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 44-year-old female British travel guide suddenly had fever, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea develop during her stay in South India. Four days later she was transported to our hospital. At admission she had a high temperature, impaired respiration, and abdominal pain. Clinical examination revealed bilateral pleural effusion, hepatomegaly, and ascites. Two days later the patient showed a generalized macular rash with a conspicuous sparing of small islands of normal skin. Hemorrhagic erythema on the palms and soles as well as focal petechiae on the hard palate and scleral and conjunctival bleeding were also observed. Hypotension and renal insufficiency developed 1 week after the illness started. Laboratory investigations revealed highly elevated levels of hepatic enzymes, severe hemolytic anemia, decreased platelet counts, and abnormal coagulation values. The presumptive clinical diagnosis of dengue hemorrhagic fever was supported by serologic testing that disclosed sustained high titers of hemagglutination inhibition antibodies. Symptomatic therapy with substitution of volume and albumin, blood transfusions, and administration of antipyretics resulted in complete recovery within 6 weeks.
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PMID:Dengue hemorrhagic fever in a British travel guide. 1186 82

Tuberculosis is an ancient disease, still with highprevalence in developing countries. In Western countries there is anincreased incidence, perhaps by immigrants of the Third World, by peoplewith low socioeconomic status, and AIDS. Gastrointestinal tuberculosis, aspulmonary tuberculosis, is a common and serious problem. Symptoms and signsare nonspecific; general syndrome, fever with digestive syndrome, andabdominal pain is frequent. Digestive syndrome presents diarrhea, nausea andvomiting, abdominal pain and tenderness, abdominal mass, hepatomegaly, andassociated ascites. More than 80 percent of cases in our series have activepulmonary tuberculosis. Radiology with Barium in small bowel and colon areimportant diagnostic methods, but colonoscopy with biopsy and stained slides for acid-fast bacilli and caseose granuloma are of high yield in the colon, ileon, or ileocecal localization. If any doubt exists, therapeutic trial and exploratory laparotomy can be used. Important advances have been made in gastrointestinal tuberculosis serodiagnosis. Treatment is the same as for pulmonary tuberculosis, with short regimens; although, in certain cases, this regimen may last from 18 to 24 months. Surgical treatment is required for tuberculosls complications.
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PMID:[GASTROINTESTINAL TUBERCULOSIS] 1229 80

Migration of Ascaris lumbricoides into the gallbladder is rare, unlike ascariasis of the bile duct, and, when it does occur, treatment is generally by endoscopic or surgical extraction. We describe a case of the successful treatment of gallbladder ascariasis with conservative therapy. A 44-year-old Korean man was admitted because of nausea and right upper quadrant pain that did not respond to medical control and had worsened 1 day before admission. Abdominal ultrasonography showed a long, linear, moving echogenic structure in the distended lumen of the gallbladder, but no abnormal dilation of the bile duct. Computerized tomography showed a linear soft-tissue density in the dependent portion of the gallbladder. The patient presented with eosinophilia, and abnormal liver function results, but no fever or hepatomegaly. Based on these findings, and presuming a diagnosis of gallbladder ascariasis, we administered antiparasitic medication (albendazole 400 mg/day for 1 day). Seven days later, we obtained one adult female A. lumbricoides from the feces. The symptoms were fully resolved, and no moving structure could be visualized in the gallbladder by ultrasonography. We recommend that initial therapy for gallbladder ascariasis should involve conservative treatment, unless an associated disease is present or a complication arises.
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PMID:Successful elimination of Ascaris lumbricoides from the gallbladder by conservative medical therapy. 1237 53

Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease is a rare disease first described in 1972 by Kikuchi and Fujimoto et al. (1,2). Clinically the disease presents with lymphadenitis usually in the cervical region. Most reported cases of Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease have been of Asian origin. The cause is unknown and the condition is self-limiting. Some kind of viral or postviral etiology has been implicated. Bacterial and protozoal organisms as well as various other antigens, chemical, physical and neoplastic, have also been postulated. An association with systemic lupus erythematosus has also been shown. Lymphadenitis, hepatomegaly and splenomegaly as well as leukopenia, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and hepatic abnormalities are common findings. Fever, malaise, fatigue, headache, night sweats, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, cutaneous manifestations, and even neurological symptoms are other complaints. Histologically the lymph nodes show partial involvement with patchy irregular areas of necrosis in the paracortical area with absence of neutrophils. We describe four cases of Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease observed in Greece. Their characteristics are discussed, whilst a review of the literature is attempted.
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PMID:Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease in Greece. A study of four cases and review of the literature. 1249 69

Chronic arsenic toxicity due to drinking arsenic-contaminated water has been one of the worst environmental health hazards affecting eight districts of West Bengal since the early eighties. Detailed clinical examination and investigation of 248 such patients revealed protean clinical manifestations of such toxicity. Over and above hyperpigmentation and keratosis, weakness, anaemia, burning sensation of eyes, solid swelling of legs, liver fibrosis, chronic lung disease, gangrene of toes, neuropathy, and skin cancer are some of the other manifestations. A cross-sectional survey involving 7683 participants of all ages was conducted in an arsenic-affected region between April 1995 and March 1996. Out of a population of 7683 surveyed, 3467 and 4216 people consumed water containing As below and above 0.05 mg/L, respectively. Except pain abdomen the prevalence of all other clinical manifestations tested (e.g., pigmentation, keratosis, hepatomegaly, weakness, nausea, lung disease and neuropathy) were found to be significantly higher in As exposed people (water As > 0.05 mg/L) compared to control population (water As level < 0.05 mg/L). The prevalence of pigmentation and keratosis, hepatomegaly, chronic respiratory disease and weakness rose significantly with increasing arsenic concentrations in drinking water. The respiratory effects were most pronounced in individuals with high arsenic water concentrations who also had skin lesion. Therapy with chelating agent DMSA was not found to be superior to placebo effect. However, therapy with DMPS caused significant improvement of clinical condition of chronic arsenicosis patients as evidenced by significant reduction of total clinical scores from 8.90 +/- 2.84 to 3.27 +/- 1.73; p < 0.0001. Efficacy of specific chelation therapy for patients suffering from chronic As toxicity has further need to be fully substantiated. However, supportive treatment could help in reducing many symptoms of the patients. Treatment in hospital with good nutritious diet has been found to reduce symptom score in a subset of placebo treated patients in West Bengal during the course of DMSA and DMPS trial. People should be advised to stop drinking As contaminated water or exposure to As from any other source. The various clinical manifestations should be treated symptomatically.
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PMID:Chronic arsenic toxicity: clinical features, epidemiology, and treatment: experience in West Bengal. 1263 24

