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)

Twenty-seven patients suffering AIDS and disseminated histoplasmosis were included in this study, comprising twenty-three males and four females, from 18 to 46 years of age (mean = 32.9). The most frequent clinical manifestations were fever, weight loss, anaemia, skin lesions, pulmonary micronodules, hepatosplenomegaly and adenomegalies. All of them presented other infectious diseases or neoplasias frequently found in AIDS patients. The diagnosis of histoplasmosis was based upon the finding of Histoplasma capsulatum in microscopic examination or in cultures from the following specimens: skin scrapings, bone marrow aspiration, bronchoalveolar lavage, blood cultures, buccal biopsies and lymph node biopsy. Serologic reactions, searching for antibodies, were positive in 11 cases. Itraconazole by oral route, at a daily dose of 200 mg (24 cases) or 400 mg (3 cases), was administered for 6 months. Those patients who were clinically cured after receiving this scheme of treatment were treated with itraconazole 100 mg day-1 as a suppressive therapy. Twenty-three patients were considered responders, 1 as a non-responder and 3 non-assessable. The average survival time was 7.8 months and eleven cases are still alive. Itraconazole proved to be a useful medication in disseminated histoplasmosis associated with AIDS and it was very well tolerated.
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PMID:Itraconazole in the treatment of histoplasmosis associated with AIDS. 133 77

Abdominal typhus is all the rearer disease among acute infectious diseases in Vojvodina. In the last ten years (1981-1990) 16 patients with abdominal typhus were treated at the Department of Infectious Diseases in Novi Sad, mostly young individuals from 6 to 30 years of age (13 patients). Positive epidemiologic features were found in 13 patients. In 80% of the cases the source of infection was outside Vojvodina. They usually were admitted at the Department on the first and second week of the disease (11 patients), and 3 patients were admitted on the third week. None of the patients was suspected of having abdominal typhus at the time of admittance. Delayed hospitalization and unrecognized abdominal typhus were most likely due to the atypical onset and course of the disease. Atypical features in the clinical picture occurred in all the patients with a sudden onset of the disease. The abrupt temperature elevation in 50% of the patients was followed by shivering, fever and shaking. Hepatosplenomegaly was found in 12 patients, abdominal meteorism in 10, typical typhus tongue in none. Typhus state was not found in any of the patients. Normal leucocyte count was found in 7 patients, positive Widal's agglutination reaction in 13, coproculture in 8 and hemoculture in 15 patients. The atypical clinical picture was the result of early administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics before the established etiology of the febrile state.
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PMID:[Abdominal typhus today]. 134 44

HIV is efficiently transmitted through transfusion with HIV-infected blood. Accordingly, 203 multitransfused children with thalassemia attending the thalassemia clinic of the Charak Palika Hospital in New Delhi were screened for antibodies to HIV using ELISA and Western blot tests. 8.37% of the sample tested HIV-seropositive (HIV+). These 17 children were joined by 3 others referred from a neighboring state to constitute a group to be matched against 20 HIV-children for the purpose of comparing psychosocial aspects. The control group was matched for age, sex, educational level, and socioeconomic status with mean age 10.8 years ranging over 1-16 years. 4 members of the HIV+ sample were diagnoses as having clinical AIDS according to WHO criteria. The remaining 14 boys and 2 girls were HIV+, but asymptomatic. 25% were of lower class, 63.5% middle class, and 12.5% upper class. Of those with AIDS, 50% were diagnosed in their first year of life and 82% were diagnosed by year 3. Symptoms generally developed after 4-6 months of life. Lymphadenopathy and hepatomegaly tend to be visible at birth, while chronic diarrhea, prolonged fever, oral thrush, recurrent bacterial infections, and hepatosplenomegaly may also be presented. 7.1% of cases aged 2-3 years exhibited rocking and head banging problems worse than did control subjects. Furthermore, 28.5% had temper tantrums and 21.5% ground teeth. These children may have delayed developmental milestones as well as behavioral problems. The small sample size, however, precludes concluding that psychosocial differences exist between those with HIV/AIDS and those with thalassemia major. In fact, behavioral problems in these children were due to child illness and not of HIV-positivity, for children tend to be unaware of HIV/AIDS infections and its consequences. The author recommends that HIV+ children continue to attend school unless they can not control bodily secretions, have uncoverable oozing lesions, have unacceptable behaviors, or if there is extreme possibility of contracting infectious diseases at school. The author also stresses parents' and families' need for long-term medical and psychological care.
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PMID:Psycho-social aspects of HIV infection and AIDS in multiple transfused thalassemic children. 145 60

