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)

The proband, a 17-year-old boy, was admitted to our department because of the difficulty in standing on heel. Physical examination revealed a marked weakness and atrophy of bilateral lower legs, especially anterior tibial muscles. Patellar and Achilles tendon reflexes were abolished. Marked hepatomegaly and moderate splenomegaly were noted on abdominal echogram and CT scanning. Serum creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, GOT and GPT were markedly increased. There were no abnormal findings in thyroid function, serum lipid analysis and serum lactate level after ischemic forearm exercise test. EMG of anterior tibial and calf muscles showed a mixture of myogenic and neurogenic patterns and biopsy specimen of calf muscle was compatible with a dystrophic change. Liver biopsy specimen revealed no noticeable change except a slight ballooning of hepatocytes in light microscopy. However, electron microscopic examination showed a marked increase of intracellular vesicles and enlarged smooth ER in which low-density, cotton-like materials were contained. In family study, both his father and paternal uncle were also affected with advanced scapuloperoneal-type myopathy associated with a marked elevation of serum creatine kinase and hepatomegaly. The disorder differs from Miyoshi's distal muscular dystrophy, which shows an early involvement of flexor muscles in lower extremities and is inherited as an autosomal-recessive trait. Although the etiology of hepatomegaly in this case remains to be elucidated, the special findings on electron microscopic study imply the possibility of some unknown metabolic disorder involving both muscle and liver. This disease seems to be a new type of scapuloperoneal-type myopathy, probably having an autosomal-dominant inheritance.
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PMID:[Familial scapuloperoneal-type myopathy associated with a marked elevation of serum creatine kinase and hepatomegaly]. 275 61

We reported two siblings of Leber's congenital amaurosis associated with increased level of very long chain fatty acid (VLCFA) in blood. Case 1, a 3 1/2-year-old boy had congenital blindness, severe psychomotor retardation, hepatomegaly, profound hypotonia, loss of deep tendon reflexes, muscular atrophy and weakness, and non-convulsive status epilepticus characterized by a sudden respiratory failure, and also showed a flat electroretinogram, non-pigmentary retinal degeneration, severe atrophy of the brain stem and cerebellum, hepatic fibrosis, decreased motor and sensory conduction velocities and atlanto-axial instability. Sural nerve biopsy revealed severely decreased number of total myelinated fibers without remarkable demyelination or remyelination. Case 2, an elder sister of case 1, with pigmentary retinal degeneration, hepatomegaly and pericarditis had died at 3 months. Autopsy revealed hypomyelination and heterotopy of the cerebral white matter, hepatic fibrosis, renal microcysts and normal adrenal cytoarchitecture. In case 1, the level of VLCFA was increased twofold and sevenfold of controls in serum and in red cell membrane, respectively. Phytanic or trihydroxycholestanoic acid was not detected in the serum and bile. Normal shaped peroxisomes were definitely recognized in biopsied liver by means of electronmicroscopic histochemistry. From the above findings, these patients was thought to be a new variant of peroxisomal disorders relating to degradation of VLCFA, other than Zellweger syndrome, infantile Refsum disease and infantile adrenoleukodystrophy. It was concluded that peroxisomal functions should be studied in cases of Leber's congenital amaurosis.
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PMID:[Two siblings of Leber's congenital amaurosis with an increase in very long chain fatty acid in blood: relationship between peroxisomal disorders and Leber's congenital amaurosis]. 278 58

Sixty cats with hematologic abnormalities indicative of non-lymphoid hematopoietic neoplasia were classified into two groups, myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myelogenous leukemias (AML), using criteria developed for human patients with similar diseases. Cats with myeloblast counts in bone marrow of less than 30% were classed as MDS and cats with myeloblast counts of 30% or greater were classed as AML. The clinical, laboratory, and postmortem findings in each group were described and compared. Clinical signs of disease were similar in both groups, the most common being inappetance, lethargy, and weakness. Non-regenerative anemia, macrocytosis, neutropenia, and thrombocytopenia were frequent hemogram abnormalities in both groups. Diagnostically useful differences in physical and peripheral blood findings were a higher prevalence of splenomegaly and/or hepatomegaly, thrombocytopenia, and severe anemia in the AML group. Circulating myeloblasts were found only in cats in the AML group. Outcome of disease was similar in both groups; 85% of the cats in each group died or were euthanatized within one week of diagnosis. In cats that were necropsied, extramedullary leukemic infiltrates were found in all cats in the AML group and in none of the cats in the MDS group.
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PMID:Non-lymphoid hematopoietic neoplasia in cats: a retrospective study of 60 cases. 282 80

