Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (hepatosplenomegaly)
4,408 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Oral thrush developed during the second month of life in the 5-month-old son of a patient with haemophilia A. He did not feed well, and interstitial pneumonitis, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and a cellular immune defect consistent with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) followed. Both parents had signs of pre-AIDS during the year before their son's illness. Transmission presumably occurred in 3 steps: parenterally, via factor VIII concentrate in the haemophiliac; heterosexually, from the haemophiliac to his wife; and vertically, from mother to infant, or via close paternal-infant or maternal-infant contact. This first report of AIDS in the child of a haemophiliac supports the theory that AIDS is caused by an infectious agent. Concentrate-treated haemophiliacs may transmit this agent to their spouses or children, resulting in pre-AIDS or AIDS.
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PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the child of a haemophiliac. 285 14

HTLV-I, the first human oncovirus, is a type C retrovirus linked to the development of ATLL. The virus shows a striking ethnogeographic distribution that is only partially understood. Certain populations at high risk for AIDS appear to have a higher incidence of HTLV-I infection. The extended latent period renders present knowledge of the sequelae and natural history of HTLV-I seropositivity incomplete, although recent data suggest that HTLV-I infection may have important implications for blood transfusion, organ transfer, and public health policy. A variety of clinical syndromes have been associated with infection, ranging from an asymptomatic carrier state to acute ATLL with lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, hypercalcemia, cutaneous lesions, and systemic immunosuppression. Conventional chemotherapy is marginally effective; innovative approaches to therapy are presently being evaluated.
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PMID:Manifestations of human T-lymphotropic virus type I infection. 289 61

To date, the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has been identified in over 50 children in the US, including those with associated hemophilia, high-risk environmental factors (Haitian background, parental intravenous drug abuse, or prostitution), and blood transfusions. The evaluation of an infant or young child in whom AIDS is suspected requires exclusion of congenital disorders of immune function. A specific test is not currently available, but inclusion criteria for childhood AIDS have been developed. The diseases accepted as indicative of underlying cellular immunodeficiency children are the same as those used in defining AIDS in adults, with the exclusion of congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the 1st month of life or cytomegalovirus infection in the 1st 6 months of life. Specific conditions that must be excluded in children are primary immunodeficiency diseases (e.g., DiGeorge syndrome, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, ataxia-telangiectasia, neutrophil function abnormality) and secondary immuno-deficiency associated with immunosuppressive therapy, lymphoreticular malignancy, or starvation. Almost all young children with AIDS have hepatosplenomegaly, interstitial pneumonitis, and poor growth. The average age of 36 US child AIDS victims studied in detail was 5 months at presentation with findings suggestive of severe immunodeficiency. Mucocutaneous candidiasis was present in 75% of these 36 children, and Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus were each isolated from 30% of cases. Normal T4:T8 ratios occur in about 15% of pediatric AIDS cases. Laboratory evidence of polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia generally supports the AIDS diagnosis. Recurrent infection and malnutrition are major problems in the clinical management of child AIDS patients.
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PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome in childhood. 298 8

Human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus I can transform mature T-lymphocytes in vitro and is associated with the human T-cell cancer, adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma. Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma is a distinct clinicopathological entity associated with leukemia, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, hypercalcemia, and lytic bone lesions. Although morphologically diverse it pursues an aggressive clinical course. Human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus III is associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, which in its early stages shows follicular lymphoid hyperplasia; however, lymphoid atrophy is progressive and ultimately results in virtually total lymphoid depletion of lymph nodes. Patients with human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus III infections appear to have an increased risk of high-grade B-cell lymphomas and perhaps Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Lymph node pathology of HTLV and HTLV-associated neoplasms. 299 Jul 5

The clinical signs and immunological abnormalities in ten babies with lymphadenopathy associated virus infections (LAV) are described. We have made this diagnosis based on the association of specific immunological abnormalities, serological tests or the positive isolation of the virus. In one very severe case, whose mother died of AIDS, the serology and attempts to isolate the virus were both negative. Excluding the two post-transfusion cases, the ethnic and familial history always suggested the diagnosis. The clinical characteristics were very close to those in adults, being hepatosplenomegaly and generalized lymphadenopathy. There was an associated retardation of growth and weight gain. A decrease of the absolute number of OKT4(+) lymphocytes and hypergammaglobulinaemia were the abnormalities most frequently observed. The degree of immunodeficiency, both humoral and cellular was very variable. The existence of LAV infection during the first few months of life suggests a maternal-foetal transmission, but a post-natal infection cannot be eliminated. It is difficult to decide the long-term prognosis; it depends mainly on the degree of the immune deficiency.
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PMID:[LAV virus infections in children]. 300 18

An eight-year-old child from Zaire died in Sweden in 1982 after a clinical course compatible with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In 1975, at the age of 5 months, the infant had an acute viral infection with a rash; this illness was followed by a chronic cough. During the course of the disease he had recurrent septicemia, fever (frequently with miliary lung infiltrates), disseminated lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, candidiasis, and diarrhea. Late in the illness the child developed lethal disseminated disturbances of the central nervous system. Immunologic investigations revealed a pronounced hypergammaglobulinemia, normal C3 but low C4 values, decreased number of T-lymphocytes, and decreased lymphocyte stimulation with T-cell and B-cell mitogens. Samples of serum taken in 1981 and 1982 were analyzed and found to be positive for antibodies to HTLV-III virus. The course of the disease in this child was more prolonged than most of the pediatric cases described earlier. It is likely that this child developed AIDS early in 1975, long before the AIDS epidemic was apparent in the United States.
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PMID:Early case of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in a child from Zaire. 301 6

