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)

Two distinct and characteristic cases of osteopetrosis are presented. The first concerns a fourth month old baby with the malignant form of the disease, initiated since the newborn period. He was admitted because of abnormal ocular movements and probably deafness. At the physical examination he showed bilateral optic atrophy, abnormal ocular movements, hepatosplenomegaly and petechia. The diagnosis was confirmed by clinical means and radiological studies of virtually all of his skeleton. Several fractures were found. Laboratory tests showed marked anemia, trombocytopenia "tear cells", evidence of medullary erythropoiesis and myelofibrosis. An increased alkaline phosphatase was detected in serum and in granulocytes. The second case corresponds to a 26 year-old female with the benign form of the disease. She had multiple pathological fractures specially of her lower limbs, that produced severe impotence in her gait. In this case, the diagnosis is suspected on clinical basis and confirmed with the characteristic radiological findings. Some of the more distinct features of the disease are discussed, specially those concerning the genetic mode of inheritance and consanguinity, the etiopathogenic, pathophysiology, clinical, laboratory, prognosis and treatment, with particular reference to the radiological and hematologic problems related with this metabolic disorder.
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PMID:[Osteopetrosis (report of 2 cases)]. 91 41

Two cases of infantile osteopetrosis are reported. Both were males aged four and eight months at presentation. They presented with osteosclerotic change of the bone, leukoerythroblastic anemia, optic atrophy, hepatosplenomegaly and frequent infection. The histology of the bone showed thickened bone trabeculae with little osteoclastic activity, although in one patient the number of osteoclasts increased, while in the other they did not. One received a bone marrow transplant (BMT) but died from disseminated cytomegaloviral infection, pulmonary hemorrhage and sepsis. The post-transplant marrow histology showed evidence of engraftment and osteoclastic activity. The other only received a course of prednisolone, which was of little help. His condition has followed a natural course with progressive visual impairment and marrow failure. Our cases suggest that infantile osteopetrosis should be taken into consideration in dealing with infants who present with early marrow failure and that patients of infantile osteopetrosis should receive BMT. BMTs appear to be the only cure. They should be given as early as possible to avoid major consequences and severe infection.
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PMID:Infantile osteopetrosis: report of two cases. 135 41

Clinical and radiological studies of seven patients with autosomic recessive malignant osteopetrosis are presented. Diagnosis was established before the age of 3 months in six cases and at 7 months in one. In all cases the presenting signs were pallor and hepatosplenomegaly with associated neurological involvement in five. All patients had normocytic normochromic anemia, leucopenia and thrombocytopenia with features of extramedullary hematopoiesis. Radiological studies revealed increase in the density of bones with "mask" appearance of facial bones and diminished size of optic foramina. Long bones showed absence of normal trabeculae and anomalies in modeling with methaphiseal bands and "bone within bone" images. There was hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia with slight increases in alkaline phosphatase; parathormone was normal. Clinical course was characterized by progressive pancytopenia, recurrent infections and neurological deterioration with convulsions, nistagmus and optic atrophy. Five out of the seven patients died after a median of 3 months, due to infections or haemorrhage. The patient diagnosed at 7 months of age presented bilateral optic atrophy and moderate anemia; no other complications appeared after 2 year follow-up. Histological findings included substitution of bone marrow by chondro-osseous tissue; focal obsteoblastic and osteoclastic activity in calcified cartilage, and myeloid metaplasia in liver, spleen, lymph nodes and kidneys. The lesions are in agreement with the concept of a defect in bone formation-resorbtion balance; dysfunction of both osteoclasts and osteocytes is implicated in the pathogenesis. Unlike experimental disease, osteopetrosis in man is probably an heterogeneous disease and appropriate therapy should be individualized. Nevertheless, at present, the only favorable results have been obtained with bone-marrow transplantation.
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PMID:[Juvenile malignant osteopetrosis. Clinico-radiological study of 7 cases]. 663 10

The first case of infantile sialic acid storage disease in Czech Republic is presented in a four-and-half year-old girl. The clinical phenotype consisted of moderate hepatosplenomegaly and skin hypopigmentation, early psychomotoric and developmental arrest, associated with truncal ataxia and lower extremities spasticity, extinguished acoustic and visual perception (optic atrophy without macular alteration) and remarkable automutilation phenomena. The appearance was normosomatic and there were minimal dysostotic changes. Skin and liver biopsy displayed moderate amount of lucent storage lysosomes in epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural elements. Alder-Reily granules were found in the bone marrow and peripheral blood cells. The urinary excretion of mucopolysaccharides and oligosaccharides was not increased. The autopsy showed heterogenous neuronal and glial brain storage (lucent lysosomes, lipopigment, membranous cytoplasmic bodies), severe hypomyelination and severe storage in the splenic sinus endothelium. Diagnosis was made by proving thirteen fold increase of free sialic acid in the fibroblast culture. It is pointed out that in the case of a mucopolysaccharidosis-like storage disease unexplainable by a hydrolytic enzyme deficiency, it is the enzyme product storage which must be suspected. At present, the only candidate is the sialic acid storage disease.
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PMID:Infantile sialic acid storage disease (ISSD). Report on first case in Czech Republic with biopsy and autopsy findings. 799 7

Over a 10-year period, 28 Arab children with autosomal recessive osteopetrosis were seen in two hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Eighteen (64%) had osteopetrosis associated with metabolic acidosis probably due to a renal tubular defect; nine (32%) had a malignant infantile form of osteopetrosis and one had a mild form with delayed onset. Parental consanguinity was 56% and 40% among patients with and without acidosis respectively. Somatic and psychomotor retardation and recurrent bone fractures were common in both groups. Dental caries, cerebral calcification and optic atrophy were more frequent in patients with acidosis, while anaemia, hepatosplenomegaly and deafness were more common in patients without acidosis. To guarantee optimal rehabilitation, children with this progressive disease require an early multiteam approach.
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PMID:Osteopetrosis in children. 953 61

