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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A fatal case of systemic carnitine deficiency is reported. The patient suffered from slowly progressive muscle
weakness
since early childhood. After the age of 17 years her
weakness
progressed more rapidly until her death at the age of 20. A pregnancy during the last year of the patient's life was followed by rapid deterioration in her condition. An episode of renal insufficiency occurred at the age of 17 years and
hepatomegaly
, increased BSP dye retention and intermittent ketoacidosis were present during the last month of her life. Biopsy and autopsy specimens of muscle showed a lipid storage myopathy. Type 1 fibers were selectively severely affected, and many Type 1 fibers were atrophic. Abundant large mitochondria, some also containing abnormal inclusions, were also present in the muscle fibers. At autopsy there was marked accumulation of sudanophilic lipid deposits in all hepatocytes, in the renal tubular epithelial cells, and a patchy increase of lipid material was found in the myocardial fibers. There was marked carnitine deficiency in the patient's liver as well as muscel, while the carnitine palmityltransferase activities in these tissues were abnormally high. The basic metabolic abnormality is assumed to be a defect in carnitine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Fatal systemic carnitine deficiency with lipid storage in skeletal muscle, heart, liver and kidney. 18 38
Fifteen males and 17 females with adrenal cortical carcinoma were reviewed. Their average age at diagnosis was 50.33 years plus or minus 12.26 SD for males and 39.76 years plus or minus 12.02 SD for females. The 5-year survival rate in this series was 31.25%. Abdominal pain,
weakness
, and weight loss were the primary presenting symptoms, whereas abdominal mass, distant lymphadenopathy,
hepatomegaly
, and edema of the lower extremities were the main presenting signs. The major sites of distant metastatic involvement were the lungs, liver, lymph nodes, and bones. The best available mode of therapy was surgery. The use of ortho para 'DDD (o,p'DDD), either in addition to surgery or as the only mode of therapy, was not associated with any significant advantage to the patient. Female patients had a longer survival than males, probably because of their younger age at diagnosis.
...
PMID:Adrenal cortical carcinoma. A study of 32 patients. 23 92
A 55-year-old woman had progressive
weakness
, weight loss, night sweats, fever, right-sided facial
weakness
, and
hepatomegaly
. Reticulonodular infiltrates were seen on chest x-ray film and a central filling defect was noted on liver scan. Study of the peripheral blood was noted on liver scan. Study of the peripheral blood revealed pancytopenia and myeloblasts. The bone marrow was not markedly hypercellular but contained noncaseating granulomas and myeloblasts. The patient's condition deteriorated and she died on the 22nd hospital day. Autopsy disclosed disseminated sarcoidosis but no evidence of leukemic infiltrates. Although concomitant "smoldering" acute leukemia cannot be ruled out, the findings in this patient can be best explained on the basis of a myeloblastic leukemoid reaction accompanying sarcoidosis.
...
PMID:Probable myeloblastic leukemoid reaction with disseminated sarcoidosis. 27 Feb 28
Fifty consecutive patients with blastic chronic myelogenous leukemia were evaluated clinically, morphologically, biochemically, and therapeutically. Forty-five patients had a preceding stable phase (38 Ph'+, 7 Ph'-); five patients presented with de novo Ph+ blast crisis. The most frequent clinical signs of impending blast crisis were
weakness
, fatigue, increasing splenomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia, marrow fibrosis, and a rising neutrophil alkaline phosphatase. Fever (unrelated to infection), skin infiltration, lymphadenopathy,
hepatomegaly
, thrombocytosis, and basophilia were much less common. The development of aneuploidy occurred in less than one-half of the total group. Myeloblastic morphology at blastic transformation was most frequent with occasional lymphoblastic, promyelocytic, and undifferentiated cases seen. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase was present in one-third of the patients, but had no clear-cut relationship to the morphology. Response to treatment was generally disappointing (two complete and 15 partial remissions in 45 treated patients).
...