The clinical and immunologic abnormalities of 7 infants with Lymphadenopathy Associated Virus (LAV) infection are reported. Indicative immune changes, positive anti-LAV serologic test and/or virus isolation led to the diagnosis. In a case with a particularly severe form of the disease, whose mother died from AIDS, serologic tests and virus isolation were negative. Beside a case associated with blood transfusion, the familial and ethnic context helped the diagnosis. Clinical and biochemical features were close to those in adult AIDS, including hepatosplenomegaly, polyadenopathy, a decreased absolute number of OKT4(+) lymphocytes and hypergammaglobulinemia. The importance of cellular and sometimes also humoral immune deficiency was highly variable. For 4 patients, the severity of the immune deficiency allowed the diagnosis of AIDS. Occurrence of such an infection in the first months of life suggests a fetomaternal viral transmission; however, a postnatal contamination cannot be ruled out. Long-term prognosis is difficult to assess. It depends, among other factors, on the importance of the immune deficiency.
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PMID:[LAV infections and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in infants]. 301 18

The long term clinical outcome for infants and children with the pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex is unknown. This report describes our experience with 14 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex who have been followed for 11 to 71 months since the onset of their symptoms. The most frequent clinical features at presentation were persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (14 of 14), hepatosplenomegaly (11 of 14) and a history of recurrent otitis media (7 of 14). Except for hypergammaglobulinemia (14 of 14) and reversed T4/T8 ratios (9 of 14), immunologic analyses, including in vitro responses to mitogens and antibody responses following immunization, revealed no consistent abnormalities. Over the course of follow-up, none of the patients have developed serious or opportunistic infections and 12 of 14 have shown catch up or age-appropriate growth. The T4/T8 ratios have remained stable in 8 of 11 and improved in 2 of 11 patients. Gradual regression of hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy has been noted patients. Although follow-up studies over a longer period are needed to confirm our observations to date, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex may represent a prolonged plateau in the course of human immunodeficiency virus infection in many infected children. Detailed immunologic evaluation of these patients may help to identify a subset of children that could benefit from periodic gamma-globulin or chronic antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex: clinical and immunologic features. 326 Jun 67

Morphologic and clinical features of 30 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) were studied with particular attention to bone marrow and blood manifestations. Twenty-four (80%) patients had marrow involvement with lymphoma in trephine biopsies at initial diagnosis; two other patients subsequently developed marrow involvement. The bone marrow lesions were diffuse in 58% of the cases and focal, nonparatrabecular in 42%. A morphologic spectrum of lymphoma cells was seen with cases classified into small cell, mixed cell, and large cell/immunoblastic lymphoma. The bone marrow lesions were characterized by a heteromorphous population of lymphocytes, prominent vascularity with endothelial cell proliferation, reticulin fibrosis, and a polycellular infiltrate composed of plasma cells, eosinophils, and histiocytes. The histopathologic features in bone marrow biopsies were not pathognomonic for PTCL; the differential diagnosis may include non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of B-cell type, polymorphous reactive lymphoid lesions, including those from patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy, Hodgkin's disease, and systemic mastocytosis. The patients ranged in age from 13 to 81 years (median, 61 years) and generally presented with constitutional symptoms, lymphadenopathy, and hepatosplenomegaly. Abnormalities in one or more hematologic parameters were common and, in general, related to the degree of bone marrow involvement. Hypocalcemia was found in 40% of the patients studied and hypercalcemia in 4%. The median survival for PTCL patients was 11 months. Patients with small cell lymphoma, large cell/immunoblastic lymphoma, and marked eosinophilia had the shortest median survivals.
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PMID:Bone marrow manifestations of peripheral T-cell lymphoma. A study of 30 cases. 349 Jan 73

Two infants with AIDS who presented with interstitial pneumonitis, failure to thrive, lymphadenopathy, and hypergammaglobulinemia have been studied. Antibody to human T-lymphotropic retrovirus (HTLV-III) was identified by ELISA and Western blot analysis in serum samples from both patients. The T4/T8 ratios of peripheral blood T-lymphocytes in both patients were mildly decreased, with normal absolute numbers of lymphocytes and positive T4 cells. Lung biopsies from both patients demonstrated similar histopathologic features with features of lymphocytic interstitial infiltrates and accumulation of macrophages in the air spaces. Immunoperoxidase studies of the lung biopsy from 1 patient revealed that the lymphocytic infiltrate was composed predominantly of T cells of the T8 subset. Each patient was treated with prednisone, with improvement or resolution of pulmonary symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and growth failure. Neither patient has had any opportunistic infections. One patient has been followed for more than 4 years and the other for 8 months.
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PMID:The pathology and treatment of interstitial pneumonitis in two infants with AIDS. 350 45


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