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)

We report a case of aplastic anemia complicated with secondary hemochromatosis after allogenic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). A 29-year-old man was diagnosed as having aplastic anemia at the age of 8. At the age of 28, BMT was performed from his HLA-identical sister. Total volume of blood transfusion before BMT was about 28,000 ml, and in three months after BMT was 8,000 ml. The transplantation was successful, but one month after BMT, dry eyes, skin pigmentation and hepatomegaly appeared. Serum bile duct enzymes and ferritin also increased remarkably. Moreover after thirteen months, glucose tolerance impaired seriously. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) revealed atrophic pancreas and an increased CT density in the liver and the tail of the pancreas. A large amount of iron deposition were also found in liver and stomach biopsy specimens. We concluded that diabetes mellitus was due to secondary hemochtomatosis in the present case. There is a possibility that tissue damage due to iron deposits may have been accelerated through BMT in this patient with a history of many blood transfusions.
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PMID:[Aplastic anemia complicated with secondary hemochromatosis after allogenic bone marrow transplantation]. 853 29

Primary hemochromatosis is characterized by a specific pattern of clinical manifestations. It includes liver disease with hepatomegaly, glucose intolerance, e.g. diabetes, hyperpigmentation oft the skin, impotence/ amenorrhea, arthropathy, cardiomyopathy and fatigue. Laboratory investigation reveals significantly elevated serum ferritin and transferrin saturation with iron. The diagnosis is confirmed by liver biopsy and quantitative determination of elevated liver iron content. Wilson's disease represents a copper storage disease. Prominent clinical features are hepatomegaly and splenomegaly. Neurological alterations and detection of Kayser-Fleischer corneal rings are typical. In the acute initial phase the often young patients present with Coombs-negative hemolysis. Psychiatric alterations, cardiomyopathy, arthropathy, nephropathy, as well as thrombocytopenia and leucopenia are other clinical features. Laboratory parameters of Wilson's disease include low serum ceruloplasmin and serum copper. There is an elevated urinary copper excretion and elevated serum free copper concentration. The diagnosis is confirmed by liver biopsy with quantitative determination of an elevated liver copper content.
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PMID:[Current diagnosis: hereditary metabolic diseases of the liver (primary hemochromatosis, Wilson disease)]. 898 78

This study concerns the effects of several pre-transplant features on outcome for patients with beta thalassemia major who underwent bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Seventy patients with beta thalassemia major underwent bone marrow transplantation during the period 1991-1997 in Shariati Hospital in Tehran, Iran. The survival and rejection curves levelled off at 8 and 18 months after transplantation at 82.6% and 11.4%, respectively. Pre-transplant clinical features (age, serum ferritin, portal fibrosis, hepatomegaly and quality of chelation therapy) were examined for their effects on survival and recurrence of thalassemia in this group of patients who were less than 16 years old. Increasing age, presence of portal fibrosis and increasing serum ferritin were significantly associated with reduced probability of survival (P = 0.0047, P = 0.016 and P = 0.024, respectively). Hepatomegaly and inadequate pre-transplant chelation therapy which were documented as poor prognostic factors in previous studies, were not evaluable in this study. We also showed the benefits of transplanting more than 5.5 x 10(8)/kg cells in this group of patients with no increase in complications.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in bone marrow transplantation for beta thalassemia major: experiences from Iran. 989 19

B-cell lymphoma associated with haemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) is extremely rare in Western countries but has recently been increasingly reported in Asian countries. We describe seven patients with B-cell lymphoma associated with HPS, six males and one female, age range 41-82 years (median 63 years). All patients had fever and splenomegaly, and six of the seven patients had hepatomegaly with no associated lymphadenopathy. The bone marrow showed haemophagocytosis and an infiltration of lymphoma cells. All patients showed increased levels of lactate dehydrogenase, C-reactive protein, ferritin and soluble interleukin-2 receptor. Lymphoma cells were positive for CD19. CD20 and surface immunoglobulin in all patients examined, and positive for CD5 in four of seven patients. Cytogenetic analyses of bone marrow cells showed a complex structural abnormality including chromosome 14q32 in two patients, 19q13 in three patients and deletion of the terminal part of 8p21 in six patients. The prognosis was poor; only two of the seven patients have survived in complete remission with a median survival of 11 months. These data suggested that B-cell lymphoma associated with HPS might constitute a distinct biological and clinical disease entity. Abnormality of chromosome 19q13 and loss of 8p21 might be involved in the pathogenesis of this disease.
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PMID:B-cell lymphoma associated with haemophagocytic syndrome: a clinical, immunological and cytogenetic study. 1052 18

