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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This retrospective study included eight HIV-positive patients with a M. genavense infection. Seven of these patients had a CT scan of the abdomen and a US examination, whereas one patient with pulmonary symptoms had conventional chest radiographs and thin-section CT scan of the thorax. Multiple large retroperitoneal and mesenteric lymph nodes were demonstrated in seven patients; low-attenuation centers within enlarged nodes were identified in two patients. On CT scans two cases showed circumferential wall thickening of the proximal small bowel with a deep ulceration in one of these patients. Additional findings included focal lesions in the liver (n = 1), spleen (n = 2), splenomegaly (n = 6), and
hepatomegaly
(n = 4). The CT scans from the thoracic examination demonstrated multiple diffuse nodular infiltrates in both lungs. M. genavense infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of AIDS patients with
CD4
counts below 100 cells/mm3 presenting with abdominal lymphadenopathy, multinodular or homogeneous hepatosplenic enlargement and circumferential thickening of the small bowel wall.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium genavense infection in AIDS: imaging findings in eight patients. 1121 13
We report on a case of CD20-positive peripheral T cell lymphoma. The lymphoma cell was positive for CD20 and T cell lineage markers such as cytoplasmic CD3,
CD4
, and CD5 and had a monoclonal rearrangement of the T cell receptor (TCR) gamma chain gene. The clinical characteristics resembled angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy: spontaneous regression of lymphadenopathy and immunological abnormalities such as polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, positive results of direct and indirect antiglobulin tests, and a high antinuclear antibody titer. We reviewed seven cases of CD20-positive T cell malignancies including the present case. Three were immature T cell malignancies (acute lymphoblastic leukemia) and four were peripheral T cell malignancies (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia).
Hepatomegaly
and/or splenomegaly were common features. Further cases must be evaluated to understand the clinical significance of the CD20 expression on the surface of T cell malignancies.
...
PMID:CD20-positive T cell leukemia/lymphoma: case report and review of the literature. 1147 54
Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) is a rare disease occurring in childhood. Recently, it has been shown that heritable mutations in Fas or Fas ligand genes, which regulate lymphocyte survival by triggering apoptosis of lymphocytes, are the most frequent cause of ALPS. Patients with ALPS frequently have lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly and
hepatomegaly
, especially at young ages. A positive result of the Direct Coomb's test, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura are the most common features of autoimmunity in patients with ALPS. Elevated numbers and percentages (>1%) of double-negative (
CD4
-CD8-) T cells, and characteristic pathologic findings in lymph nodes or spleen are other important diagnostic features. In this report, we present the clinical, immunologic, and pathologic features of two children who were diagnosed with ALPS. The early recognition of ALPS in children with enlarged lymph nodes, hepatosplenomegaly, and autoimmune hematologic features has important diagnostic and prognostic value in avoiding expensive and time-consuming studies and unnecessary treatments. The ratio of
CD4
-CD8- T cells, immunoglobulin levels and the histopathologic features of lymph nodes should be rapidly determined in these patients in order to establish an early diagnosis and treatment.
...
PMID:Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome: report of two cases and review of the literature. 1245 4
We report on the characteristics of 21 patients with hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma (HSgammadeltaTCL), an entity recognized since 1994 in the Revised European American Lymphoma (REAL) classification. Median age was 34 years. Patients had splenomegaly (n = 21),
hepatomegaly
(n = 15), and thrombocytopenia (n = 20). Histopathologic findings were homogeneous and showed the presence of medium-sized lymphoma cells within the sinusoids of splenic red pulp, liver, and bone marrow. Marrow involvement was usually mild but could be demonstrated by phenotyping in all patients. Cells were CD3+CD5-, expressed the gammadelta T-cell receptor, and had a nonactivated cytotoxic cell phenotype (TIA-1+, granzyme B-). Most patients were
CD4
-/CD8- (16 of 18); CD56+ (15 of 18), expressed the Vdelta1epitope (Vd1+/Vd2-/Vd3-) (9 of 12); and were negative for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (18 of 20). Isochromosome arm 7q was documented in 9 of 13 patients. Eight patients had previously undergone kidney transplantation or had a history of systemic lupus, Hodgkin disease, or malaria. Prognosis was poor; median survival time was 16 months, and all but 2 patients ultimately died despite consolidative or salvage high-dose therapy. In conclusion, HSgammadeltaTCL is a disease with distinctive clinical, histopathologic, and phenotypic characteristics. Bone marrow biopsy with combined phenotyping is sufficient for diagnosis, and splenectomy is therefore unwarranted. Current treatment modalities appear to be ineffective in most patients.
...
