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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (hepatosplenomegaly)
4,408 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three atypical patients with clinical and laboratory findings of Hurler syndrome, but without alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency, are described. Clinical features included characteristic facies, mental retardation, corneal clouding, dysostosis multiplex, restriction of joint mobility, and hepatosplenomegaly. Excessive amounts of chondroitin sulfate B and heparitin sulfate were excreted in the urine. alpha-L-Iduronidase activities in leucocytes and liver tissues were within the normal range or somewhat elevated.
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PMID:Atypical Hurler syndrome without alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency. 13 68

The mucopolysaccharidosis represent a broad spectrum of disorders due to the deficiency of one of a group of enzymes which degrade three classes of mucopolysaccharides: heparan sulfate, dermatan-sulfate and keratan sulfate. The general phenotype includes coarse facies, corneal clouding, hepatosplenomegaly, joint stiffness, hernias, dysostosis multiplex, mucopolysaccharides excretion in the urine and metachromatic staining in peripheral leukocytes and bone marrow. Various components of the MPS phenotype are also found in the mucolipidoses, glycoprotein storage diseases. Detailed clinical and radiologic evaluation and identification of the type of MPS excreted in the urine help to narrow the diagnosis possibilities. Definitive diagnosis requires assay of specific enzymes in various tissues such as cultured skin fibroblasts. For the moment there are 14 types of known mucopolysaccharidoses, including several subtypes. They are classified into Hurler's syndrome (MPS I-H); Scheie's syndrome (MPS I-S); Hurler-Scheie's syndrome (MPS I-H/S); Hunter's syndrome A, B (MPS II-A, B); Sanfilippo's syndrome A,B,C,D (MPS II-A,B,C,D); Morquio's syndrome A,B,C (MSP IV-A,B,C); Maroteaux-Lamy's syndrome (MPS VI) and Sly's syndrome MPS VII). The mucopolysaccharidosis incidence is around 0.04-0.3% of the newborn and they are 1.5% of all congenital disorders. All mucopolysaccharidosis are autosomal recessive disorders, except for Hunter's syndrome that is X-linked and recessive. Patient suffering of MPS, usually, don't show clinical sign from their birth in fact they develop later their characteristics. The average surviving of this patients is around 20-30 years old, and the exitus is due to cardiac failure or to infections to the gastrointestinal tract or to instability of atlantoaxial joint.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Mucopolysaccharidosis. A case report of Morquio's type-A disease (MPS IV-A)]. 129 76

A female child of healthy, unrelated parents presented at 12 months of age with a history of moderately severe developmental delay, macrocephaly, dysmorphic facies, hypotonia, hepatosplenomegaly, mild generalized dysostosis multiplex, mucopolysacchariduria (dermatan and heparan sulfates), and Alder-Reilly bodies in peripheral blood leukocytes. Iduronate sulfatase activity in plasma was markedly depressed: 0.11 units/ml/h (normal, 1.75 +/- 0.56, N = 6). Analyses of arylsulfatases A, B, and C, heparan N-sulfatase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-mannosidase, beta-glucuronidase, beta-hexosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, and alpha-fucosidase activities in plasma, leukocytes, and/or cultured skin fibroblasts were all normal. Urinary sulfatide excretion was also within normal limits. Karyotypes of peripheral blood leukocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts were normal. Serum iduronate sulfatase activities in the parents were in the normal range (father, 1.63 units/ml/h; mother, 1.25 units/ml/h). The results of analyses of restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) of DNA from cultured skin fibroblasts with the use of probes for loci extending from Xpter to Xq28 showed X chromosome heterozygosity and confirmed the paternal origin of one of the X chromosomes. Studies on sulfur-35 uptake in mixed fibroblast cultures showed cross-correction of [35S]-glycosaminoglycan accumulation between cells from the patient and normal cells or cells from a patient with Hurler disease; however, there was no cross-correction between cells from the patient and those from boys affected with classical Hunter disease. This represents only the second confirmed case of Hunter disease reported in a karyotypically normal girl.
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PMID:Hunter disease (mucopolysaccharidosis type II) in a karyotypically normal girl. 211 88

We describe the clinical findings over the first 18 years of a patient with a novel phenotype for galactosialidosis, the storage disease produced by the combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase. Clinical findings in the first few months included somewhat unusual appearance and hepatosplenomegaly. Dysostosis multiplex was evident by age 2 1/2 years. Mitral and aortic valvular disease appeared over the next few years and cardiac disease has become the most important clinical problem. Foam cells were present in the bone marrow, and vacuolated lymphocytes were present in the peripheral blood smear. The patient had no neurological symptoms, cherry red spots, or intellectual deterioration during the first 18 years. Evidence presented elsewhere indicates that the basic defect in this late infantile form of galactosialidosis (as is thought to be true for the other forms of galactosialidosis) is a reduced amount of the 32 kDa phosphoglycoprotein which associates with beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase in lysosomes.
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PMID:Combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase: natural history of the disease in the first 18 years of an American patient with late infantile onset form. 214 53

The present paper describes 3 out of a total of 9 siblings, aged 9, 17, and 18, with the following symptoms: gargoyle-like facial features, clouding of the cornea in both eyes, dysostosis multiplex, slightly impaired intelligence, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, and increased secretion of mucopolysaccharides in the urine, in particular dermatan and heparan sulfate. Some of the symptoms are mid-way between those of Hurler's and Scheie's syndromes, both having the same deficiency of the enzyme alpha-1-iduronidase. McKusik developed the theory that the genes responsible for the clinical pictures of Hurler's and Scheie's syndromes are alleles and hence cases such as those described here should be considered as allelomorphic compounds.
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PMID:[Compound Hurler-Scheie disease in 3 siblings]. 393 47