The antiarrhythmic agent amiodarone is associated with numerous adverse effects, but clinically significant liver disease is rare. A patient is described who presented with muscle weakness, hepatomegaly, and ascites following 28 months of amiodarone usage. His condition deteriorated despite discontinuation of amiodarone therapy. A postmortem liver biopsy demonstrated necrosis, fibrosis, hyalin, and phospholipid-laden lysosomal lamellar bodies. Resolution of hepatic dysfunction may not necessarily occur on withdrawal of amiodarone if irreversible damage is already established. We speculate as to the reasons for the reportedly low incidence of overt liver disease, and suggest that hepatic enzyme levels, as well as other indicators of hepatic function, such as the serum albumin concentration, be monitored indefinitely in all patients while taking amiodarone.
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PMID:Fatal amiodarone hepatoxicity. 334 40

It has been estimated that during 1955-1959 in southeastern Turkey, approximately 4000 people developed porphyria due to ingestion of hexachlorobenzene (HCB), a fungicide added to wheat seedlings. Patients subsequently developed bullae on sun-exposed areas, hyperpigmentation, hirsutism, weakness and porphyrinuria. Children born to mothers who had ingested the grain were exposed to HCB in maternal milk and transplacentally, resulting in the death of children under the age of two. In this follow-up study, 204 patients with a past history of HCB-induced porphyria were re-evaluated. There were 132 males and 72 females, with an average age of 32.1 years, an average age of onset of 7.1 years and a duration of 2.4 years. The clinical features of the 204 patients were: scarring of the face and hands in 86.7%, hyperpigmentation in 71.1%, hirsutism in 47.1%, pinched facies in 41.2%, fragile skin in 37.7%, painless arthritis in 66.6%, small hands in 64.2%, an enlarged liver in 4.4% and an enlarged thyroid in 37.3%; most patients also showed neurological symptoms. Urine and stool porphyrin levels were determined in all patients. Seventeen showed elevated levels of one of the porphyrins and eight were considered still porphyric after 25-30 years. A total of 56 specimens of human milk obtained from porphyric mothers were analysed for HCB. The average value was 0.51 ppm compared with 0.07 in controls. After HCB ingestion, abnormal porphyrin metabolism, dermatological, orthopaedic and neurological findings, and HCB residues in the milk of porphyric patients have been shown to persist at least for 25-30 years.
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PMID:Porphyria turcica: hexachlorobenzene-induced porphyria. 359 56

A 7-year-old adult male ferret had progressive hair loss that was bilaterally symmetric. Also clinically evident were severe dehydration, polydipsia, muffled heart sounds, weak femoral pulses, hepatomegaly, lethargy, weakness, temporal muscular atrophy, dyspnea, and weakness. The blood profile of the ferret indicated profound leukopenia, eosinopenia, and high phosphorus, BUN, creatinine, and potassium concentrations, as well as high aspartate transaminase activity; the albumin concentration was low. The serum cortisol concentration was 8.1 micrograms/dl. Necropsy and histologic findings confirmed a diagnosis of hyperadrenocorticism, complicated by dilatative cardiomyopathy, chronic active hepatitis, and renal disease.
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PMID:Hyperadrenocorticism in a ferret. 365 2

