Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cerebrohepatorenal syndrome of Zellweger is a congenital syndrome of multiple manifestations, including hepatomegaly and liver dysfunction. Treatment is generally of a supportive nature, aimed at improving nutrition and growth, controlling the central nervous system symptoms and limiting progression of liver disease. Because the liver disease in Zellweger syndrome may be attributed to an overproduction and accumulation of cholestanoic acids, exacerbated by diminished primary bile acid synthesis, we hypothesized that primary bile acid administration would be beneficial in improving liver function by a mechanism involving down-regulation in the synthesis of these atypical bile acids. We report here the clinical and biochemical responses to primary bile acid administration in a 2-mo-old boy who was seen with the typical signs of Zellweger syndrome. Liver disease was evident from hepatomegaly and elevated serum liver enzymes and bilirubin. The diagnosis was supported by markedly elevated serum very long chain fatty acids and the bile acids dihydroxycholestanoic acid and trihydroxycholestanoic acid. Confirmation of the lack of peroxisomes was established by electron microscopy. When the patient was 6 mo old, the primary bile acids cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid, (100 mg each/day) were administered orally. A significant improvement in biochemical indices of liver function occurred with a normalization of the serum bilirubin and liver enzymes and a histological improvement in the extent of inflammation and bile duct proliferation and disappearance of cannalicular plugs. Serum and urinary cholestanoic acids showed a significant decrease within a few days. A striking and sustained increase in growth was observed after therapy, and an improvement in neurological symptoms was noted. In conclusion, this study indicates that primary bile acid therapy improves liver function and growth in the patient with peroxisomal dysfunction and should be considered in the supportive therapies for this condition.
...
PMID:Oral bile acid treatment and the patient with Zellweger syndrome. 173 22

We describe a relatively new syndrome in four children with characteristic facial dysmorphism, sensorineural hearing loss, severe visual impairment with retinitis pigmentosa, hypotonia, hepatomegaly, and severe developmental delay. Two patients had intracranial hemorrhage secondary to a vitamin K-responsive clotting defect; both had steatorrhea. Liver biopsy specimens in two children showed an accentuated lobular architecture with prominent fibrous bands in the portal area. In one, the ultrastructure showed accumulation of abnormal substances and occasional trilaminar structures in hepatocytes and other cells. All four patients had elevated serum phytanic acid concentrations (0.3 to 2.7 mg/dl, normal less than 0.2 mg/dl) and deficient fibroblast phytanic acid oxidase activity (0.1 to 6.7 pmol/mg protein/hr, normal 23 to 87 pmol/mg protein/hr). Serum pipecolic acid was 7 to 55 times normal, and the ratio of C26/C22 very long chain fatty acids was increased (0.10 to 0.22; normal less than 0.03). This characteristic syndrome has been described in several children and called infantile Refsum disease or phytanic acid storage disease. Its relationship to neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy, hyperpipecolic acidemia, and Zellweger syndrome is discussed.
...
PMID:Dysmorphic syndrome with phytanic acid oxidase deficiency, abnormal very long chain fatty acids, and pipecolic acidemia: studies in four children. 241 87

Nine cases of neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy are described. All patients had abnormal facial features, moderate to severe hypotonia, hepatomegaly, and retinitis pigmentosa. The clinical course was rapidly progressive in six cases and more protracted in three others. Biological signs of adrenal insufficiency were present in five cases. CT scan showed a demyelinating process in four patients. Trilamellar inclusions were found in the liver of four cases and dark and complex lipidic inclusions in three other cases. In the three necropsied patients there was severe alteration of the white matter involving particularly the cerebellum in two cases. Gyral and cytoarchitectonic disturbances were absent in all three cases. Increased plasma levels of very long chain fatty acids (8/8), phytanic acid (7/8) and bile fluid trihydroxycoprostanic acid (2/4) confirmed the deficiency of multiple peroxisomal enzymes. Clinical, histopathological and biochemical findings of these nine cases are compared to those reported in other neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy cases and to those of other neonatal peroxisomal disorders, that is cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome of Zellweger and infantile Refsum's disease.
...
PMID:Neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy. 242 Sep 40

Infantile Refsum's disease was diagnosed in three male patients, presenting with facial dysmorphia, retinitis pigmentosa, neurosensory hearing loss, hepatomegaly, osteopenia and delayed growth and psychomotor development. An elevated plasma phytanic acid concentration and a deficient phytanic acid oxidase activity in fibroblasts were found with an accumulation of very long chain fatty acids in plasma and fibroblasts. There were elevated pipecolic acid levels in plasma, urine and CSF, and abnormal bile acid metabolites in plasma. Deficient activity of acylCoA: dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyl transferase was found in thrombocytes and fibroblasts of these patients as well as an impaired de novo plasmalogen biosynthesis in fibroblasts. These biochemical abnormalities, previously described in the Zellweger syndrome, suggest multiple peroxisomal dysfunction in our patients.
...
PMID:Infantile Refsum's disease: biochemical findings suggesting multiple peroxisomal dysfunction. 242 95

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.
...
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

