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)

Nineteen patients whose bone marrow smears showed histiocytic hyperplasia with prominent hemophagocytosis were found to have a clinicopathologic syndrome associated with active viral infection. High fever, constitutional symptoms, liver function, and coagulation abnormalities and peripheral blood cytopenias were characteristic findings. Hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, and skin rash were often present. Fourteen of the patients were immunosuppressed. Active infection by herpes group viruses was documented in 14 patients and by adenovirus in 1. The bone marrow of most patients also showed decreased granulopoiesis and erythropoiesis with normal to increased numbers of megakaryocytes. Treatment generally consisted of supportive therapy and withdrawal of immunosuppressive drugs. Thirteen patients recovered. Lymph node biopsy and autopsy material showed generalized histiocytic hyperplasia with hemophagocytosis. The relationship of this disorder to familial hemophagocytic reticulosis, familial erythrophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, histiocytic medullary reticulosis, and malignant histiocytosis is discussed. Immunosuppressive and cytotoxic therapy may be contraindicated in the treatment of this virus-associated syndrome.
Cancer 1979 Sep
PMID:Virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome: a benign histiocytic proliferation distinct from malignant histiocytosis. 22 8

A 47-year-old white male developed massive hepatosplenomegaly, a pleural effusion, leucocytosis, and a left parasternal mass following a relatively symptom-free persistent hypereosinophilia for about 5 years. Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy and peripheral blood differential showed eosinophilia and a shift to the left with immature cells. A high serum B12 vitamin level and low LAP activity were found. Biopsy of the soft tissue mass revealed a granulocytic sarcoma (chloroma) with a hyperdiploid karyotype (49,XY, + 10, + 15, + 19,3q-), whereas the bone marrow cells had a normal male karyotype. The patient responded temporarily to chemotherapy but eventually developed CNS leukemia and went on to terminate in a frank blastic phase. This case illustrates hypereosinophilia and a myeloproliferative syndrome characterized by a somewhat indolent chronic course evolving into "eosinophilic leukemia" and granulocytic sarcoma, CNS involvement by leukemic cells and, finally, blastic transformation. It is possible that this case represents a variant of Ph1-negative CML to which the term "chronic eosinophilic leukemia" could be justifiably applied.
Cancer 1979 Oct
PMID:Chromosomes and causation of human cancer and leukemia. XXXIV. A case of "hypereosinophilic syndrome" with unusual cytogenetic findings in a chloroma, terminating in blastic transformation and CNS leukemia. 29 66

This work is a retrospective study of 50 cases of DHX, collected over a period of 27 years. 24 children died, 26 are still alive. The prognosis for DHX was neither dependent on age (usually occurring in children under 2 years) nor on histological findings but on the extent of the lesions. It was possible to establish a clinical staging system distinguishing 2 groups. One, where the disease was severe and almost always fatal, often included the combined symptoms of thrombocytopenia, spontaneous anemia, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, respiratory insufficiency and absence of osteolytic lesions. The other, with a favorable prognosis, was characterized by skin lesions, diabetes insipidus, exclusively radiological pulmonary involvement and multiple bone lesions. In cases where death did not occur, DHX was often chronic, frequently persisting for 2 years or more and leading to serious sequelae such as diabetes insipidus, growth stunting, intellectual retardation, blindness or deafness.
Cancer 1979 Nov
PMID:Disseminated histiocytosis X: analysis of prognostic factors based on a retrospective study of 50 cases. 31 67

Acute myelofibrosis is a rare but distinct accelerated variant of agnogenic myeloid metaplasia that is characterized by marked anemia, peripheral blood myeloblastosis and normoblastosis, a lack of teardrop poikilocytosis, and prominent myelofibrosis. There is usually no palpable hepatosplenomegaly or lymph node enlargement. The clinical course is remarkable short. We describe a 63-year-old man who presented with idiopathic acquired sideroblastic anemia and subsequently developed acute myelofibrosis. Intensive polychemotherapy with vincristine, cytosine arabinoside, and prednisone and a later trial of oxymetholone therapy were ineffective. He died 134 days after the diagnosis of acute myelofibrosis was established. The 11 previously reported cases of acute myelofibrosis are reviewed, and the relationships of acute myelofibrosis to other myeloproliferative disorders and to idiopathic acquired sideroblastic anemia are discussed.
Cancer 1977 Jan
PMID:Idiopathic acquired sideroblastic anemia terminating in acute myelofibrosis: case report and review of leterature. 31 17

