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)

A cystic fibrosis (CF) clinic for adults was established in 1977. We have reviewed the data on 164 patients who attended between 1977 and 1989. Twenty four patients had died, 11 being over 20 years of age at the time of death. Of the 140 patients still alive, 61% were male and 53% were aged over 20 years. Only 55% were diagnosed by one year and 88% by ten years. Almost all patients had respiratory symptoms and sputum culture yielded pseudomonas species in 69%. Other respiratory problems included major haemoptysis and pneumothorax, each in 10%. We found a wide range of respiratory impairment among older patients. Among 33 patients aged over 23 years, the mean (+/-S.D.) percent predicted FEV1 and FVC were 53.3% (+/- 18%) and 71.4 (+/- 20%) respectively. Mean weight in this group was 92.5% (+/- 14) of predicted. Malabsorption occurred in most patients and meconium ileus equivalent occurred in 34%. Other complications were clinical hepatomegaly (16%), diabetes mellitus (9%) and arthropathy (20%). Most patients were taking continuous antibiotics by mouth (89%) and by nebuliser (48%), beta-2 agonists by inhaler (57%) and oral steroids (29%). Almost all were taking multivitamins, pancreatic replacement therapy and multiple nutritional supplements. The number of CF "bed days" grew 12 fold since 1979 and the mean stay in hospital was double the hospital mean. The economic impact was such that over 1/4 of the annual hospital antibiotic budget was expended on CF patients.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis in adolescents and adults. 181 18

A cystic fibrosis (CF) clinic for adults was established in 1977. We have reviewed the data on 164 patients who attended between 1977 and 1989. Twenty four patients had died, 11 being over 20 years after time of death. Of the 140 patients still alive, 61% were male and 53% were aged over 20 years. Only 55% were diagnosed by 1 year and 88% by 10 years. Almost all patients had respiratory symptoms and sputum culture yielded Pseudomonas species in 69%. Other respiratory problems included major haemoptysis and pneumothorax, each in 10%. We found a wide range of respiratory impairment among older patients. Among 3 patients aged over 23 years the mean (+/- S.D.) percent predicted FEV1 and FVC were 53.3% (+/- 18%) and 71.4% (+/- 20%) respectively. Mean weight in this group was 92.5% (+/- 14) of predicted. Malabsorption occurred in most patients and meconium ileus equivalent occurred in most patients and meconium ileus equivalent occurred in 34%. Other complications were clinical hepatomegaly (16%), diabetes mellitus (9%) and arthropathy (20%). Most patients were taking continuous antibiotics by mouth (89%) and by nebuliser (48%), beta-2 agonists by inhaler (57%) and oral steroids (29%). Almost all were taking multivitamins, pancreatic replacement therapy and multiple nutritional supplements. The number of CF "bed days" grew 12 fold since 1979 and the mean stay in hospital was double the hospital mean. The economic impact was such that over 1/4 of the annual hospital antibiotic budget was expended on CF patients.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis in adolescents and adults. 189 94

Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory granulomatous disorder affecting any part of the gastrointestinal tract, particularly the terminal ileum and the colon. Familiar complications are strictures, fistulae, perforation, haemorrhages and malabsorption due to multiple resections. A patient with two rare complications of Crohn's disease is described. A 16-year-old female with ileocaecal Crohn's disease presented with anaemia and ileus. This ileus was caused by some 40 tablets of ferrosulphate with a non-soluble matrix, in the presence of an existing stenosis of the ileum due to Crohn's disease. An ileocaecal resection was performed. During an exacerbation of Crohn's disease she developed hepatic vein thrombosis with a Budd-Chiari syndrome (upper abdominal pain, hepatomegaly and ascites). Prescription of tablets with a non-soluble matrix is contraindicated in patients with a partial stenosis of the intestine. Patients with active Crohn's disease are predisposed to thromboembolic complications. Hepatic vein thrombosis in our patient may have been the result of hypercoagulability during the exacerbation of her disease.
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PMID:[Intestinal obstruction caused by non-absorbable tablets and Budd-Chiari syndrome in a patient with Crohn's disease]. 204 72