A mild variant of Zellweger (cerebro-hepato-renal) syndrome was diagnosed in male and female siblings aged 7 and 2 years. They had mild facial dysmorphia, moderate psychomotor retardation, tapetoretinal degeneration, sensorineural deafness and hepatomegaly. Ultrastructural examination of a liver biopsy in the younger patient revealed the absence of recognizable peroxisomes. In both patients plasma levels of pipecolic acid, phytanic acid, trihydroxycoprostanoic acid and dihydroxycoprostanoic acid were elevated. The very long chain fatty acid C26:0 and the C26:0/C22:0 fatty acid ratio were elevated in plasma, but less than in classical Zellweger syndrome. In cultured fibroblasts, deficient acyl-CoA:dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase and increased concentrations of C26:0 as well as C26:1 very long chain fatty acids were found within the ranges previously established for patients with classical Zellweger syndrome. Particle-bound catalase was absent in fibroblasts. Despite the relatively mild clinical expression the biochemical abnormalities found in these patients are the result of a general peroxisomal dysfunction similar to the changes in classical Zellweger syndrome.
...
PMID:A sibship with a mild variant of Zellweger syndrome. 312 83

A male infant with typical clinical and biochemical findings of Zellweger syndrome, but in whom hepatic peroxisomes were detected by electron microscopy, had profound hypotonia, hepatomegaly, typical facial appearance including large fontanelle and frontal bossing, convulsions, panaminoaciduria, and hyperammonemia. He died of liver failure at age 5 months. There were increased levels of very long chain fatty acids and trihydroxycoprostanic acid in serum, and increased excretion of dicarboxylic acids and tyrosine metabolites in the urine. Levels of peroxisomal enzymes, acyl coenzyme A oxidase, bifunctional protein, 3-ketoacyl coenzyme A thiolase, and dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase in the liver tissue from the patient were all deficient, findings consistent with Zellweger syndrome. However, immunocytochemical study and electron microscopic examination of the liver at autopsy revealed that hepatic peroxisomes were present at a level similar to that in a control subject. These observations suggest further heterogeneity in Zellweger syndrome and a different pathogenesis in this variant case.
...
PMID:Zellweger-like syndrome with detectable hepatic peroxisomes: a variant form of peroxisomal disorder. 318 38

A boy with psychomotor retardation and Leber congenital amaurosis, sensory hearing loss, and hepatomegaly is reported. Accumulation of bile acid precursors and very long chain fatty acids together with impaired biosynthesis of plasmalogens in cultured fibroblasts (similar to those in the cerebrohepatorenal syndrome of Zellweger) were detected, but the clinical picture was distinctly different. Defective oxidation of phytanic acid was measured in fibroblasts. The virtual lack of peroxisomes in a liver biopsy specimen lends further support to the contention that at least some patients with Leber congenital amaurosis may have one of the recently defined "peroxisomal disorders." The biochemical findings indicate the possibility of prenatal diagnosis.
...
PMID:Peroxisomal dysfunction in a boy with neurologic symptoms and amaurosis (Leber disease): clinical and biochemical findings similar to those observed in Zellweger syndrome. 394 94

Previous studies have suggested that reduction of dietary fat intake, with or without caloric restriction, may lead to improvement in certain of the characteristic abnormalities that accompany total lipodystrophy (TLD). We have studied the effects of eucaloric medium chain triglyceride (MCT) substitution for dietary long chain fatty acids in a patient with acquired total lipodystrophy and unusual somatic and visceral anomalies. The patient exhibited insulin resistance, carbohydrate intolerance, striking fasting- and glucose-stimulated hyperinsulinemia, hyperglucagonemia, type V hyperlipoproteinemia, and lipoprotein lipase deficiency on a normal diet. Improvement in chylomicronemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and xanthomatosis occurred during eucaloric MCT substitution. Carbohydrate intolerance decreased and fasting immunoreactive glucagon and insulin concentrations fell 37% and 83%, respectively. Plasma triglyceride polyunsaturated fatty acid concentrations decreased to very low levels. With long term MCT feeding supplemented by polyunsaturated fatty acids, hepatomegaly has gradually decreased, while body weight has remained stable. The patient has not yet required insulin therapy. These observations suggest that the abnormalities in carbohydrate metabolism are closely linked to, and perhaps dependent on, the abnormalities in lipoprotein transport in TLD. Long chain triglyceride restriction and MCT supplementation should be attempted in additional patients with the features of TLD to determine whether this is a generally effective therapeutic approach.
...
PMID:Eucaloric substitution of medium chain triglycerides for dietary long chain fatty acids in acquired total lipodystrophy: effects on hyperlipoproteinemia and endogenous insulin resistance. 634 62

An eleven month-old boy presented clinically with craniofacial dysmorphia, severe psychomotor retardation, neurological deterioration, no response to visual and acoustic stimuli, failure to thrive, hepatomegaly and adrenal insufficiency. Specific biochemical markers for a peroxisomal deficiency disorder (Zellweger's syndrome, neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy, infantile Refsum's disease) revealed pathological results for very long chain fatty acids, phytanic acid, pristanic acid, plasmalogen biosynthesis and catalase, thus confirming the clinical diagnosis. Comparison of clinical and biochemical findings in the patient with the characteristics of the three peroxisomal deficiency disorders showed overlapping with each of these disorders, which corresponds to the current view that these three peroxisomal disorders differ only with respect to onset and severity of the clinical manifestations, but not with regard to the biochemical defects.
...
PMID:[Zellweger syndrome, neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy or infantile Refsum's disease in a case with generalized peroxisome defect?]. 768 5


1 2 Next >>