The discovery of the hemochromatosis gene has deeply changed and simplified the diagnosis of the disease. In a given individual, establishing the diagnosis relies, from now on, on a simple blood sample showing the couple: elevated transferrin saturation and homozygous C282Y mutation (= C282Y +/+). Liver biopsy should only be performed when iron overload is massive in order to detect cirrhosis (or bridging fibrosis), i.e. in a prognostic view. Practically, liver biopsy is confined to the following two situations: when the C282Y +/+ patient exhibits hepatomegaly and/or an increase in serum transaminases and/or a serum ferritin level above 1,000 micrograms/L; whenever, despite a strong bio-clinical suspicion of iron overload, genetic testing does not show the expected homozygosity for C282Y. At the family level, evaluating the risk for hemochromatosis is now "instantaneous" thanks to genetic testing. One must, however, keep in mind in interpreting the data of the family members that: clinical expression of the homozygous status is not constant; heterozygosity for C282Y does not per se lead to significant iron overload, but may constitute a co-factor exacerbating (or increasing the risk of) other hepatic or non hepatic diseases. Heterozygosity exposes also to the risk of homozygosity among the offspring; this knowledge of C282Y status must be balanced by the negative impact from the standpoint of possible societal genetic discrimination.
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PMID:[The diagnosis of hemochromatosis in the era of the gene]. 1052 Apr 12

Hereditary hemochromatosis (HHC) is one of the most common inherited disorders in the Caucasian population. Diagnosis usually made after an elevation in ferritin and serum transferrin saturation is noted, often accompanied by asymptomatic hepatomegaly. Diagnosis is confirmed by genetic testing or liver biopsy. Damage to organs is due to excessive intestinal iron, which is transported to and then deposited in the liver parenchyma, and the heart, skin, and endocrine organs, causing skin pigmentation, development of cirrhosis and hepatic carcinoma, diabetes and endocrine failure, and heart failure. Bony changes can be manifested by arthritis, often in non-weight-bearing joints. The treatment of HHC is phlebotomy, which depletes iron stores. When diagnosis is made before organ damage occurs, treatment can prevent manifestations of the disease. Skin pigmentation and some cardiac damage may reverse on depletion of iron stores, but liver and endocrine damage is rarely reversible. Arthropathy is also not reversible, and often continues to progress even with effective treatment. When hemochromatosis is diagnosed, all first degree relatives of the patient should undergo genetic testing. With early detection and treatment this can be a manageable chronic disease. If undetected, it is potentially fatal.
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PMID:Hereditary hemochromatosis: diagnosis and treatment in primary care. 1054 25

B-cell lymphoma-associated hemophagocytic syndrome (B-LAHS) is extremely rare in Western countries but has recently been increasingly reported in Asian countries, especially Japan. Here, we reviewed 25 previously reported Japanese cases of B-LAHS and summarized its clinicopathologic features and therapeutic outcome. The median age of onset was 63 years old with initial presentation of fever, hepatomegaly, and splenomegaly without associated lymphadenopathy. Laboratory findings showed increased levels of lactate dehydrogenase, C-reactive protein, ferritin and soluble interleukin-2 receptor. Histopathologically, hemophagocytosis was often seen in the bone marrow and spleen. Various percentages of lymphoma cells were seen in the bone marrow, positive for CD19, CD20 and surface immunoglobulin. and some were also positive for CD5. Cytogenetic analysis showed a complex structural abnormality including chromosome 14q32, 19q13 and deletion of the terminal part of 8p21. Some patients had histological features of intravascular lymphomatosis (IVL). The prognosis was poor with a median survival period of 9 months. We treated five patients using autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT), and four are still in complete remission nine to 24 months after PBSCT, suggesting that high-dose chemotherapy followed by PBSCT might improve the survival rate.
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PMID:B-cell lymphoma-associated hemophagocytic syndrome. 1081 54

