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)

Eight elderly women with primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were treated with a combination of surgery, chemotherapy and radiation with excellent outcome. Clinically, the patients presented with thyromegaly and did not have lymphadenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly. On histological examination, the lymphomas resembled diffuse follicle-centre cell tumours. All patients showed extension beyond the thyroid capsule and lympho-epithelial lesions; 3 displayed kappa-light-chain restriction and 2 lambda-monoclonality. Thyroid lymphomas fall into the spectrum of mucosa-associated lymphomas, which have a better prognosis than their equivalent nodal-based counterparts.
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PMID:Primary thyroid lymphomas. A clinicopathological study of 8 cases. 223 90

Amyloidosis appears to be a rare complication of cystic fibrosis. We discuss three patients with amyloidosis complicating cystic fibrosis to add to the six patients previously recorded. The presenting problem was proteinuria in five patients, thyromegaly in three patients, and hepatosplenomegaly in one patient. The progression of proteinuria to nephrotic syndrome and edema occurred in eight of nine patients and portended a very poor prognosis. The kidneys, adrenal glands, spleen, thyroid gland, liver, heart, and bowel were most frequently involved. Renal involvement is a frequent and devastating complication of amyloidosis in patients with cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:Amyloidosis as a complication of cystic fibrosis. 392 58

Amyloid goitre, defined as diffuse hyperplasia of the thyroid due to infiltration of amyloid substance, has been rarely reported as in confirmed by the latest reviews of the literature. This paper reports the case of a 23-year-old patient with a long history of systemic amyloidosis probably secondary to a Mediterranean fever with diffuse lymphoadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly and chronic renal insufficiency, who was referred to our attention due to a struma which had increased in volume over the past few years. Aspirated needle biopsy showed the presence of amyloid and the patient underwent total thyroidectomy; the histological test confirmed amyloid struma. The postoperative evolution was normal and characterised by a slight but transient deterioration of renal function. The authors stress the importance of cytological tests using aspirated needle biopsy under polarised light and after Congo Red staining; this is the only test which enables a preoperative diagnosis to be made, thus conditioning the choice of surgery, even if full thyroidectomy is almost certain given the size of the goitre and the systemic pathogenesis of amyloidosis.
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PMID:[Amyloid goiter]. 897 65

Two of every thousand pregnancies are complicated by Graves' disease. Diagnosis is suggested by maternal disorders (tachycardia, exophthalmia, weight loss.) or fetal disorders (tachycardia, intra-uterine growth retardation, preterm birth.). Due to transfer into the fetal compartment of maternal antibodies which stimulate the fetal thyroid by binding to the thyroid thyrotropin (TSH) receptor, only 1% of children born to these mothers are described as having hyperthyroidism. Neonatal thyrotoxicosis disappears with clearance of the maternal antibodies; clinical signs usually disappear during the first four Months of life. The most frequent neonatal clinical signs of thyrotoxicosis are tachycardia, goiter, hyperexcitability, poor weight gain, hepatosplenomegaly, stare and eyelid retraction. Diagnosis is based on determination of the blood level of triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxine (T4) and TSH. To confirm the nature of hyperthyroidism, thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI) should be assayed. The kinetics of TSI provides a guide for therapeutic adaptation and disappearance of TSI is a sign of recovery. Rare cases of familial non-autoimmune hyperthyroidism have been shown to be caused by germline mutation of the thyrotropin receptor. We report a case of severe neonatal hyperthyroidism which led to the diagnosis of maternal Graves' disease.
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PMID:[Severe neonatal hyperthyroidism which reveals a maternal Graves' disease]. 1524 72

Authors describe a case of a premature infant whose mother had a history of thyroidectomy due to Graves' disease and her hormonal status was not controlled during pregnancy. She did not receive prenatal care and on 33rd week the premature infant was delivered by emergency cesarean section because of fetal tachycardia and imminent intrauterine asphyxia. The infant with a weight of 1350 gram (percentile <10) was dysmature and had a large struma. The newborn received both conventional and high frequency ventilation for respiratory insufficiency and was treated with beta-blocker, digoxin and dobutamine for severe tachycardia (>180/min) and cardiac decompensation. Further examinations proved cardiomegaly, pericardial fluid, severe pulmonary hypoplasia, mitral- and tricuspid insufficiency and hepatosplenomegaly. The level of free thyroid hormones was several times higher than normal (fT4: > 6 ng/dl, fT3 > 30 pg/ml), while TSH level was 0. Respiratory support was required for 7 days, inotropic support for 10 days; at the same time propranolol and K-iodide were administered. Eventually, the tachycardia settled and beta-blocker therapy was continued with reduced doses. Finally, the thyroid hormone levels became normal. Authors emphasize that newborns of women suffering from Graves' disease can significantly lag behind in weight increase, may have severe circulatory insufficiency and symptoms of thyrotoxicosis. We also emphasize the importance of the monitoring maternal hormone levels and antibody titers.
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PMID:[Severe circulatory insufficiency in a patient with neonatal hyperthyroidism]. 2023 Nov 36

A 52 year-old male presented with neck pain after undergoing thyroidectomy for a goiter three weeks prior which was complicated by a neck hematoma requiring evacuation. Computed tomography (CT) scan showed a neck hematoma requiring evacuation and he received desmopressin with cessation of bleeding. Coagulation studies were normal. He returned eighteen months later with severe oral mucosal bleeding after a dental procedure and required transfusions with red blood cells, platelets, and fresh frozen plasma (FFP) in addition to desmopressin, Humate-P, aminocaproic acid, and surgical packing. A comprehensive bleeding diathesis workup was normal. He was readmitted six months later due to abdominal pain and distention and found to have massive hepatosplenomegaly on CT. A new coagulopathy workup revealed prolonged INR to 1.5, corrected prothrombin time mixing study, and a low factor VII level (29%), suggesting acquired factor VII deficiency. A transjugular liver biopsy revealed extensive involvement by ALamyloidosis- Kappa type. He then developed a large right retroperitoneal hematoma which required multiple transfusions with FFP, cryoprecipitate, aminocaproic acid, and vitamin K with slight success. Hemorrhage was subsequently stabilized with recombinant factor VIIa administered every four hours which corresponded with correction of factor VII levels and PT and eventual cessation hemorrhage. Acquired factor VII deficiency causing severe coagulopathy was attributed to hepatic amyloidosis ALkappa subtype. We started treatment with bortezomib, dexamethasone, and cyclophosphamide, however, the patient succumbed to uncontrolled hemorrhage. Acquired factor VII deficiency is extremely rare and to our knowledge, this is the only known case of factor VII deficiency secondary to amyloidosis involving the liver.
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PMID:Acquired factor VII deficiency causing severe bleeding disorder secondary to AL amyloidosis of the liver. 3034 85