A patient with an unusual myeloproliferative disorder, characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, myelofibrosis, ringed sideroblasts, and conversion to acute myeloblastic leukemia developed cardiac tamponade secondary to pericardia extramedullary hematopoiesis. Diagnostic criteria are discussed. Irradiation and systemic chemotherapy were successful in controlling the effusion.
Cancer 1979 Oct
PMID:Cardiac tamponade resulting from pericardial extramedullary hematopoiesis: a case report and review of the literature. 38 7

Malignant histiocytosis, an affection in which there is proliferation of morphologically atypical histiocytes, traditionally associates high fever, deterioration of the general condition, adenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and less frequently, cutaneous lesions. Clinical, radiological, and histological signs of bone involvement are rarely observed, which demonstrates the interest of the case reported of a pure medullary form with massive necrosis and successive bone localisations of the osteolytic type. The clinical picture was completed by the progressive development of adenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly. Multiple chemotherapy, according to the A.V.E.C. procedure, controlled the affection for three months before it became totally ineffective. Survival for twelve months after clinical onset demonstrates the extreme malignancy of the affection.
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PMID:[Malignant histiocytosis with bone involvement (author's transl)]. 54 9

Three patients with megakaryoblastic leukaemia are described. All three presented with pancytopenia, a few blast cells in the peripheral blood and absence of overt hepatosplenomegaly. In two of them bone marrow aspiration yielded a dry tap. Histological investigation of the bone marrow indicated that the megakaryocytic cell line was the dominant proliferating lineage. Cytochemical and EM investigation supported these findings. The isomorphic isoenzyme pattern of the elevated serum lactic dehydrogenase might be of diagnostic importance. Despite chemotherapy, there was a rapidly fatal terminal leukaemic phase with high blast cell counts. The differentiation from other haematological malignancies, especially acute (aleukaemic) leukaemias and the accelerated phase of primary (chronic) myelofibrosis, is discussed. The picture appears to be identical with acute (malignant) myelofibrosis.
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PMID:Megakaryoblastic leukaemia (acute myelofibrosis): a report of three cases. 57 95

We observed two sisters with ataxia telangiectasia, one of whom developed an atypical subacute lymphocytic leukemia characterized by atypical lymphocytes and absence of palpable lymphadenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly. The lack of organomegaly in this patient may have been due to the underlying ataxia telangiectasia, which was associated with lymphoid hypoplasia. Cytogenetic studies showed a marker chromosome 14 [t(14q11:14q34)] in both patients. The sister with leukemia had other complex chromosomal aberrations in addition to the marker chromosome 14 that were stable for more than 14 mo before the patient's death from complicating infection. The development of atypical T cell leukemia has not been previously described in ataxia telangiectasia. This case further illustrates the interesting interrelationships amoung immunosuppressed states, development of lymphoid malignancy, and an emerging pattern of a propensity to chromosome 14 abnormalities in various lymphoid malignancies.
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PMID:Atypical lymphoid leukemia in ataxia telangiectasia. 69 87

An unusual syndrome of hepatosplenomegaly and fever followed by rapid deterioration and death has been described in 38 children from 21 families. Pancytopenia, liver dysfunction, and bleeding developed prior to death from hemorrhage, sepsis, or lymphocytic meningitis. This report reviews the literature and adds a set of twins to the reported cases.
Cancer 1976 Jul
PMID:Familial erythrophagocytic lymphohistocytosis. Report of two cases and clinicopathologic review. 77 51

Fifty-one cases of Hodgkin's disease in Turkish children under 15 years of age were clinically analyzed, and 40 cases were evaluated histopathologically according to the Rye Conference classification. Complete clinical, laboratory, and radiologic findings for each patient were examined. Most patients were of low socioeconomic class, and nearly all were Caucasian. The most common presenting clinical sign was cervical lymph node enlargement; hepatosplenomegaly was noted in 18 patients. Nearly three times as many males as females were found among the patients whose diseases were histologically analyzed, and most of the children with Hodgkin's disease were in the first decade of life. Classification of the cases revealed a predominance (67.5%) of the mixed cellularity (MC) type. Of 40 patients analyzed, 34 had disease in clinical stage IV, mostly of the MC type. The data indicated a correlation of the high incidence of the MC type of Hodgkin's disease with the socioeconomic and environmental conditions in Turkey.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1977 Mar
PMID:Hodgkin's disease in Turkish children: a clinical and histopathologic analysis. 83 52


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