A retrospective study of 137 patients with blood culture-positive typhoid fever admitted to the paediatric unit of the Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia was carried out to study epidemiological, clinical, laboratory and treatment aspects of typhoid fever in Kelantanese children in hospital. The male:female ratio was 1:1.1. School-children were the most affected. Cases were seen throughout the year. The five most frequently presenting features were fever, hepatomegaly, diarrhoea, vomiting and cough. Rose spots were seen in only two patients. Complications included gastritis, bronchitis, ileus, psychosis, encephalopathy, gastro-intestinal bleeding and myocarditis. Relative bradycardia was not seen. Blood and stool cultures were positive in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd weeks of illness. There was no significant difference between percentages of elevated O and H titres, whether done during or after the 1st week of illness. A four-fold rise in (O) titres occurred in 50% of cases tested. We would miss 50% of typhoid fever cases if a titre (O) equal to more than 1/160 were relied upon for diagnosis. Altogether, 46% of patients had leucopenia. Chloramphenicol was the most commonly used antibiotic. There were two deaths.
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PMID:Typhoid fever in hospitalized children in Kelantan, Malaysia. 246 4

Three hundred and sixteen patients with cystic fibrosis were seen at the Brompton Hospital during 1965-83; 178 (56.3%) of them were male and 136 female, and their ages ranged from 12 to 51 years. Most patients presented in infancy with respiratory symptoms and malabsorption, but 19 (6%) were diagnosed in adult life, three in their 30s. Pulmonary disease was almost universal (99.7%), being responsible for 97% of all deaths and three quarters of hospital admissions. All patients had developed a productive cough by the age of 21 and over half before the age of 5. Many complained of wheezing, but reversible airflow obstruction was present in only 40% of those tested. Minor haemoptysis was very common (62%), but major episodes less so (10%). Pneumothorax was seen in 61 cases (19%), and was often recurrent. Some irreversible airflow obstruction was present in all patients with pulmonary disease. Two patients have been followed for over 20 years without showing appreciable decline in lung function. Thirty five patients (11%) had no symptoms of malabsorption. Acute meconium ileus equivalent was seen in 16% and a chronic partial obstruction with episodic symptoms in a further 19%. Diabetes mellitus developed in 36 patients, 13 of whom were insulin dependent. Hepatomegaly was common (29%), often occurring without abnormal results in biochemical tests of liver function; only 1% of patients developed portal hypertension with varices and ascites. Skin reactions to at least one common allergen, including Aspergillus fumigatus, were positive in 70%, but very few patients suffered from hay fever or eczema. One hundred and twenty one patients have died, 97% from infection or other pulmonary complications, and 195 were alive in December 1983 (mean age 23 years). Seventy eight per cent of patients were in full time education or full or part time employment, or were housewives, and only 41 were unemployed for reasons for health. Many patients are married and 10 women have borne children. Most patients were admitted to hospital only three or four times during the period of follow up and 50 individuals (16%) have never been in hospital at all. The improvement in prognosis and quality of life for adults with cystic fibrosis should encourage a positive attitude in those who care for them.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis in adolescents and adults. 343 96

We prospectively screened for liver disease patients with cystic fibrosis who were more than 3 years of age and who were followed at the cystic fibrosis center of the University of Milan. From January 1991 to December 1992, we screened 189 patients; clinical, biochemical, and echographic abnormalities suggestive of overt liver disease were present in 34 (18%). To define risk factors for the development of liver disease associated with cystic fibrosis, we evaluated the possible role of specific mutations of the CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator) gene and of different clinical and demographic characteristics (sex, pancreatic status, meconium ileus or its equivalent) through a comparison of patients with cystic fibrosis and overt liver disease (n = 34) and those without liver disease (n = 155). Genetic analysis failed to reveal any significant difference in the allele frequencies of defined (delta F508, 1717-1G-A, G542X, N1303K, W1282X, R553X) and undefined mutations of the CFTR gene in the two groups of patients; genotype frequencies were also not significantly different. Pancreatic insufficiency was present in all patients with liver disease and in 87.3% of those without liver disease. A male predominance was found in the group with liver disease. The frequency of meconium ileus or its equivalent was significantly higher in patients with cystic fibrosis and liver disease (35.3%) than in patients without liver disease (12.3%) (p = 0.0025). In the 31 patients with a history of meconium ileus or its equivalent, the following hepatic abnormalities occurred more frequently than in the 155 patients with cystic fibrosis who did not have meconium ileus: hepatomegaly, biochemical abnormalities, heterogeneous echographic pattern of the liver, and microgallbladder. Twenty-four patients with a history of meconium ileus or its equivalent underwent hepatobiliary scintigraphy (with technetium-labeled iminodiacetic acid derivatives), which showed morphologic abnormalities suggestive of impaired biliary drainage in 21 patients and abnormalities in function in 11. The risk of acquiring liver disease was increased almost fourfold in patients with a history of meconium ileus or its equivalent, in comparison with patients who had cystic fibrosis but were unaffected by these complications (odds ratio, 3.9043; 95% confidence interval, 1.666 to 9.149). We conclude that patients with cystic fibrosis and meconium ileus or its equivalent may benefit from prophylactic treatment with ursodeoxycholic acid; genetic analysis of the major mutations present in this population failed to provide evidence of the existence of a specific genetic marker for the development of liver disease in patients with cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:Analysis of risk factors for the development of liver disease associated with cystic fibrosis. 781 10