The inborn errors of GM2 ganglioside metabolism cause GM2 ganglioside to accumulate within the lysosomes of the nerve cells. The majority of the patients are infants with the Tay-Sachs form of the disease associated with a severe deficiency of beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidase A (hexosaminidase A). Both Hexosaminidase A and B are deficient in Sandhoff disease. The serum total hexosaminidase and the percentage of hexosaminidase A and B were estimated in 449 patients who presented with progressive mental-motor retardation. Three cases of Tay-Sachs disease and two cases of Sandhoff disease were detected. They presented with exaggerated startle response to acoustic stimuli, seizures, optic atrophy and retinal cherry red spots in addition to psychomotor retardation. One case of Sandhoff disease had hepatosplenomegaly and skeletal deformities.
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PMID:GM2 gangliosidoses: a review of cases confirmed by beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase assay. 1082 9

Thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia (TRMA) syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by diabetes mellitus (DM), progressive sensorineural deafness, and thiamine-responsive anemia. Mutations in the SLC19A2 gene encoding a high-affinity thiamine transporter protein THTR-1 are responsible for the clinical features associated with TRMA syndrome. We report an African-American female with TRMA-syndrome associated with thyroid disease and retinitis pigmentosa caused by a novel mutation in the SLC19A2 gene. The patient presented at 12 months of age with paroxysmal atrial tachycardia and hepatosplenomegaly. One month later, she developed DM requiring intermittent insulin therapy. At 2-1/2 years of age, profound sensorineural hearing loss was discovered. By 4 years of age, daily insulin therapy (0.5 U/kg/day) was instituted and her insulin requirement gradually increased to 1.0 U/kg/day by 9 years of age. She developed optic atrophy, retinitis pigmentosa, and visual impairment by 12 years of age with severe restriction of peripheral vision by 16 years. At age 19, a thiamine-responsive normocytic anemia was discovered. She was diagnosed with autoimmune thyroiditis at 20 years and she experienced a psychotic episode associated with a mood disorder at age 21. With oral thiamine therapy, her insulin requirement decreased by 30% over a 20 month period. Molecular analysis revealed that the patient is homozygous for a missense mutation (C152T) in exon 1 of the SLC19A2 gene.
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PMID:Novel mutation in the SLC19A2 gene in an African-American female with thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia syndrome. 1499 41

Osteopetrosis is a heterogeneous family of rare human genetic disorders due to markedly decreased bone resorption. It is one among disorders causing osteosclerosis of the trabecular bone and/or hyperostosis of the cortical bone. Four types of human osteopetrosis have been clearly defined, but patients with atypical symptoms are frequent, suggesting that there are additional forms. The most severe expression of this condition in its malignant form is inherited as an autosomal recessive disorder and it is usually fatal before school age. It presents with failure to thrive, severe hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia and nerve compression leading to blindness and deafness during infancy. The case of a 2-month-old female child with severe hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, nystagmus, pancytopenia, gengival hyperplasia, optic atrophy, absent evoked visual potential and increased bone density within the total skeleton, is reported. Diagnosis of autosomal recessive malignant osteopetrosis was established by transiliac bone biopsy. She underwent bone marrow transplantation, but died soon afterwards. This rare and mortal disorder of bone formation requires early diagnosis and immediate pharmacological treatment, consisting in administration of vitamin D, in order to enhance bone resorption and of prednisone to improve hematological indexes and, if possible, bone marrow transplantation in order to ameliorate quality of life and survival.
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PMID:Autosomal malignant osteopetrosis. From diagnosis to therapy. 1524 21

Autosomal recessive osteopetrosis is a severe hereditary bone disease whose cellular basis is in the osteoclast, but with heterogeneous molecular defects. We hereby report the clinical and the molecular study of seven patients affected by the recessive form of osteopetrosis (ARO) from six families originating from the Middle-East: four from Lebanon and two from Syria. Parental consanguinity was found in five families. The mean age of diagnosis was 3 months. Failure to thrive, prominent forehead, exophthalmia, optic atrophy, hepatosplenomegaly, neurological manifestations, anaemia, thrombocytopenia, hypocalcaemia, elevated hepatic enzymes and acid phosphatase, and an early fatal outcome were common. Macrocephaly, strabismus, and brain malformations were relatively less common. Mutations were identified in two genes: TCIRG1 and OSTM1. Phenotype-genotype correlation is discussed.
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PMID:Molecular study of six families originating from the Middle-East and presenting with autosomal recessive osteopetrosis. 1740 May 32

Bilateral optic neuritis is an extremely uncommon complication of pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus and sporadic cases are reported in the literature. The authors describe an 11-yr-old girl who presented with fever and progressively increasing pallor for 4 months, headache for 7 days, severe anemia and hepatosplenomegaly. Soon after admission, she developed rapid deterioration of vision, worsening to no perception of light with afferent pupillary defect. Fundoscopy showed bilateral optic neuritis. Investigations revealed autoimmune hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia. Anti-dsDNA and anti-phospholipid antibodies were positive. Magnetic resonance venography showed multiple thrombi in the cerebral venous sinuses, for which anticoagulant therapy was initiated. She was managed with intravenous methylprednisolone followed by cyclophosphamide pulse therapy for 6 months along with oral prednisolone. Though she went into remission, visual outcome has been dismal, with development of bilateral optic atrophy, and absence of perception of light.
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PMID:Bilateral optic neuritis in pediatric systemic lupus erythematosus with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. 2088 28


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