A one-year-old boy with type I H mucopolysaccharidosis (Hurler's disease) was given a bone-marrow transplant (BMT) from his mother in an attempt to replace the deficient enzyme, alpha-L-iduronidase (iduronidase). These is definite evidence of engraftment, the enzyme activity of the recipient's leucocytes reaching heterozygote levels within 37 days of the BMT. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) developed but was partially controlled by steroids. From 3-4 months after graft until the present (13 months after the graft) iduronidase activity has been present in the serum and the urine and there has been evidence of considerable degradation of glycosaminoglycans excreted in the urine. The hepatosplenomegaly has disappeared, corneal clouding has cleared, and deterioration in the child's development seems to have been arrested.
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PMID:Reversal of clinical features of Hurler's disease and biochemical improvement after treatment by bone-marrow transplantation. 611 56

At the 28th week of gestation a hydrops fetalis was first detected by ultrasound. At birth a generalized hydrops with Hurler-like craniofacial dysmorphism, hepatosplenomegaly and a moderate dystostosis multiplex was noted. High urinary excretion of oligosaccharides and a severe deficiency of neuraminidase and of beta-galactosidase in cultured skin fibroblasts could be found. Thus, a rare early infantile type of galactosialidosis was diagnosed. The patient died at the age of 3 months because of cardiac failure. The consanguineous but otherwise healthy parents received genetic counselling for further pregnancies and have been informed about the possibility of prenatal diagnosis. In view of this possibility, the parents decided to have more children. In the second pregnancy a severe combined enzyme deficiency had been detected and the pregnancy interrupted. In the third pregnancy prenatal diagnosis revealed normal fetal enzyme activities. It resulted in a healthy female child and in the fourth pregnancy reduced but still in the heterozygote level enzyme activities had been found, a healthy boy was born.
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PMID:Nonimmune hydrops fetalis with galactosialidosis: consequences for family planning. 883 67

We report our experience in nine patients with Hurler syndrome (six with a severe and three with an intermediate phenotype) who successfully engrafted after bone marrow transplantation. The donor was a human leukocyte antigen-identical sibling in six cases, the human leukocyte antigen-identical father in one case, and an unrelated donor in two cases. One patient with Hurler syndrome and an intermediate phenotype received two successive grafts from the same donor. There was a beneficial effect of bone marrow transplantation on visceral features (hepatosplenomegaly, obstruction of the upper airway, and coarse facies); however, dysostosis multiplex worsened. All patients but one required surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome. Visual acuity was low because of corneal clouding, and two patients had glaucoma several years after the graft. Five patients had normal hearing before the graft that remained normal, and four had hearing impairment that improved. All patients had learning difficulties, but none had severe mental retardation (IQ ranging from 75 to 103). The follow-up of patients with severe Hurler syndrome engrafted for more than 10 years emphasizes the limits and benefits of bone marrow transplantation.
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PMID:Follow-up of nine patients with Hurler syndrome after bone marrow transplantation. 967 3

Infantile free sialic acid storage disease (ISSD) is a rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by a lysosomal membrane transport defect, resulting in accumulation of free sialic acid within lysosomes. Only a few cases have been described. We report on three new cases of ISSD with different modes of presentation: an infant with nephrotic syndrome, a case of fetal and neonatal ascites with heart failure, and a case of fetal ascites with esophageal atresia type III. From these patients and a review of the literature (27 cases total) we draw the following conclusions. 1) "Coarse facies," fair complexion, hepatosplenomegaly, and severe psychomotor retardation are constant findings in this disorder. 2) Nephrotic syndrome occurred in most cases (four in seven) in which renal evaluation was performed. Therefore, ISSD is an important cause of nephrosis in infants with a storage disorder phenotype. 3) Fetal/neonatal ascites or hydrops was the mode of presentation in 13 (60%) of 21 cases. Thus, ISSD enters in the differential diagnosis of hydrops fetalis with a storage disease phenotype. 4) Cardiomegaly was evident in nine cases. 5) Corneae were always clear, and albinoid fundi were reported in five cases. 6) Dysostosis multiplex was not prominent. 7) Bone marrow aspiration could be negative. 8) Death ensued in early infancy with a mean age of 13.1 months. All reported deaths were caused by respiratory infections.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of infantile free sialic acid storage disease. 1006 9

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from an HLA-matched sibling appears to improve survival and diminish some of the physiologic derangements seen in children with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS)-I (Hurler Syndrome), an inherited metabolic storage disease resulting from the lack of alpha-L-iduronidase enzyme activity. Death is usually expected in the first decade of life. Unfortunately, most patients lack an HLA-matched sibling donor and alternative donors have been identified for transplant. This study reports on a five-year median follow-up (range: 985-2,355 days) in 11 Hurler Syndrome patients who underwent allogeneic BMT from partially mismatched related donors (PMRDs). The median age was 20 months (range: 11-44 months). The overall survival rate was 64% (95% CI 34-94%). The overall graft failure rate (36%) was higher than reported with matched sibling BMT. All patients with sustained engraftment experienced improvement in physical manifestations, such as corneal opacity, gum and tongue hypertrophy, hepatosplenomegaly and joint mobility. Skeletal abnormalities, such as dysostosis-multiplex, were stabilized but not reversed. Some patients have continued to show decline in neuropsychometric testing, while others appear to stabilize and one has demonstrated improvement. Until better methods for replacing enzyme activity are developed, BMT from a matched sibling of alternative donors can be considered a viable intervention for Hurler Syndrome patients to achieve partial improvement or stabilization from the deterioration caused by substrate storage, particularly in minimally affected patients early in life.
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PMID:The use of partially HLA-mismatched donors for allogeneic transplantation in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis-I. 1008 24


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