally in patients with submassive necrosis and also in those with cirrhosis. Liver cysts present most often in middle aged women and the ratio of females to males is 4:1. In the US, metastatic carcinoma of the liver is some 18-20 times more frequent and about 85% of these arise in a cirrhotic or precirrhotic liver. Malignant mesenchymal tumors have been associated with exposure to vinyl chloride of injection of Thorotrast. Signs and symptoms of liver disease occur in about 50% of patients with hepatic metastases with hepatomegaly being the most common physical sign. Metastatic carcinoma most often produces multiple umbilicated nodules that involve the liver uniformly. Portal hypertension may be associated with a hepatic neoplasm.
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PMID:Tumors of the liver: pathologic features. 630 41

Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver is a rare benign tumor of unknown etiology. Presented here is a case of focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver in a 19-year-old man with asymptomatic hepatomegaly. Liver scan and selective hepatic angiography revealed a tumor mass, which was indistinguishable from a malignant tumor. At laparotomy a large mass measured 16 X 10 X 4 cm and weighed 480 gm arising from a part of the left hepatic lobe and extending down to the abdominal cavity was found. The gross and microscopic findings established the diagnosis of focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver. The clinical, radiological and pathological findings in the patient are described in detail.
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PMID:A case of focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver. 694 48

Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver (FNH) in a fit young Iranian girl of 19 months presented with asymptomatic hepatomegaly. Liver scan and ultrasound examinations demonstrated a space-occupying lesion involving both hepatic lobes. Arteriography revealed a vascular pattern suggestive of liver cell carcinoma with dilated arterial branches and tumour blush on the capillary phase. At laparotomy the large mass involved both right and left hepatic lobes and was not resected. Tissue diagnosis was established by surgical wedge biopsy. FNH should be considered in the differential diagnosis of an hepatic mass in a clinically well child, particularly female, in which the liver biopsy suggests cirrhosis but arteriography favours liver cell carcinoma. If FNH is diagnosed and the lesion is not resected it is recommended that patients be advised against sex hormone therapy as there may be an increased risk of rupture with intraperitoneal haemorrhage.
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PMID:Focal nodular hyperplasia of the liver. 736 58