We report on a 8-month-old boy with AIDS, born of an asymptomatic mother with positive HTLV-III serology. He was hospitalized in the Intensive Care Unit because of anemia, fever and hepatosplenomegaly. Chest X-ray showed pneumonia and subsequent blood cultures were positive for Candida albicans. After 3 days of Amphotericin B treatment, the patient was transferred to Infectious Disease Department. After 30 days of hospitalization, the patient developed a rapid neurological impairment evolving into coma. CT scan showed a round, ring-shaped low density lesion with hyperdense and enhancing haemorrhagic centre in the left basal ganglia and a smaller hypodense lesion on the right. There was also evidence of cortical atrophy and mild ventricular dilatation. Such lesions are more commonly described in children with AIDS and congenital cytomegalic inclusion virus (CMV) encephalitis. In this case toxoplasma cysts were shown microscopically reinforcing the contention that in patients with AIDS, toxoplasma gondii infection may occur with atypical manifestation.
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PMID:An unusual CT presentation of congenital cerebral toxoplasmosis in an 8 month-old boy with AIDS. 159 15

Patients with typhoid or paratyphoid fever, admitted to 14 hospitals for infectious diseases during 1984-1987, were epidemically and clinically studied. Of the total number of 183 typhoid, 49 paratyphoid fever patients, those infected overseas was 44.3% and 71.4% respectively, giving an overall annual decrease, yet marking an increased ratio of overseas infection. Patients aged 20s-30s and males were dominant. One hundred and seventy six cases (96.2%) of typhoid and all the paratyphoid fever cases were bacteriologically diagnosed. The period from the onset to the diagnosis was around 14 days in most cases, but beyond 29 days in over 10% of the cases. We would like to emphasize that enteric fever, focusing on high fever, bradycardia, roseola, hepatosplenomegaly, leukopenia, elevated serum-GOT GPT and LDH, can be easily diagnosed by blood/stool culture before beginning chemotherapy. Intestinal bleeding was recognized in 24 cases (13.1%) of typhoid and 4 (8.2%) of paratyphoid fever, intestinal perforation in 2 (1.1%) and death in 1 (0.5%) of typhoid fever. CP was most commonly used in chemotherapy. Bacteriological relapse was recognized in 7/127 cases (5.5%) of typhoid, 6/48 (13.0%) of paratyphoid fever those followed beyond 3 weeks, though eradication was attained by retreatment. One strain of S. typhi resistant to CP.ABPC.KM.SM was isolated in 1986 from a patient infected overseas. New quinolones seem reliable in our preliminary studies.
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PMID:[Clinical research on patients with typhoid and paratyphoid fever (1984-1987). Research Group for Infectious Enteric Diseases, Japan]. 191 2

Two patients with chronic neutrophilic leukemia, a rare myeloproliferative syndrome, are reported with a review of the literature. The major features of the 34 collected cases (including the two patients reported here) were persistent leukocytosis simulating a leukemoid reaction, hepatosplenomegaly, hyperuricemia, increased vitamin B12 blood level, increased leukocyte alkaline phosphatase and absence of the Philadelphia chromosome. Infection was the leading cause of death. Concomitant multiple myeloma was found in eight patients.
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PMID:[Chronic neutrophilic leukemia: apropos of 2 cases and review of the literature]. 208 13