A 46-year-old man experienced weakness, lassitude, and vague, aching abdominal pain in the right upper quadrant. Physical examination was notable for hepatomegaly and slight hyperpigmentation of the hands. Elevated levels were revealed on liver function tests, and massive iron deposition was shown on liver biopsy. The patient was started on a therapeutic regimen of 400-ml phlebotomies. Hereditary hemochromatosis is an iron-storage disease in which total body iron stores can reach incredibly high levels, leading to damage of the liver, heart, pancreas, and pituitary gland. The most specific screening test is measurement of the serum concentration of ferritin, and a transferrin saturation determination is also helpful in diagnosis. Phlebotomy is still the treatment of choice, although new ways of administering chelating agents are being investigated.
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PMID:Hereditary hemochromatosis in a 46-year-old man. 374 25

Seven male members of one family had a form of glycogen storage disease that was inherited in an X-linked recessive pattern. The clinical manifestations included hepatomegaly, delay in growth and sexual maturation, muscular weakness in childhood, and gouty arthritis. The cause of the glycogen accumulation did not appear to be a deficiency of glucose 6-phosphatase, debrancher enzyme, phosphorylase, or phosphorylase kinase. Prognosis appeared to be good although there was significant disability during childhood.
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PMID:X-linked glycogen storage disease. A cause of hypotonia, hyperuricemia, and growth retardation. 385 3

Two cases of Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia occurred in a breeding group of 22 adult patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). Affected animals had acute clinical signs of depression, weakness, dehydration, hypothermia, hepatomegaly and pronounced leukopenia. Both animals died a few hours after treatment was initiated. Gross necropsy findings included jaundice, fluid in body cavities, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, multiple white foci within the liver and spleen, generalized lymph node enlargement and numerous mucosal ulcerations in the colon. Primary histopathological lesions were multifocal hepatic necrosis, splenic necrosis, chronic ulcerative enteritis and diaphragmatic myositis with necrosis and edema. Yersinia enterocolitica was cultured from the liver, spleen, lung, jejunum and rectum. Wild rodents, particularly mice, may have been a source of infection for these animals, as the monkeys were housed in a rural, indoor-outdoor facility. A preliminary culture survey showed that some clinically normal patas monkeys harbored the organism in their intestinal tracts.
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PMID:Naturally occurring Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia in patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). 405 42

Investigations of schistosomiasis mansoni in 218 Yemeni agricultural workers in the San Joaquin Valley of California revealed a prevalence of 56%. In those infected, quantitative egg counts performed by the Kato thick smear method revealed that 57% had light infections (1-100 eggs/g), 27% moderate infections (101-400 eggs/g), and 16% heavy infections (greater than 400 eggs/g; mean--918 eggs/g). The Yemeni had been migrating to the USA for the past 20 years, a period in which the prevalence of schistosomiasis had remained constant in the Yemen. The prevalence of schistosomiasis in those who had been away from Yemen for less than 5 years was 59% with a mean egg output of 236 eggs/g, but in those away for more than 5 years (up to 20 years) it was 32% with a mean egg output of 75% eggs/g. This is in spite of the fact that 75% of the latter had returned to Yemen for short visits. Statistical analysis by the Fisher's exact probability test revealed a significantly lower egg output in those away from Yemen more than 5 years. On the basis of these findings the mean life span of the Yemen strain of Schistosoma mansoni in man was estimated to be between 5 and 10 years. The presence of disease was assessed in this population by traditional medical means without prior knowledge of the status of the infection in the individuals examined. Under these circumstances, there were no differences in symptoms such as weakness, diarrhea and abdominal pain among the uninfected proportion of the population, total infected group and a small subgroup of those most heavily infected. None of the patients had hepatomegaly and only two had splenomegaly--one lightly and the other heavily infected. Because of the toxicity of antischistosomal drugs and the lack of treatment facilities only the 22 most heavily infected (greater than 200 eggs/g) of the 122 individuals with schistosomiasis mansoni were treated with niridazole. In addition the two individuals with splenomegaly were treated with antimony dimercaptosuccinate. Side effects, though common, were not severe. Although follow-up in this migrant population was poor the nine patients examined 3 to 7 months after treatment showed a mean decrease in egg output of 97%.
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PMID:Schistosomiasis mansoni in Yemeni in California: duration of infection, presence of disease, therapeutic management. 445 Dec 30


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