Genetic hemochromatosis is an autosomal recessive disease, characterized by an increased iron absorption, leading to progressive iron overload. The fully expressed phenotype comprises fatigue, skin pigmentation, liver disease with hepatomegaly, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, and diabetes. Arthralgias are frequent, cardiopathy or impotence may occur. This presentation is now unfrequent with earlier diagnosis, and patients are often asymptomatic--with only biochemical expression--or pauci-symptomatic (mild fatigue, arthralgias or increased transaminases). Transferrin saturation is always increased. Serum ferritin is proportional to iron burden. Diagnosis is now easy, since most patients are homozygote for the C282Y mutation of the HFE gene. Liver biopsy can be useful to quantify iron overload and assess liver fibrosis. The disease can be lethal due to liver disease, carcinoma or heart disease, but life expectancy goes to normal if patients are treated before the occurrence of cirrhosis. Treatment relies on regular venesections. Familial screening is essential.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of genetic hemochromatosis]. 1086 97

Hemochromatosis is one of the most frequent genetic diseases among the white populations, affecting one in three hundred persons. Its diagnosis has been radically transformed by the discovery of the HFE gene. In a given individual, the diagnosis can, from now on, be ascertained on the sole association of a plasma transferrin saturation (TS) over 45% and homozygosity for the C282Y mutation. Liver biopsy is only required to search for cirrhosis whenever there is hepatomegaly and/or serum ferritin >1000 ng/ml and/or elevated serum AST. Family screening is mandatory, primarily centered on the siblings. The treatment remains based on venesection therapy which improves many features of the disease (one of the most refractory, however, being the joint signs) and permits normal life expectancy provided the diagnosis is established prior to the development of cirrhosis or of insulin-dependent diabetes. In view of the prevalence, the non-invasive diagnosis, the spontaneous severity and the efficacy of a very simple therapy, hemochromatosis should benefit from population screening. This screening could be based, first, on the assessment of transferrin saturation, followed - when elevated - by the search for the C282Y mutation. The discovery of the HFE gene has also paved the road for the individualization of other types of iron overload syndromes which are not HFE-related.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of hemochromatosis. 1109 95

Hereditary hemochromatosis is an inherited autosomal recessive disease, associated to a mutation in the recently described HFE gene, which is located on the short arm of chromosome 6. The product of this gene combines with the beta-2-microglobulin and the ferritin receptor, and regulates the iron absorption in the small intestine crypt cells. It is possible that the mutation may cause the increased iron uptake by the intestinal cells. The disease is very much common in men after the forties, and its expression is influenced by concomitant alcoholism, iron rich diet, oral and parenteral iron administration, menstrual blood loss or abnormal hemorrhages, blood donations, pregnancy, lactation, and iron malabsorption clinical conditions, like celiac disease. Many patients are asymptomatic, and the diagnosis may be suspected by hepatomegaly of unknown cause, abnormal iron metabolism tests, increased serum aminotransferase levels, diabetes mellitus, and anonymous arthropathy. Less commonly hereditary hemochromatosis presented by symptoms and signs of chronic liver disease, or by the classic triad described by Trousseau skin pigmentation, hepatomegaly and diabetes mellitus. The diagnosis is confirmed by the increased serum ferritin levels and transferrin saturation, and the stainable iron in hepatocytes, measured by scale devised by Scheuer et al, or the measurement of the hepatic iron. The C282Y mutation was found in 64 to 100% of patients; eventually, subjects with hepatic iron overload identical to hereditary hemochromatosis has no mutation, and homozygous for the C282Y mutation do not express iron overload. Iron is best and quickly removed by weekly or twice-weekly phlebotomy of 500 ml, containing approximately 250 mg iron. One to 3 years of weekly phlebotomy may be required to reduce stores to normal. As a guide to long-term maintenance therapy, is recommended phlebotomy every 3 months and the serum ferritin level should be maintained by less than 50 ng/ml.
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PMID:[Hereditary hemochromatosis]. 1217 Feb 86


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