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)

Twenty infants and young children with hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) were admitted to hospital. None was diagnosed at admission. Referals were for vomiting of unknown aetiology (16X), pyloric stenosis or hiatus hernia (5X), toxic condition (3X), and hepatomegaly of unknown origin (5X). Feeding difficulties (20X), vomiting (18X), and failure to thrive (16X) were leading symptoms. The most frequent clinical findings were hepatomegaly (18X), pallor (14X), haemorrhages (13X). Ascites, oliguria, tachypnoea, fever, splenomegaly and rickets were less frequent. Laboratory findings were indicative of disturbed hepatic and renal tubular function and also of disturbed intermediary metabolism (hypokaliaemia, hypophosphataemia). However, hypoglycaemia was found in only 4 out of 15 patients tested. Differential diagnosis after hospital admission centered on metabolic disorders such as glycogenoses, galactosaemia, tyrosinosis, or Wilson's disease. Hepatitis, toxic hepatosis, liver tumour, intrauterine infection and sepsis were also considered. Eleven children had first ingested fructose within the first 6 weeks of life. The diagnosis was usually established only many weeks or months after first fructose intake and appearance of symptoms. This documents how difficult the diagnosis of this disease can be both in practice and in hospital. The course was severe in 11 children and lethal in 4. In only 5 patients was the course mild. The 16 survivors are doing well under fructose-exclusion diet. Irreversible visual impairment after intraocular haemorrhage occurred once. In each case HFI could have been suspected immediately, had a detailed nutritional history been taken. Practising paediatricians should know the composition of commonly used infant formulae. They should never prescribe sugared condensed milk for intractable vomiting prior to excluding HFI. Solution for intravenous infusion containing fructose and sorbitol are life-threatening for undiagnosed HFI patients.
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PMID:Hereditary fructose intolerance in early childhood: a major diagnostic challenge. Survey of 20 symptomatic cases. 73

A study was made of opportunities for the use of some signs of alcoholic intoxication in the verification of alcoholic etiology of heart lesion. Clinical signs like hyperemia of the face with telangiectasia, venous plethora of the eyeballs, tremor of the lips, tongue, limbs, Dupuytren's contracture, enlarged liver size combined with a positive macrocytosis test and, to a lesser degree, with a higher activity of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and the detection of fatty hepatosis in liver puncture biopsy were shown to suggest alcoholic intoxication, and excluding other cases of heart lesion they can be of great help in the verification of diagnosis of alcoholic heart lesion.
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PMID:[Importance of alcoholism markers in the diagnosis of alcoholic heart lesions]. 289 79

Necropsy findings of hepatobiliary system from 78 patients with end-stage renal disease maintained on hemodialysis are reported. Ninety percent of the patients exhibited some abnormalities. Multiple abnormalities often coexisted in each patient. Hepatomegaly was found in 50% of the patients and could be attributed to a discernible cause in all but two of the affected patients who had isolated hepatomegaly. Hepatic congestion was also prevalent and was complicated by fibrosis, cardiac cirrhosis, and centrilobular necrosis and hemorrhage in some patients. This was associated with chronic fluid overload, hypertension, and/or cardiovascular disease in the affected patients indicating the importance of adequate control of these factors. Mild periportal hepatic fibrosis, fatty metamorphosis, triaditis, hemosiderosis, and cystic changes were also seen with some frequency--the latter were associated with polycystic kidney disease and were complicated by massive intracystic hemorrhage and abscess formation, each in one patient. Chronic active hepatitis was found in three patients and was associated with chronic HBs antigenemia in one patient and presumed non-A, non-B infection in two. Nearly 22% of the patients showed either cholelithiasis at autopsy or before cholecystectomy due to complications. Significant negative findings included lack of acute viral hepatitis, silicone hepatosis, and recently described focal anoxic lesions associated with erythrocyte sludging. In conclusion, the present study has demonstrated the spectrum of hepatobiliary pathology in a large group of patients with end-stage renal disease maintained on hemodialysis.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary pathology in hemodialysis patients: an autopsy study of 78 cases. 375 41