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 14-month-old baby weighing 4300 g was a giant infant with macroglossia. Exomphalos was not present, but diastasis recti abdominis was observed. The patient was therefore diagnosed as having Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (EMG syndrome). Other characteristic signs such as neonatal hypoglycemia, hemihypertrophy, and a small ventricular septal defect were also recognized, but nephromegaly or hepatomegaly was not present. Tongue reduction by wedge resection was performed under general anesthesia. Some of the problems associated with anesthetic management in this syndrome are hypoglycemia, airway obstruction and cardiovascular status. After induction with increasing concentration of halothane (0.5-4.0%) and 66% nitrous oxide in oxygen, a nasotracheal tube was inserted. Endotracheal intubation was easy without using a neuromuscular blocking agent. Anesthetic maintenance was accomplished with nitrous oxide 66% in oxygen and halothane 0.5-1.0% and no neuromuscular blocking agent was used. The plasma glucose level was kept within normal ranges during and after the operation by infusion of acetate Ringer's solution with 5% glucose. The postoperative progress was uneventful.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management for partial tongue resection in a patient with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome]. 160 68

We report the case of a patient with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) who developed renal cell carcinoma (RCC). At birth, this patient presented with macroglossia, diastasis recti, mild gigantism, hepatomegaly and hypoglycemia, and the diagnosis of BWS was made. At 22 months, an intrapelvic rhabdomyosarcoma was detected and resected. At 37 months, computed tomography (CT) demonstrated a small mass with high attenuation in the right kidney, which was surgically confirmed to be RCC.
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PMID:Renal cell carcinoma in a patient with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. 865 57

We report the association of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) and a residual acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) activity of about 35% in a 23 months old Hungarian boy. Besides the classical triad of exomphalos, macroglossia and gigantism some other BWS-related features: polyhydramnios (known from the praenatal history), hemihypertrophy, craniofacial dysmorphy, a mild mental retardation, bilaterally undescended testes, cardiac anomalies and a terminally developed, fatal embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma were present in the patient. The decreased activity of the ASM was measured in the patient s skin fibroblasts. This result, with hepatomegaly, mental retardation, feeding problems, a failure to thrive and muscle-hypotony, partially resembled the ASM-deficient forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD). Morphological analysis of the bone-marrow cells gave normal results. There was no chromosomal alteration found by conventional karyotyping of the patient s lymphocytes.BWS-associated genes as well as the human ASM gene (SMPD1) are all located at 11p15. DNA-studies by region specific markers as well as mutational analysis for the most common NPD-mutations are planned in the future. This is the first report on the simultaneous occurrence of BWS and ASM-deficiency.
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PMID:Acid sphingomyelinase deficiency in Beckwith Wiedemann syndrome. 1117 64

An infant with persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, diffuse nesidioblastosis, and mixed hamartoma of the liver (MHL), in addition to demonstrating clinical, pathologic, and molecular manifestations of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), is the subject of this report. H19 methylation assay and allelic expression analysis for insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) indicated that the patient was mosaic for paternal isodisomic cells and normal cells in lung tissue, nontumoral liver tissue, tissue from the MHL, and pancreatic tissue. We propose that abundant IGF2 expression during development due to paternal isodisomy resulted in hepatomegaly and islet cell hyperplasia, which led to nesidioblastosis. MHL, by contrast, may have resulted from a decrease in disomic cells, compared with nontumoral liver tissue, which showed an increase in disomic cells. Thus, somatic mosaicism may result in unbalanced tissue growth, which may contribute to the formation of MHL in BWS.
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PMID:Nesidioblastosis and mixed hamartoma of the liver in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: case study including analysis of H19 methylation and insulin-like growth factor 2 genotyping and imprinting. 1144 40

We report a case of a female neonate with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome who manifested upper airway obstruction soon after birth and suffered from intractable hypoglycemia and abdominal distention caused by nephromegaly. She was delivered at 31 weeks of gestation with 2480 g and was diagnosed as Beckwith-Wiedeman syndrome, manifesting macroglossia, hepatomegaly, nephromegaly and omphalocele. Her trachea was intubated 30 minutes after birth due to upper airway obstruction. At 12 days of life, glossopexy was performed to relieve the airway obstruction. Although tracheal extubation was successfully accomplished 12 days later, 21 days after the glossopexy she manifested apnea and hypoxia and required tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation again. We suspected hypoglycemia or central apnea to be the cause of apnea and started the administration of somatostatin analog as a treatment for hypoglycemia. In addition to the apnea, abdominal distention caused by nephromegaly exacerbated her respiratory condition. At 69 days of life she died of sepsis complicated with disseminated intravascular coagulation and renal failure. A needle biopsy at autopsy revealed nephroblastomatosis.
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PMID:[A neonate with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome who developed upper airway obstruction after glossopexy]. 1184 Jun 63

Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) patients with chromosome 11p15.5 uniparental isodisomy (UPD) have an increased risk for developing embryonal tumors. UPD in these patients involves maternal loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and paternal duplication, which leads to tissue overgrowth and tumor development. Although 11p15.5 UPD predisposes to tumorigenesis, the events leading to tumorigenesis in UPD patients remains unknown. We have examined two hepatoblastomas in the BWS patients with UPD to determine the sequence of genetic events. Constitutional 11p15.5 LOH was detected in the blood or nonneoplastic liver of the BWS patients with hepatoblastoma. Mutation of beta-catenin gene (CTNNB1) was found in one hepatoblastoma. Although mutations in CTNNB1 were not found in the second hepatoblastoma, nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin was detected. However, mutation of CTNNB1 or nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin was not detected in the tissue with hepatomegaly which contains UPD cells. These data indicate that Wnt signal activation can be involved as a later event in BWS-associated hepatoblastoma involving 11p15.5 UPD.
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PMID:Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome-associated hepatoblastoma: wnt signal activation occurs later in tumorigenesis in patients with 11p15.5 uniparental disomy. 1469 43

When Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is detected prenatally, it is usually on the basis of macroglossia, exomphalos or enlarged kidneys. We describe a case that presented as gross hepatomegaly and a suspected enlarged pancreas at 20 weeks' gestation, with none of the usual features.
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PMID:Unusual prenatal presentation of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. 1530 Jul 38

Placental mesenchymal dysplasia (PMD) is a distinct placental disorder that may coexist with a normal fetus. In one-third of cases, the fetus exhibits Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome (BWS). In the present study, we report a case of PMD changes associated with an unusual genetic constitution. Pathological examination showed an enlarged placenta with a mixture of normal but also numerous clusters of grape-like fluid-filled vesicles confined to the stem villi without trophoblast proliferation. Some stem villi contained many large vessels filled by partially organized thrombi consistent with PMD. The fetus presented an enlarged liver and cytomegaly in the adrenal glands, hyperplastic islets of Langerhans in the pancreas, and some microcysts with cuboidal epithelium in the kidneys. These findings suggest the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome phenotype. DNA genetic markers showed three alleles for three independent markers and two alleles for the 12 others. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) demonstrated that villous trophoblast and fetal tissues are diploid. The haploid paternal complement found in the androgenetic cells was different from that found in biparental cells, suggesting a double fertilization event. Preferential distribution of the androgenetic cells into the placenta explains the predominance of molar villi with an apparently normal fetus. This represents a well-documented case of androgenic and biparental mixture of cell types in both fetal and placental tissues.
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PMID:Placental mesenchymal dysplasia with beckwith-wiedemann syndrome fetus in the context of biparental and androgenic cell lines. 1834 34

A male patient with mosaic paternal uniparental diploidy (PUD) is presented. After birth, the patient presented with hypoglycemia, hemihypertrophy, umbilical hernia, and hepatomegaly. Afterward pancreatic hypertrophy, liver hemangiomas, and cysts were detected sonographically. At the age of 3.5 months, hepatoblastoma was diagnosed. To investigate suspected Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), extensive genetic analyses were performed using DNA from chorionic villus sampling, amniocentesis, and peripheral blood lymphocytes (chromosome analysis, methylation-specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification assays, microsatellite analyses, and single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis). These analyses led to the detection of mosaic PUD. In peripheral blood lymphocytes, a male cell line (46,XY[27]/46,XX[5]) predominated, suggesting a mixture of uniparental isodisomy and heterodisomy. The genetic analyses suggest that the mosaic PUD status was attributable to fertilization of an oocyte by two sperms, with subsequent triploidy rescue giving rise to haploidy, which in turn was rescued. Notably, in the majority of the 28 mosaic PUD patients reported to date, BWS was initially suspected. Mosaic PUD status is associated with a higher risk for a broad range of malignant and benign tumors than in BWS. As tumors can also occur after childhood surveillance into adolescence is indicated. Mosaic PUD must therefore be considered in patients with suspected BWS.
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PMID:Male infant with paternal uniparental diploidy mosaicism and a 46,XX/46,XY karyotype. 3137 73

Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is an overgrowth syndrome, caused by alterations in a cluster of imprinted genes located within the chromosome region 11p15.5. Common clinical features are overgrowth, macroglossia, lateralized overgrowth, abdominal wall defects, neonatal hypoglycemia and an increased risk of embryonal tumors, such as hepatoblastomas. Periodic screening for abdominal tumors is recommended. Vascular tumors are uncommon in BWS. Diffuse infantile hepatic hemangiomas (DIHHs) are rare vascular tumors with potentially lethal complications, in particular acquired consumptive hypothyroidism, high-output cardiac failure, liver failure and abdominal compartment syndrome. We describe a 2-month-old patient with hallmark clinical features of BWS and confirmed a genetic diagnosis with mosaic paternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 11p15.5 (UPD[11]pat). The patient developed hepatomegaly and elevated alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and was therefore suspected of having a hepatoblastoma. Abdominal echo-color Doppler and a CT-scan allowed diagnosis of DIHHs. She was closely monitored and underwent treatment with propranolol. Oral propranolol was effective in reducing hepatic lesions without side effects. This report may suggest that vascular tumors can also be associated with BWS.
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PMID:Diffuse infantile hepatic hemangiomas in a patient with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: A new association? 3257 7


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