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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intravenous (i.v.) infusion of excessive energy has been associated with hepatic steatosis. The time course of liver lipid accumulation was examined during 6 days of i.v. hyperalimentation with fat-free infusate. Adult male rats with indwelling superior vena cava cannulas received a
dextrose
-amino acid infusate for 0, 1/2, 1, 2, 4 or 6 days to provide 146% of nonprotein energy requirement [congruent to 350 non-protein kcal/(kg . day)] and 335% of nitrogen requirement [congruent to 2.7 g amino nitrogen/(kg . day)]. Significant
hepatomegaly
was apparent by day 1/2. Initially, glycogen deposition accounted for the liver enlargement, but after day 2, liver glycogen was declining and liver lipid was increasing. By day 4, liver lipid had increased fourfold and was the major contributor to
hepatomegaly
. Concurrent with fatty liver metamorphosis, hepatic essential fatty acid deficiency (EFAD) developed by day 4; liver linoleic acid levels had dropped from 20 to 1% of total fatty acids, and liver triene:tetraene ratio was 0.68. Similar changes in hepatic phospholipid fatty acids were observed. Enhanced lipogenesis and impaired lipid transport is known to accompany EFAD and may underlie the observed steatosis. A doubling of plasma cholesterol levels was also associated with steatosis. The mechanism leading to this increase in plasma cholesterol warrants further investigation.
...
PMID:Development of hepatic steatosis and essential fatty acid deficiency in rats with hypercaloric, fat-free parenteral nutrition. 643 8
Two cases of red cell aldolase deficiency associated with congenital nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia are reported. The proband is a fourteen-month-old Japanese boy. Consanguineous marriage was not proven but probable in this family, as the parents were born in the same small island. The proband had moderate to mild anemia aggravated by upper respiratory infections, 1 cm
hepatomegaly
and 2.5 cm splenomegaly, but was unremarkable in other respects and has thus far not shown mental or growth retardation. He did not have dysmorphic features. The red cell aldolase activity was 6% of the normal mean. The enzyme was unstable with respect to heat, and Km for fructose 1,6-diphosphate (F-1,6-DP) was high. The parents and other heterozygotes showed intermediate activity between that of the proband and that of normal subjects. Red cell F-1,6-DP concentration in this case was remarkably increased. Red cell glucose consumption, and lactate formation, as well as hexose monophosphate shunt activity, were decreased as compared with a comparable reticulocyte-rich hereditary spherocytosis patient.
Hexose
monophosphate dehydrogenase by a high concentration of F-1,6-DP in his red cells. As a result of family study, another homozygous aldolase deficiency case associated with hemolytic anemia was found. He is 13 years old and a nephew of the proband's paternal grandmother. His hemolytic anemia also is moderate to mild and aggravated by upper respiratory infections. He does not seem to have mental or growth retardation, nor does he possess dysmorphic features.
...
PMID:Two cases of red cell aldolase deficiency associated with hereditary hemolytic anemia in a Japanese family. 733 96
Various metabolic studies were performed in a patient with the idiopathic Fanconi syndrome in whom constant ketonuria suggested that organic acidemia might contribute to the metabolic acidosis. Glucose intolerance with a diminished insulin release was found after PO or IV glucose loads and after glucagon administratio. An insulinopenic "diabetes-like" state has not previously been described in such patients. The patient had impaired
galactose
-glucose interconversion, elevated blood lactate levels, reduced pyruvate levels, and an increased lactate:pyruvate ratio.