The authors report the case of a 26-year-old woman with hepatomegaly, who had recurrent and progressive nausea and abdominal pain. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated fatty replacement of the entire pancreas resulting from cystic fibrosis. The pulmonary disease was totally asymptomatic. Fatty replacement of the pancreas is the most frequent pattern in older patients with cystic fibrosis. This pattern correlates with pancreatic exocrine dysfunction.
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PMID:[Fatty replacement of the pancreas in a patient with asymptomatic pulmonary cystic fibrosis]. 1275 56

The authors reported a case of niclofolan intoxication occurred during the trial of clonorchiasis treatment. The case, a 15 years old Korean schoolboy, took niclofolan(Bilevon(R)) of total 473 mg(11 mg/kg) in 11 divided doses during 20 days. And the case suffered from neurologic symptoms such as severe headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, blurred vision, papilledema, retinal hemorrhage, an epsiode of seizure attack and elevated intracranial pressure, and hepatotoxic symptoms such as hepatomegaly, increased serum transaminases, and shoulder pain, excessive sweating and weight loss. Therapy was concentrated to the management of the elevated intracranial pressure. Hepatotoxic manifestations subsided within one month. The clinical signs related to elevated intracranial pressure persisted two months. Body weight regained after 2 months. And the symptoms of headache, dizziness and vomiting were complained intermittently until 4 months after onset. However, no subsequent clinical problems related with this episode has been noted until this record.
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PMID:A Case Of Niclofolan (Bilevon(R)) Intoxication. 1290

This is a retrospective and descriptive review of 277 patients suffering fasciolasis. These patients were seen in Hospital Nacional Cayetano Heredia between 1970-2002; 240 (86.6%) developed the chronic phase and 37 (13.3%) the acute form. Group aged 20-29 years were the most affected (24%). The main places infected were the interandean valleys of Lima, Ancash and Junin. The 277 patients the main symptoms were: abdominal pain in 236, nausea/vomiting in 106 and diarrhea in 100. Hepatomegaly in 56, pallor in 44 and fever in 23 were the main physical findings. 47% (80/169) suffered eosinophilia, 46% (38/82) had an increase of alkaline phosphatase and 31% (52/169) anemia.
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PMID:[Human fasciolasis and gastrointestinal compromise: study of 277 patients in the Cayetano Heredia National Hospital (1970-2002)]. 1524 93

Hepatic lymphoma metastasis is rare, and should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of hepatic malignancy. A 52-year-old man presented with a four-day history of fever, fatigue, yellowish skin and nausea. His past medical history was unremarkable. There was no history of alcohol intake or medications. His physical examination revealed generalized jaundice and hepatomegaly. His blood tests showed liver failure and coagulopathy. Abdominal ultrasonography illustrated hepatomegaly. A further work-up included bone marrow and liver biopsy. The pathology report was B-cell lymphoma. He was treated with chemotherapy, and his laboratory findings during follow-up showed steady improvement. In conclusion, lymphoma metastasis to liver can be a cause of liver dysfunction. A high index of suspicion is required for the diagnosis. We emphasize the importance of obtaining tissue sample in all patients with suspicious lesion in any organ to avoid missing the rare but curable pathologies.
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PMID:Hepatic lymphoma metastasis presenting with severe acute liver failure: a rare case. 1533 18

A 16-year-old Caucasian girl of Albanian origin was admitted to the hospital complaining of intermittent fever (38 degrees C) for a week, nausea, vomiting, and abnormal laboratory findings (elevated serum aminotransferases levels AST/ALT 77/40 U/l and erythrocyte sedimentation rate 80 mm/first hour, as well as leukopenia 2.5 x 10(3)/mm3), which were found in a blood examination. Physical examination revealed slight hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, as well as cervical and axillary lymphadenopathy. A diagnostic open lymph node biopsy was performed and Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease (KFD) was established based on the characteristic histological pattern. Other abnormal laboratory findings were C-reactive protein 6.8 mg/dl and serum lactate dehydrogenase 900 U/l. Her history included a diarrhoea syndrome 2 months before the present admission, during the summer holidays, for which she was treated with metronidazole. At that time, characteristic cysts of giardia lamblia intestinalis were observed in the stools. Herein, we present this case hypothesising that the protozoal infection caused by the giardia lamblia intestinalis was probably triggering an immune response leading to KFD. The patient's age in combination with this firstly reported protozoal pathogen, as a triggering agent leading to KFD, consist a very interesting originality. Additionally, some review data is also given.
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PMID:Giardia lamblia intestinalis: a new pathogen with possible link to Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease. An additional element in the disease jigsaw. 1564 21


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