PMID:Hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma is a rare clinicopathologic entity with poor outcome: report on a series of 21 patients. 1290 41
Penicillium marneffei is a thermal dimorphic fungus which is endemic in an ecologic niche restricted to the Far East and which may cause deep-seated infection in humans and rodents. Discovered in the late 1950s from the bamboo rat Rhizomys sinensis, in Vietnam, P. marneffei was initially identified in HIV-infected individuals. A disseminated and progressive infection, it is the third most common opportunistic morbidity in the late course of HIV infection. We report the clinical and therapeutic features of a series of 12 HIV-infected adults with disseminated P. marneffei infection in Vietnam. From May to September, 2001, 12 patients with P. marneffei infection confirmed by culture were identified among 273 HIV-infected patients studied at the Tropical Diseases Centre, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The clinical signs were related to the reticuloendothelial system involvement. Common clinical features included fever, cutaneous manifestations, lymphadenopathy,
hepatomegaly
, splenomegaly, and marked anemia. The organism was identified from skin specimens or blood culture. Cases were consistently found with low
CD4
(+) cell count. Treatment with parenteral amphotericin B and itraconazole was relatively effective, although treatment with a delaying diagnosis remained associated with pejorative prognosis.
...
PMID:[Penicillium marneffei infection and AIDS. A review of 12 cases reported in the Tropical Diseases Centre, Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)]. 1469 74
Aggressive natural killer-cell leukemia (ANKL) is a rare form of large granular lymphocyte leukemia, which is characterized by a systemic proliferation of NK cells. The clinical features of 22 ANKL cases were analyzed.
Hepatomegaly
(64%), splenomegaly (55%) and lymphadenopathy (41%) were also frequently observed. Leukemic cells were identified as CD1-, CD2+, surface CD3-,
CD4
-, CD5-, CD7+, CD8+/-, CD10-, CD11b+/-, CD13-, CD16+, CD19-, CD20-, CD25-, CD33(-), CD34-, CD38+, CD56+, CD122+, HLA-DR+ and TCR-. Two of the 16 cases examined for CD57 were positive and three of the seven cases examined for cytoplasmic CD3. Epstein-Barr virus was detected in the tumor cells of 11 of the 13 cases examined. No common cytogenetic abnormalities were identified and 6q anomaly was detected in only one. Three of 13 patients treated with chemotherapy containing anthracycline/anthraquinone attained complete remission, in contrast to none of the eight who were treated with regimens without anthracycline. Although the overall prognosis was poor with a median survival of 58 days, those who attained remission showed better prognosis (P=0.005). These findings suggest that ANKL is an entity of mature cytotoxic NK-cell neoplasms with distinct phenotype and disease presentations. Intensive treatment for ANKL may result in a better prognosis.
...
PMID:Aggressive natural killer-cell leukemia revisited: large granular lymphocyte leukemia of cytotoxic NK cells. 1496 Oct 41
With available interventions in Europe, mother-to-child, or vertical transmission of HIV has been reduced from 15-20%, but still occurs in around one or two of every 100 pregnancies of HIV infected women. Progression of disease in vertically-infected children is most rapid in early life and without early treatment about one-fifth progress to serious clinical illness or die before one year of age. However, those surviving the first few years of life, including the ones with previous serious illness are generally clinically well throughout childhood, sometimes even without antiretroviral treatment. With the increasingly common use of aggressive therapy at an early stage of infection, progression to serious disease or death is now rare. Clinical disease progression is closely associated with HIV RNA viral load which peaks at around age three months, with a subsequent decline thereafter in vertically-infected children. Levels in girls are different to those of boys, but the pattern of this difference is not consistent over age. Progression of HIV infection is also related to the levels of immunological components such as
CD4
, CD8 and absolute lymphocyte cell counts. Patterns over age differ by both gender and race in both infected and uninfected children with absolute lymphocyte values and subsets being generally higher for girls and white children. Levels in infected children differ markedly to those of uninfected children but much of the ranges of measurements are common to both. Early-life measurements of
CD4
percentage and absolute lymphocyte count independently predict rapid progression to serious disease or death during the first year of life, while early persistent
hepatomegaly
or splenomegaly is prognostic of serious disease progression thereafter. However, there are no differences in progression by gender and race, nor are the prognostic abilities of markers altered by gender or race, which would suggest that clinical guidelines need not account for such factors. Of the early prognostic indicators,
CD4
percentage measurement is the most useful and beyond six months of age a
CD4
percentage cut-off of 10% best informs subsequent disease progression risk.
...