Hepatomegaly
and hypoglycemia were not present, and liver and muscle biopsies revealed no enzymatic evidence of glycogenosis. The erythrocyte UDP
galactose
transferase activity was normal. The patient failed to convert fructose to glucose and had a rise in blood lactate after ethanol administration. Further studies revealed no production of glucose after alanine or glycerol administraion, each test being associated with elevated blood lactate levels and, after alanine, an increased lactate:pyruvate ratio. The lactate:pyruvate ratio was elevated after glucagon administration with increased lactate and reduced pyruvate concentrations.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of carbohydrate metabolism in idiopathic Fanconi syndrome. 738 41
Effects of restricted tube-feeding (25% of energy requirements) of protein, lipid, or carbohydrates on body weight loss; hematologic and clinical chemical variables; plasma lipid and amino acid concentrations; nitrogen balance; and hepatic histologic features and lipid concentrations were compared with values in voluntary-fasting cats (control, CON). Twelve obese cats (6.1 +/- 0.1 kg, > 40% above optimal body weight) were randomly assigned to 4 matched treatment groups (n = 3)--protein (PRO), lipid (LIP), carbohydrate (CHO), and CON--and were offered a low-palatability diet for 4 weeks. Cats of the PRO, LIP, and CHO groups were also tube-fed isocaloric amounts (88 kcal of metabolizable energy) of a casein-soybean protein mixture, corn oil, or a dextrin-
dextrose
mixture, respectively, during the 4 weeks. All cats fasted, rather than eat the low-palatability purified diet. Cats of the PRO group lost weight at a lower rate (P < 0.05) than did cats of other groups. After 4 weeks of fasting, serum alkaline phosphatase activities were higher than reference values in all cats of the CON and LIP groups and in 2 cats of the CHO group. At that time, 1 cat of the LIP group had lethargy,
hepatomegaly
, and hyperbilirubinemia. Total hepatic lipid and triglyceride concentrations increased in all groups during the study, but the increase was significantly (P < 0.05) less in cats of the PRO group, compared with those of the CON and LIP groups, and those of the CHO group, compared with those of the LIP group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of protein, lipid, or carbohydrate supplementation on hepatic lipid accumulation during rapid weight loss in obese cats. 799 98
An 8-year-old boy with galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (GALT) deficiency presented with hypotonia, muscle hypotrophy,
hepatomegaly
, bilateral cataract and mild mental retardation. Two brothers showed a GALT activity consistent with a homozygotic condition and both parents were found to be heterozygotes for this defect. Histological and ultrastructural examination of muscle biopsy specimens showed several necrotic fibres. GALT activity was undetectable in skeletal muscle and muscle tissue cultures; myotubes converted
galactose
to CO2 at a lower rate than controls.
Galactose
-1-phosphate was increased in the patient's red cells and muscle tissue. GALT deficiency, not previously described in muscle, may be of pathogenic relevance in determining the myopathic features present in GALT deficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:Clinical and biochemical evidence of skeletal muscle involvement in galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase deficiency. 832 30
A male child presented at 5 months of age with vomiting, diarrhoea, hypoglycaemia and
hepatomegaly
. Histology on a frozen liver biopsy suggested glycogen storage disease (GSD), while biochemical analyses confirmed an elevated glycogen content and normal activities of the GSD enzymes with the proviso that a variant of GSD 1 should be considered. The patient presented at 9 months of age with severe lactic acidosis and hypoglycaemia. A glucagon tolerance test and
galactose
load test on the patient produced no glycaemic response. A second biopsy was obtained and appropriately handled for the investigation of variants of the glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme (G6Pase) complex. Results showed that the patient had a deficiency of two transport proteins of the G6Pase complex, namely glucose-6-phosphate translocase and pyrophosphate translocase, i.e. GSD 1b/1c beta. These results were confirmed by additional kinetic analyses which provided confirmation of the double translocase deficiency. Evidence for inhibitors to these translocases was not found. The patient's treatment has resulted in the hypoglycaemia now being well controlled; however, at 3 years of age, height and weight are markedly lagging and he is moderately developmentally delayed. Neutropenia has not been found and neutrophil function is normal. Double enzyme deficiencies are very rare and possible explanations which might lead to this phenotype are considered. This, to the authors' knowledge, is the first report of a double translocase deficiency causing GSD type 1.
...
PMID:Multiple transport protein defects in a patient with glycogen storage disease type 1: GSD 1b/1c beta. 859 36
Classical galactosaemia, deficiency of galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GALT), is characterized by acute symptoms of
hepatomegaly
, jaundice, sepsis, cataracts and growth retardation. Treatment with dietary
galactose
restriction corrects these complications immediately; however, most of these children develop long-term complications of verbal dyspraxia, mental retardation and ovarian failure. Our previous molecular study showed that the most common mutation of the GALT gene is a missense mutation of Q188R (replacement of glutamine-188 by arginine) in approximately 60-65% of the German galactosaemic population. The coding region of GALT was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction from genomic DNA of classical galactosaemic individuals, who are negative or heterozygous for Q188R, and was further characterized by direct sequencing. Three new disease-causing mutations, two missense and a stop codon mutation, were identified in three patients from two families with mild galactosaemic variants: firstly R67C, replacement of arginine-67 by cysteine and W316X, the stop codon at tryptophan-316 in one male; secondly A330V, replacement of alanine-330 by valine in two female siblings. In the first family the patient was also heterozygous for the polymorphism N314D and in the second family both girls were compound heterozygotes for Q188R and A330V. All three galactosaemic individuals have a considerable amount of the residual GALT activity in RBC and the
galactose
-1-phosphate (GALP) level decreased much faster on treatment than that of other galactosaemic patients with missense mutations such as Q188R. The clinical and biochemical data of these patients were much more favourable in comparison with those of two female galactosaemic individuals, one homozygous for L195P and the other compound heterozygous for Q188R and L195P. These three missense mutations (R67C, L195P and A330V) also occur in highly conserved regions. These observations suggest that the phenotypic variation in galactosaemic individuals may be due to different molecular aetiologies.