Cystic fibrosis is believed to be rare in Arabs. We report 202 cases (114 boys and 88 girls) diagnosed in Jordan over a period of 9 years. The mean age at diagnosis was 2.9 years. Classical presentation with growth failure, malabsorption and respiratory symptoms occurred in 75.4% of cases. Eighteen (10.8%) presented with hepatomegaly, 12 (7.2%) with meconium ileus and 11 (6.6%) had Pseudo-Bartter syndrome. Thirty-eight (23%) children died, most below the age of 1 year which may reflect a more severe disease in our population. Consanguineous marriage was present in 69% of cases. Genetic screening of 84 children and 66 parents revealed 24 different CFTR mutations with a DF508 mutation accounting for only 7.4%. Among the mutations detected, six were alleles identified for the first time. The fact that boys outnumber girls might reflect more deaths in girls due to the observed gender gap in CF mortality. It is possible that the low incidence of the DF508 mutation is due to a confounding effect and the high mortality in those carrying this mutation. The large number of different mutations reflects the ethnic diversity of the Jordanian population and the complex history of the country.
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PMID:Cystic fibrosis in Arabs: a prototype from Jordan. 1121 65

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common lethal autosomal recessive disease in Caucasians, but rare in Asians. The mutations of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene are responsible for CF. To date, less than 5 cases of CF have been reported and a few of them diagnosed based on the genotype of the CFTR gene in Korea. We encountered a 4-month-old Korean infant with CF and the diagnosis was confirmed by CFTR gene mutation analysis. The patient underwent surgical operation, due to meconium ileus at birth. He suffered by recurrent respiratory infections, failure to thrive, fatty liver with hepatomegaly, and cholestasis. The mutations of the CFTR gene were identified in the patient and his parents. The patient was a compound heterozygote with a nonsense mutation of c.263T>G, resulting in an amino acid change of p.Leu88X in exon 3. It was previously described in a Korean patient with CF. The other is a novel mutation; c.2089-2090insA mutation (p.Arg697LysfsX33) in exon 13. The mutation c.263T>G was inherited from his father, and the c.2089-2090insA mutation from his mother. Respiratory infection was recovered by supportive care, and cholestasis was improved slowly with sufficient feeding and supplementation of pancreatic exocrine enzymes. He is 19- month old now and shows catch-up growth. We report a novel CFTR mutation in a Korean infant with CF.
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PMID:Identification of a novel mutation of CFTR gene in a Korean patient with cystic fibrosis. 1895 5

This study analyzes the prevalence and the role of possible clinical and genetic risk factors for the development of cystic fibrosis (CF)-related liver disease (LD) in a Macedonian CF population. All patients older than three years (n=52) were screened for LD. LD was defined by the finding of hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly, significant and persistent increase of at least two serum liver enzyme levels, suggestive ultrasonographic abnormalities (score >4), and morphologic or functional scintigraphic abnormalities. According to predefined criteria, 18 patients (34.6%) were classified as having LD, three of them with portal hypertension. A male predominance was found in the group with LD (72%). There was no significant difference in the pulmonary function, nutritional status, and in the prevalence of meconium ileus. Genetic analysis showed higher frequency of DeltaF508 mutation in the LD group (77.8%) vs. the no LD group (66.2%). All patients with LD had severe mutations: DeltaF508, G542X, N1303K, CFTRdel.21Kb, 1811+1G-->C, and Y1092X.
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PMID:Screening for liver disease in cystic fibrosis: analysis of clinical and genetic risk factors for its development. 1922 14

This paper describes three cases of liver lobe torsion in rabbits presenting with anorexia, lethargy, jaundice and abdominal pain. This condition was associated with anaemia and elevation of alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyl transferase. Abnormal radiological findings included hepatomegaly, gas-filled intestinal loops consistent with gastrointestinal ileus and ascites. Ultrasonographic findings included heterogeneous liver parenchyma, free abdominal fluid and reduced bowel motility. Diagnosis was confirmed by histopathological examination of the liver in all three cases.
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PMID:Liver lobe torsion in three adult rabbits. 1979 19


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