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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malignant
osteopetrosis
is the autosomal recessive form of
osteopetrosis
. Besides anemia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, and the osteopetrotic bone seen on roentgenogram, the head and neck manifestations are important to the diagnosis and clinical course of this disease. Eye, ear, nose, face, teeth, mandible, maxilla, central nervous system structures, and cranial nerves are often involved.
...
PMID:Head and neck manifestations of malignant osteopetrosis. 11 52
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.
...
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.
...
PMID:Infantile osteopetrosis: report of two cases. 135 41
Osteoporosis is a disorder characterized by osteoclastic dysfunction. The bones of afflicted patients become sclerotic and show modeling defects resulting in either a decrease or obliteration of the marrow cavity and resultant pancytopenia. Other clinical manifestations include bony deformities, cranial nerve palsies from bony overgrowth, pathological fractures, osteomyelitis, and
hepatosplenomegaly
secondary to extramedullary hematopoiesis. In the skull, the diploic space is usually decreased or obliterated. Absent or decreased marrow space is observed on plain films. On MRI, the marrow cavity very likely will be obliterated with low signal intensity on T1- and T2-weighted images. We report a case of
osteopetrosis
in which the diploic space is markedly increased, giving a hair-on-end appearance resembling thalassemia major. Perhaps some local factor within the diploic space prevented the expected osteoclastic dysfunction, allowing remodeling and expansion of the cranial vault.
...
PMID:Case report 746: Osteopetrosis. 152 37
The osteopetroses are a heterogeneous group of disorders characterised by generalised bony sclerosis. The autosomal dominant form usually has a "benign" prognosis, in contrast to the "malignant" course of the autosomal recessive variety. In this paper we describe a kindred in which the phenotypic spectrum varied from an asymptomatic condition in adults to a severely affected infant, presenting with anaemia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, hydrocephalus and blindness. The findings in this family are reported and discussed to elucidate further the possible genetic heterogeneity in autosomal dominant
osteopetrosis
.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type II with "malignant" presentation: further support for heterogeneity? 226 72
Skeletal, reticuloendothelial and renal images were obtained on a patient with
osteopetrosis
using Tc-99m MDP, Tc-99m HSA millimicrospheres and Tc-99m DTPA respectively. The bone scan showed increased uptake in multiple fracture sites, in the frontal bone, and in the splayed metaphyses of long bones while the remainder of the skeleton appeared normal. Reticuloendothelial images demonstrated an absence of bone marrow activity,
hepatosplenomegaly
and a site of extramedullary hematopoiesis. A renogram demonstrated a left kidney displaced and distorted by the massive splenomegaly.
...
PMID:Scintigraphy in a patient with complicated osteopetrosis. 265 38
Osteopetrosis
is a metabolic bone disease inherited in a number of species including human beings and characterized by a generalized increase in skeletal density detected radiographically. This condition results primarily from reduced osteoclast function which produces partial or complete absence of marrow spaces, a variable compensatory
hepatosplenomegaly
, interferences with tooth eruption and certain neurological complications. Experimental investigations of some mutations have shown that restoration of bone resorption and recovery from the disease follow bone marrow transplantation. These data indicate that in these mutations, including some children, the defect is intrinsic to osteoclasts or their stem cells. In other mutations in animals and children, bone marrow transplants do not restore bone resorption and the defect is believed to be one of local environmental products or signals whose importance in cell differentiation and regulation is becoming increasingly appreciated. These data, reviewed with respect to the emerging cell biology of the osteoclast, indicate that osteopetrotic mutations have much to teach us about the regulation of bone metabolism.
...
PMID:Osteopetrosis--multiple pathways for the interception of osteoclast function. 330 55
Neurological manifestations in infantile
osteopetrosis
are common and varied, and not always attributable to the skeletal pathology. An unusual association of
osteopetrosis
with neuronal storage of ceroid lipofuscin is reported in two infant brothers born of nonconsanguinous parents. The first child became symptomatic at age 5 days with weight loss and vomiting. He had poor head control, hypertonia, and persistent fisting, and died at age 2 months. In the second infant, the diagnosis of
osteopetrosis
was confirmed at age 2 days. His neurological symptoms included blindness, deafness, and recurrent seizures. The infant died at 7 months of age. In both cases, autopsy confirmed the diffuse bony sclerosis with
hepatosplenomegaly
and extramedullary hematopoiesis. Neuropathological examination revealed cerebral atrophy with ventricular dilation, neuronal loss, and astrogliosis. The most striking finding was widespread accumulation of neuronal ceroid lipofuscin associated with formation of axonal spheroids. The optic nerves were compressed at the optic foramina and showed loss of myelinated axons and gliosis. Rapid Golgi impregnations of neurons from the calcarine cortex in the second infant were analyzed quantitatively, showing a reduction in the total dendritic length and number of branches. The primary defect in
osteopetrosis
is thought to be a lysosomal dysfunction involving the monocyte cell line from which osteoclasts are derived. Thus, the association in two brothers of
osteopetrosis
with accumulation of neuronal ceroid lipofuscin may not be fortuitous. The neuronal storage disorder in this instance probably reflects lysosomal dysfunction.
...
PMID:The association of infantile osteopetrosis and neuronal storage disease in two brothers. 334 81
Two- to three-week-old mice homozygous for the recessive oc gene had negligible numbers of marrow cells but possessed no significant spleno- and hepatomegaly. They also maintained normal numbers of blood cells except for monocytes, which were significantly lower. Additionally, they had reduced numbers of total cells and resident macrophages in the peritoneum, as determined by cell counts in the peritoneal lavage fluid. The frequency of spleen colony-forming units (CFU-S) in the spleens of oc/oc mice was the same as that in the spleens of normal littermate control mice. These oc/oc CFU-S showed essentially similar differentiation patterns as CFU-S of control mice. Also, a few CFU-S could be detected in livers of oc/oc mice. On the other hand, the frequency of cells that formed macrophage colonies in a four-day liquid-culture system in the presence of colony-stimulating activity was significantly reduced in oc/oc mice and abnormalities were observed in the formation of the adherent (stromal) layers by oc/oc spleen cells in liquid cultures. Numbers of fibroblastoid cell colonies in these layers were reduced and, moreover, cultures demonstrated a marked decrease in the number of macrophages both within and outside the fibroblastoid cell colonies. Transplants of spleen and thymus cells of oc/oc mice into lethally irradiated +/? recipients induced oc/oc-like lesions. They included peritoneal macrophage deficiency, marrow deficiency, as well as
hepatosplenomegaly
. This suggests a hemopoietic stem cell and not microenvironmental defect in this particular type of
osteopetrosis
. The murine mutant characterized in this study may be useful in studies of cellular interactions during blood and bone formation and in studies of the mononuclear phagocyte system.
...
PMID:Congenital murine osteopetrosis inherited with osteosclerotic (oc) gene: hematological characterization. 375 33
A 31/2-month-old girl with juvenile
osteopetrosis
is described. She presented with failure to thrive, a blocked nose, anaemia and
hepatosplenomegaly
and had dense sclerotic bones on radiography. This disease, which is potentially lethal, may be cured by bone marrow transplantation in selected cases.
...
PMID:[Juvenile osteopetrosis: a case report]. 389 67
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