PMID:Blastic transformation in chronic myelogenous leukemia: experience with 50 patients. 27 33
Five patients, 4 men and 1 woman, had adult-onset and slowly progressive
weakness
. There was distal wasting in 2,
hepatomegaly
in 3, and congestive heart failure in 2. Electromyography showed a mixed pattern with abundant fibrillations. Serum creatine phosphokinase was increased 5- to 45-fold. Blood glucose failed to respond to epinephrine or glucagon, and venous lactate did not rise after ischemic exercise. Muscle biopsy showed vacuolar myopathy affecting both fiber types. By electron microscopy the vacuoles corresponded to large pools of glycogen not limited by a membrane. Glycogen concentration was 3 to 5 times normal in muscle and 7 to 21 times normal in erythrocytes. In the presence of iodine, muscle glycogen showed a spectrum characteristic of phosphorylase-limit-dextrin. Debrancher activity was measured by a spectrophotometric assay and by a radioactive reverse reaction. The activity was lacking in muscle and erythrocytes of 4 patients according to both assays; in 1 patient the reverse reaction was not impaired. Though previously reported in only 5 patients, debrancher deficiency myopathy may not be rare and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of adult-onset hereditary myopathies.
...
PMID:Debrancher deficiency: neuromuscular disorder in 5 adults. 28 18
Four cases of hepatic angiosarcoma are reported with a review of 99 other cases in the English literature. Angiosarcoma of the liver is associated with chronic exposure to thorotrast, vinyl chloride, arsenicals, radium and possibly copper and with chronic idiopathic hemochromatosis. Although 40% of patients have hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis at autopsy, the nature of the association between chronic liver disease and hepatic angiosarcoma is unknown. The clinical presentation of hepatic angiosarcoma is nonspecific with abdominal pain,
weakness
and weight loss common complaints and with
hepatomegaly
, ascites and jaundice common findings. Liver function tests are usually abnormal but there is no one liver function test or set of tests specific for the tumor. The occurrence of thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of hepatic angiosarcoma and may be related to local consumption of clotting factors and formed blood elements in the tumor. Catastrophic intraabdominal bleeding is also characteristic and occurs in one-fourth of all cases. This complication is likely related to the high incidence of clotting abnormalities and the vascular nature of the neoplasm. Selective hepatic arteriogram and open liver biopsy are the foundations of diagnostic evaluation. Percutaneous liver biopsy should be avoided. Failure to appreciate the possibility of hepatic angiosarcoma in the proper clinical setting, leading to blind percutaneous biopsy, may result in failure to make the diagnosis at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Survival of patients with hepatic angiosarcoma is brief; only 3% live longer than 2 years. Treatment of the tumor to date is empirical. There are probably a few patients who might benefit from radical surgery with curative intent. For all others chemotherapy is indicated. Adriamycin is active against hepatic angiosarcoma, but optimal dose and mode of administration require further investigation. Further study is also required to delineate the cause of hepatic angiosarcoma in the 60% of cases without definite epidemiologic association.
...
PMID:The clinical features of hepatic angiosarcoma: a report of four cases and a review of the English literature. 36 8
This report deals with two sisters who died with eight, respectively ten weeks under the signs of respiratory failure caused by progressive muscular
weakness
. Only an elevated cerebrospinal fluid protein was suspicious of an additional disturbance of the central nervous system. Muscle biopsy revealed a vacuolar myopathy. Histochemistry showed lipid storage, increased mitochondrial enzyme activity, and to a lower degree, glycogen accumulation especially in type I muscle fibers. Electron microscopy confirmed elevated lipid content in combination with increased, enlarged and abnormally structured mitochondria. Biochemical studies on muscle biopsy, in comparison with normal children, showed a significant decrease of carnitine content and an increased activity of carnitine palmityltransferase. Retrospectively from a clinical point of view this disease is suggestive of "systemic carnitine deficiency", even if some symptoms (
hepatomegaly
, cardiomyopathy) were not present and serum- and liver carnitine was not measured because the children died before the diagnosis of muscle carnitine deficiency was confirmed. The clinical picture of these two fatal cases is compared with another observation of muscle caritine deficiency. This child shows only a mild course of muscle disorder, but very similar morphological changes in muscle biopsy. Biochemically, there was a clear decrease in muscular carnitine, while the serum levels were in the normal range. The activity of muscular carnitine palmityltransferase was also normal.