...
PMID:Mutations in the galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase gene of two families with mild galactosaemia variants. 859 37
Several investigators have reported that feeding a semi-synthetic diet of casein and
dextrose
to New Zealand White (NZW) rabbits will increase total serum cholesterol concentration, principally through an increase in the beta-lipoprotein fractions, thereby creating a useful model for atherosclerosis research. Although there is evidence to suggest that the
dextrose
/casein diet alters low-density lipoprotein receptor and bile acid clearance of cholesterol, the underlying mechanism is not completely understood. The effects of the diet on the overall physiology of the rabbit have received little attention. In this study feeding a diet of casein and
dextrose
of male NZW rabbits for 4 weeks resulted in changes in the serum lipid concentrations. During that time the rabbits fed the
dextrose
/casein diet gained less weight than did control rabbits. In the test diet rabbits, liver aspartate and alanine transaminase activities were increased from baseline values of 27 +/- 2 U/L and 89 +/- 9 U/L respectively to 112 +/- 21 U/L and 281 +/- 34 U/L respectively, then returned to the high end of the reference range. Necropsy findings included
hepatomegaly
caused by vacuolar hepatopathy in 19 or 20 experimental rabbits; rabbits fed the control diet had no hepatic lesions. Ultrastructural analysis revealed that enlargement of the liver cells was due to glycogen deposition. Adrenal glands from animals fed the experimental diet had a minimal change in the size of the adrenocortical cells consisting of slight ballooning and rarefaction of the cytoplasm. In a second study the level of dietary fiber was doubled. This resulted in a three-fold increase in lipid concentrations, compared with the fivefold increase in the first study. The liver enzyme activities were increased to the same extent as in the first study. Histologic changes were comparable to those in the first study. The activity of hepatic cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase was 3.7 +/- 0.4 pmol/min/mg of protein, compared with the control value of 7.7 +/- 1.1 pmol/min/mg of protein (P < 0.05) in the second study. The improved rate of weight gain and the lesser increase in total serum cholesterol concentration in the second study with increased dietary fiber suggest that two separate activities may be involved. Although the level of dietary fiber may be related to weight gain and total serum cholesterol values, the relation to the decrease in liver transaminase activities in study 1 was probably coincidental. It appears that the
dextrose
/casein diet causes decreased activity of hepatic cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase, which could cause a decrease in the biliary excretion of cholesterol.
...
PMID:Hepatic and adrenal changes in rabbits associated with hyperlipidemia caused by a semi-synthetic diet. 874 27
Gaucher's disease is a genetically determined inborn error of metabolism in which acid beta-glucosidase or one of its cofactors is absent or diminished in macrophage cells and cause an accumulation of glucosylceramide in these cells. These Gaucher cells accumulate in the organs of the reticuloendothelial system and cause varying degrees of splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
, and encroachment of the marrow cavity of bones. Dental radiographs often reveal consistent bony changes that result from this encroachment. In cases where visceral signs are not apparent, dental radiographs can detect the presence of the disease. Because therapy is available, early recognition of this disorder may reduce overall morbidity. A review of the dental radiographic changes over as many as 60 years shows the effects of oral surgery procedures on bone degeneration and regeneration. The effects of
mannose
lectin acid beta-glucosidase, alglucerase on bone deposition are discussed. Finally, a literature review shows that the changes in the dental radiograph of patients with Gaucher's disease are very specific. Currently, this disorder and its associated molecular genetics are a prototype for research of new treatments such as allogenic bone marrow transplantation and molecularly engineered enzymes.
...
PMID:Dental observations in Gaucher's disease: review of the literature and two case reports with 13- and 60-year follow-ups. 897 38
We report the case of a patient with carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type Ib who developed normally until 3 months of age, when she was referred to the hospital for evaluation of hypoglycemia that was found to be related to hyperinsulinism. She also had vomiting episodes,
hepatomegaly
, and intractable diarrhea, which evoked the diagnosis of carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. Oral
mannose
treatment at a dose of 0.17 g/kg body weight 6 times/d was followed by a clinical improvement and normalization of blood glucose, aminotransferases, and coagulation factor levels. Hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia should be considered as a leading sign of carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type Ib, especially when it is associated with enteropathy and abnormal liver tests.
...
PMID:Hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia as a presenting sign in phosphomannose isomerase deficiency: A new manifestation of carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome treatable with mannose. 1048 8
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