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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Psycho-social aspects of HIV infection and AIDS in multiple transfused thalassemic children. 145 60
One hundred and twenty-five cases of biopsy proven sarcoidosis have been found during a prospective study since 1972 in Calcutta, Eastern India. The presentation, clinical course and radiological features are considerably different from those seen in the West. Elderly males over 40 years are more prone. Low grade fever, cough, dyspnoea, arthralgia are common symptoms while
hepatosplenomegaly
, hypercalcaemia, hypercalciuria and hyperglobulinaemia are frequent signs. Nearly 60% are MT negative (up to 100 TU). Serum angiotensin converting enzyme and high lymphocyte count in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid are usual findings in active disease. Chest X-ray usually shows mottled opacities or fibrosis in 60% cases. Clinico-radiological dissociation (i.e. remarkable dissociation between the alarming-looking chest X-ray and scanty physical signs and symptoms in chest) was a very remarkable feature in this series. Treatment with oral steroid or steroid aerosol with oxyphenbutazone and chloroquine give equally good results initially. However, most cases tend to relapse inspite of adequate initial treatment. The pattern of the disease is similar almost all over India with minor regional differences like more erythema nodosum and eye involvement in Chandigarh in the extreme north (which could also have been due to case selection). The pattern from Northern India (
Delhi
) and Western India is nearly similar to our figures.
...
PMID:Sarcoidosis in India: a review of 125 biopsy-proven cases from eastern India. 234 18
An 11-month-old male infant was admitted to hospital with fever, pallor and
hepatosplenomegaly
, and was diagnosed as having kala-azar. The mother also suffered from kala-azar while carrying this baby. As the baby and the mother did not leave
Delhi
either during or after delivery, and the vector found in
Delhi
is not competent to transmit leishmaniasis, the infant could not have been infected by the bite of a sandfly. It therefore seems most likely that he was infected in utero--a rare route.
...
PMID:Congenital kala-azar. 261 66
Ten children (five boys and five girls) with juvenile chronic myelocytic leukemia were seen over a period of 12 years (1980-1991) at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New
Delhi
. With the exception of one who was aged 4.5 years, all children were below 4 years of age (mean age 20.4 months). The presenting features included fever, bleeding secondary to thrombocytopenia, marked
hepatosplenomegaly
, and skin rash. The striking hematological features were anemia, thrombocytopenia, peripheral blood monocytosis, and normoblastemia. There was no significant myeloid proliferation in the bone marrow aspirate (mean M:E = 5:1), while erythroid proliferation was prominent along with monocytosis (mean 11.2%). Fetal hemoglobin was raised in 8 of the 10 patients (mean 14.1%). Long-term survival was poor, with maximum survival being 18 months in one case. New modalities of management of this rare entity are discussed.
...
PMID:Juvenile chronic myelocytic leukemia--report of 10 cases. 799 Jul 56