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)

Angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AILD), first discovered in the 70's, is an infrequent disease which generally proves fatal within a short time. It is characterized by lymphadenopathies, hepatosplenomegaly, fever and rash. The most frequent laboratory findings are: anemia, leukocytosis with lymphopenia and non specific hypergammaglobulinemia. In spite of being considered a non malignant disease, it produces important immunity disorders which predispose the patient to serious infections, frequently fatal. In the course of time patients are likely to develop malignant lymphomas or other types of tumors. We describe a ganglionar proliferation and general symptoms in a patient who had been diagnosed as AILD by ganglionar biopsy. She was treated with corticosteroids during 8 months after which she had a complete recovery. Three months later the patient was readmitted with enterrorhagias and clear deterioration of her general condition. Tests showed the existence of a colon tumor and absence of adenomegaly in the areas previously affected by AILD. A colon surgery was carried out and a specimen examined. The anatomopathologic examination confirmed the existence of an immunoblastic lymphoma infiltrating the regional ganglionar area. Colon lymphomas constitute only 4% of all colon tumors; they are related to chronic gastrointestinal disease such as Crohn disease, ulcerative colitis, malabsorption syndromes, tumors and others. We conclude that in this patient AILD and prednisone administration constituted favoring factors for the development of an extranodal lymphoma.
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PMID:[Angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy and colonic lymphoma]. 213 Feb 46

Muckle-Wells syndrome is a rare autosomally dominant disorder belonging to the group of periodic fever syndromes. Three main features of the disease are: (i) urticarial eruptions; (ii) progressive perceptive deafness; and (iii) amyloid nephropathy. A 26-year-old Japanese woman had suffered at birth from an urticarial rash and episodic fever. The fever was frequently associated with chills and ill-defined malaise. There was no familial history of urticarial rash or fever. Although she did not recognize hearing loss, audiometry revealed perceptive deafness. She also had hepatosplenomegaly and hyperimmunoglobulinemia, but did not have persistent arthritis, or any neurological or gastrointestinal disorder. No growth retardation was observed. Skin biopsy specimens from her buttock showed a sparse perivascular and interstitial infiltrate of neutrophils in the papillary dermis. Periodic fever syndrome was diagnosed. Muckle-Wells syndrome was most likely, although no amyloid nephropathy was observed and no gene mutations of CIAS1 (T785C, C778T, G907A, G1315A, G1075C) were detected. We treated her with prednisolone, which had a partial effect. Previous treatment with colchicines, antihistamines, dapsone, clarithromycin, minocycline hydrochloride and loxoprofen sodium had been unsuccessful. Muckle-Wells syndrome may go undiagnosed for many years or be misdiagnosed as refractory urticaria. Therefore, we should consider the possibility of periodic fever syndrome when we see patients with refractory urticaria and episodic fever.
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PMID:A probable case of Muckle-Wells syndrome. 1655 80

The acute phase of Chagas disease lasts 4-8 weeks and is characterized by microscopically detectable parasitaemia. Symptoms are usually mild with severe acute disease occurring in less than 1% of patients. Orally transmitted Trypanosoma cruzi outbreaks can have more severe acute morbidity and higher mortality than vector-borne infection. Congenital T. cruzi infection occurs in 1-10% of infants of infected mothers. Most congenital infections are asymptomatic or cause non-specific signs, requiring laboratory screening for detection. A small proportion of congenital infections cause severe morbidity with hepatosplenomegaly, anaemia, meningoencephalitis and/or respiratory insufficiency, with an associated high mortality. Infected infants are presumed to carry the same 20-30% lifetime risk of cardiac or gastrointestinal disease as other infected individuals. Most control programs in Latin America employ prenatal serological screening followed by microscopic examination of cord blood from infants of seropositive mothers. Recent data confirm that polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is more sensitive and detects congenital infections earlier than conventional techniques. For infants not diagnosed at birth, conventional serology is recommended at at 6 to 9 months of age. In programs that have been evaluated, less than 20% of at risk infants completed all steps of the screening algorithm. A sensitive, specific and practical screening test for newborns is needed to enable Chagas disease to be added to newborn screening programs.
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PMID:Acute and congenital Chagas disease. 2182 May 50