...
PMID:[Clinical, morphological and biochemical studies on muscle carnitine deficiency (author's transl)]. 50 58
A fatal case of carnitine deficiency is described. The patient had intermittent metabolic acidosis, fluctuating
hepatomegaly
, and progressive muscle
weakness
since 22 months of age. One of two liver biopsies revealed lipid accumulation in the hepatocytes, and a muscle biopsy at age 5 years showed a lipid storage myopathy. Type 1 fibres were the most severely affected. Satellite and vascular endothelial cells also contained abnormal lipid deposits. Quantitative electron microscopy demonstrated an approximately 50-fold increase in lipid material, and a twofold increase in mitochondria in myofibres. The muscle carnitine level was less than one-seventh of the lowest value encountered in 74 biopsies from non-weak or neuromuscular disease controls. The basic abnormality in this patient is assumed to be a defect in carnitine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Carnitine deficiency: clinical, morphological, and biochemical observations in a fatal case. 87 8
A case of B cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis was described. A 57-year-old male was admitted to Shinshu University Hospital because of transverse myelopathy. Five months before admission, he noticed urinary disturbance, which progressed to urinary obstruction. The following month, bilateral muscular
weakness
appeared in his legs. A few days later he could not stand up, and was admitted to a local hospital. Neurological examination revealed sensory disturbances below the level of Th12 in all modalities, and marked
weakness
and hyperreflexia in the lower limbs. A spinal tumor was suspected. However, myelography showed no abnormality. The patient's condition worsened and he became bed-ridden in February 1990. He was transferred to Shinshu University Hospital for further evaluation. On admission he was poorly nourished with fever, anemia,
hepatomegaly
, and bilateral pretibial pitting edema. No lymphadenopathy was observed. Neurological examination showed total sensory loss below the level of Th12, spastic paraplegia, hyperreflexia in the legs, and urinary obstruction. Laboratory findings revealed an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, increased CRP, pancytopenia, and hypoalbuminemia. Serum level of IgG, IgA, IgM, LDH, ALP, GPT and total bilirubin were increased. CSF and MRI imaging of the spinal cord were normal. Proliferation of atypical histiocytes with marked erythrophagocytosis, which is a characteristic pathological feature of malignant histiocytosis, was observed in peripheral blood and aspirated bone marrow. Immunoenzyme staining of bone marrow using monoclonal antibody L-26, which is a B-cell marker, revealed B-cell lymphoma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of B-cell lymphoma with clinical and histological features of malignant histiocytosis]. 130 24
A rare form of plasma cell dyscrasia characterized by associated polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M protein and skin changes has been termed the POEMS syndrome. The pathophysiology is unknown; plasma cell dyscrasia is essential; secondary manifestations are unexplained. We report a 67-year-old man with a 7-month history of progressive
weakness
and numbness of the legs. Clinical examination revealed sensorimotor polyneuropathy, predominantly affecting the lower extremities,
hepatomegaly
, and skin haemangiomas. Additional investigations disclosed IgG-lambda monoclonal serum protein, endocrine abnormalities, elevated cerebrospinal fluid protein level and an osteoblastic lesion of the lumbar vertebra. Biopsy of the osteosclerotic vertebra showed a marked lymphoplasmocytic infiltrate. MRI of the liver disclosed two haemangiomas; this association has not been reported previously.
...
PMID:Polyneuropathy with osteosclerotic myeloma--POEMS syndrome. A case report. 154 70
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