We present a report of a pregnancy complicated by chronic schistosomiasis. A.H. is a 22 year old G1 Filipina, referred at 34 weeks gestational age for evaluation of hypersplenism and progressive thrombocytopenia. Physical exam was remarkable for hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory evaluation of hepatic, renal, hematologic, autoimmune, or infectious disease etiology or abnormality was negative. Ultrasound revealed a normal fetus, an enlarged spleen, dilated splenic and hepatic vasculature and an enlarged liver with periportal fibrosis. Abdominal computed tomography revealed subcapsular calcifications, dilated ducts, and periportal fibrosis. Esophagogastrojejeunoscopy showed no varices. The presumptive diagnosis of hypersplenism secondary to chronic hepatosplenic schistosomiasis was made. Based on pathophysiology and literature review conservative management was elected. Liver functions, clotting functions, and platelet counts were monitored closely. Intense antepartum fetal monitoring was performed. Platelet counts remained between 30 and 40K. The patient went into labor at 38 3/7 weeks and delivered a 3148 g female Apgars 8/9 by spontaneous vaginal delivery. Evaluation of the placenta was negative for ova. By 2 weeks postpartum platelet counts had increased to the 60-70 k range, and a rectal biopsy, positive for S. japonicum ova was performed. Treatment with three doses of Praziquantel 20 mg/kg q8h was completed prior to her return to the Philippines.
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PMID:Hepatosplenic schistosomiasis in pregnancy: report of a case and review of the literature. 212 Nov 52

Infection of BALB/c mice with the RLV-A virus typically results in an erythropoietic dysplasia characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, erythroblastosis, erythroblastemia and severe anemia without reticulocytosis. Mice hypertransfused weekly with 75%-packed red cells for 42 days prior to RLV-A infection and viral potency controls manifested this typical RLV-A response. Mice that were hypertransfused prior to and following RLV-A infection never developed the "typical" RLV-A pathogenesis. Instead, a transplantable myeloid leukemia was established. Although the reason for altered pathogenesis remains uncertain, it seems plausible that continued hypertransfusion, presumably after establishment of an altered granulopoietic microenvironment, resulted in a completely different viral expression and development of the transplantable myeloid leukemia.
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PMID:Sustained hypertransfusion and induction of a transplantable myeloid leukemia in RLV-A-infected BALB/c mice. 273 54

Infection of BALB/c mice with the RLV-A virus normally induces an erythropoietic dysplasia characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, erythroblastosis, erythroblastemia and severe anemia without reticulocytosis. Time to death varies between 20-30 weeks. Mice were inoculated with RLV-A after being hypertransfused with 75% packed red cells for 42 days which has been shown to eliminate erythropoiesis and modify the microenvironment to favor granulopoiesis. Following RLV-A inoculation, one group did not receive further transfusion (short-term) and another group continued with hypertransfusion weekly (long-term). The pathogenesis of RLV-A in the short-term group paralleled the characteristic RLV-A response. In the long-term group however, the characteristic RLV-A response was never observed. Instead, a granulocytic leukemia was developed. Continued hypertransfusion presumably after establishment of an altered microenvironment resulted in a completely different viral pathogenesis and the development of a transplantable myeloid leukemia.
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PMID:Effect of sustained hypertransfusion on Rauscher leukemia virus-variant A (RLV-A) infection in BALB/c mice. 322 6

Thirty children perinatally exposed to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and 30 healthy control subjects matched for age, sex, and race were evaluated for growth, head size, craniofacial dysmorphism, dermatoglyphics, and other physical features. Thirteen patients met the criteria for group IV (constitutional, neurologic, and secondary infectious diseases), 14 for group III (persistent generalized lymphadenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly), and three for group II (asymptomatic infection) of the classification of HIV infection established by the Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta. Postnatal growth failure and microcephaly, observed in a significant proportion of patients (46.7% and 30%, respectively), could be attributed to chronic illnesses and to progressive central nervous system lesions in HIV-infected patients. There were however, no significant differences between patients and controls with regard to the incidence of craniofacial features and dermatoglyphics, and the incidence of other anomalies was not different from that expected in the population. The patients born to drug-using mothers were not different from those born to non-drug-using mothers in relation to the studied criteria. We could not confirm the presence of characteristic craniofacial dysmorphism in children exposed to perinatal HIV infection.
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PMID:Lack of evidence for craniofacial dysmorphism in perinatal human immunodeficiency virus infection. 333 65


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