PMID:Clinical and biological disease progression in vertically acquired paediatric HIV infection. 1501 May 54
Treatment with contaminated plasma products before 1990 resulted in extraordinary prevalence rates of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis B and C viruses (HBV, HCV). In the Second Multicentre Haemophilia Cohort Study (MHCS-II) during 2001-03, 30% of HCV-seropositive survivors had HIV and 4.6% were HBV carriers. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) radically altered the consequences of HIV/HCV coinfection. Whereas opportunistic infections predominated previously, current major complications are liver failure and bleeding (exacerbated by decreased clotting factor synthesis, hypersplenic thrombocytopenia, and oesophageal varices). Most HIV-positives in MHCS-II were HIV RNA-negative and had > 200
CD4
(+) cells microL(-1), but only 59% were on HAART. With HIV, especially after 41 years of age, liver disease was apparent (jaundice in 5%, ascites 7%,
hepatomegaly
9%, splenomegaly 19%). HAART increases survival but may contribute to various comorbidities. Without HIV, sustained HCV clearance is obtained in > 50% with combined pegylated interferons plus ribavirin, but data in haemophilic populations, especially with HIV, are limited. In MHCS-II, HCV RNA negativity was 41% following standard interferon plus ribavirin; among interferon-naive participants (implying spontaneous HCV clearance), HCV RNA negativity was 12% with and 25% without HIV. Without HIV, spontaneous HCV clearance was much more likely with early age at infection and particularly with recent birth (late 1970s or early 1980s) but not with bleeding propensity or its treatment. Most (72%) participants had received no anti-HCV therapy. Hepatic and haematological conditions are likely to increase during the coming years unless most adult haemophiliacs are successfully treated for HIV, HCV or both.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency and hepatitis virus infections and their associated conditions and treatments among people with haemophilia. 1547 99
The clinical presentation of visceral leishmaniasis shares similarities with other geographically specific infectious diseases associated with AIDS in terms of relapsing course and atypical presentation. However, visceral leishmaniasis has not, until now, been included in the AIDS case definition. The aim of this study was to describe the clinical features and determinants for relapse and case-fatality of visceral leishmaniasis in HIV-infected patients from a Spanish Mediterranean area. A chart review was conducted in 16 hospitals in the autonomous communities of Valencia and Murcia (Spain). From 1988 to 2001, a total of 228 episodes of visceral leishmaniasis were diagnosed in 155 HIV-infected patients by the detection of amastigotes in bone marrow aspirates or in other tissue samples. Most patients had advanced HIV disease, with a median
CD4
(+) lymphocyte cell count of 55 cells x 10(9) l, and 56% of them had a previous AIDS-indicator disease. The median duration of follow-up was 8.4 months. HIV-infected patients with visceral leishmaniasis presented with fever (76%),
hepatomegaly
(77%), splenomegaly (78%), and varying degrees of cytopenias. Leishmania was detected in atypical sites in 22 (14%) patients. A total of 37 (24%) patients had a relapse of visceral leishmaniasis. Female gender was a risk factor for relapse, whereas administration of secondary prophylaxis for visceral leishmaniasis and a completed therapy for visceral leishmaniasis were protective factors against relapse. A total of 86 (54%) patients died. Independent determinants for survival were
CD4
(+) lymphocyte cell count, completed therapy for leishmania, and secondary prophylaxis for visceral leishmaniasis. The findings show that, in HIV-infected patients, visceral leishmaniasis occurs in late stages of HIV disease and often has a relapsing course. Secondary prophylaxis reduces the risk of relapse. Visceral leishmaniasis in the HIV-infected population should be included in the CDC clinical category C for the definition of AIDS in the same way that other geographically specific opportunistic infections are included.
...
PMID:Leishmaniasis as an opportunistic infection in HIV-infected patients: determinants of relapse and mortality in a collaborative study of 228 episodes in a Mediterreanean region. 1592 8
This study compared the clinical presentations of 58 episodes of cryptococcosis in 50 patients and 26 episodes of penicillosis in 25 patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) between June 1994 and June 2004, and assessed the safety of discontinuation of secondary prophylaxis for endemic fungal infections in those patients responding to highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART). Neurological symptoms were seen more commonly in patients with cryptococcosis, whereas respiratory symptoms, lymphadenopathy,
hepatomegaly
and/or splenomegaly, and non-thrush-related oral presentations were seen more commonly in patients with penicillosis. Patients with penicillosis were more likely to have abnormal chest radiography results and radiographic presentations of interstitial lesions, cavitations, fibrotic lesions and mass lesions. At the end of the study, maintenance antifungal therapy had been discontinued in 27 patients with cryptococcosis and in 18 patients with penicillosis in whom the median
CD4
count had increased to 186 cells/microL (range, 9-523 cells/microL) and 95 cells/microL (range, 15-359 cells/microL), respectively, after HAART. Only one episode of penicillosis recurred (a relapse rate of 1.72/100 person-years; 95% CI, 1.44-2.10/100 person-years) after a median follow-up duration of 35.3 months (range, 2.6-91.6 months). No relapses occurred in patients with cryptococcosis after a median follow-up duration of 22.3 months (range, 1-83.4 months). These findings suggest that there are differences in the clinical presentations between endemic cryptococcosis and penicillosis in patients with HIV infection, and that it is safe to discontinue secondary antifungal prophylaxis for cryptococcosis and penicillosis in patients responding to HAART.
...
PMID:Endemic fungal infections caused by Cryptococcus neoformans and Penicillium marneffei in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus and treated with highly active anti-retroviral therapy. 1652 16
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