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

The paper reports on a case of "late onset disease" (congenital German measles). Diagnostically significant for this disease in an infant appearing perfectly healthy when new-born, were mainly the findings of an interstitial pneumonia, hepatosplenomegaly, as well as findings indicating the presence of a meningoencephalitis and retinopathy. The diagnosis of this rare course of congenital German measles was finally established via the identification of specific IgM rubeola antibodies, of a raised hemagglutination inhibition titer, and of the German measles virus itself. An attempt to treat the interstitial pneumonia with cortisone preparations remained unsuccessful. The clinical and diagnostic problem complexes are discussed briefly.
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PMID:["Late onset disease" (congenital german measles) (author's transl)]. 56 31

The primary complex like Ghon was observed in a child's clinical roentgenographic study. C.S., white, male, 6 years old, was born in Curitiba (PR), Brazil and living in Guaratingueta (SP), Brazil, developed "common cold", bimodal diary fever, chills, shake and sweats. Dyspnea, cough with general lymphadenopathy. Foot and right shoulder arthralgias. Six months ago visited a cave, equitation practice, dog and cat contacts and no transfusion, frontal sweats, fever (38.4 degrees C). T.A. was 8/6, tachycardia in generalized lymphadenopathy. Cardiopulmonary system was normal, mesogastric tumoral mass, hepatosplenomegaly and no ascites. Bone marrow with eosinophilia; nodule demonstrated presence of P. brasiliensis, hypoalbuminemia; hyperglobulinemia; anemia; leukocytosis with eosinophilia. Immunodiffusion with exoantigen 43 kd of P. brasiliensis was 1/32. Primary complex like Ghon was observed in interstitial pneumonia followed by mediastinal and mesogastric mass (35 to 40 days). Clavicular osteolytic lesions (45 to 60 days) appeared during paracoccidioidomycosis therapy. Recovery was observed 2 months after treatment of acute infantile paracoccidioidomycosis.
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PMID:[Pulmonary lymph node in acute juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis (a case report)]. 130 53

A 73-year-old man was admitted to our hospital on April 30, 1990, because of fever persisting for 18 months. Bone marrow puncture and biopsy were performed, because examination on admission revealed an elevated leukocyte count and anemia while his superficial lymph nodes, liver and spleen were not palpable. The results of the bone marrow biopsy revealed evidence of granuloma. Around May 10, the patient developed hepatosplenomegaly and enlargement of left cervical lymph nodes. Based on the results lymph node biopsy, a diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease was made, and CHOP therapy was instituted on May 20. However, the patient developed interstitial pneumonia and died on July 3. This patient's disease was manifested by fever of unknown origin. Bone marrow biopsy revealed granuloma with histiocytes predominating, and the patient subsequently developed lymph node enlargement. His disease was then diagnosed as Hodgkin's disease on the basis of a biopsy. Malignant lymphomas associated with granulomas in the bone marrow, liver or spleen are for the most part found in the advanced stage of the disease. It should be borne in mind, however, that some patients may exhibit granuloma formation in their bone marrow prior to lymph node enlargement or hepatosplenomegaly, as in the present case.
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PMID:[Hodgkin's disease presenting with fever of unknown origin associated with granulomas of the bone marrow]. 143 47

A 19-year-old boy, who complained of fever and fatigue was hospitalized in November 1986. On physical examination, he had a temperature of 37 degrees C, cervical lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly. Serum transaminase was elevated moderately, while serum alkaline-phosphatase was elevated severely. Extremely elevated antibody titers to the EBV capsid antigen (IgG: 2560x, IgA: 160x), early antigen (IgG: 1280x, IgA: 160x) and nuclear antigen (160x) were noted. PPD and DNCB skin test were negative. Severe mobilization of Kupfer cells and mild proliferation of pseudoductule were seen in liver biopsied specimen. Cervical lymphnode biopsy showed necrotizing lymphadenitis associated with proliferation of histiocyte. In February 1987 his temperature was elevated to 40 degrees C and he had arthralgia and exanthema. Intravenous Acyclovir (500 mg every 8 hours) and Interferon alpha (6 million u/day) were administered together for 1 month. After that he improved for about a week. In March 1987 he had dyspnea. Arterial blood gas analysis in room air showed a PO2 of 51.8 mmHg, a PCO2 of 28.9 mmHg. A chest radiograph showed thickening of bilateral bronchial walls and obscurity of pulmonary vascular shadows. The effects of transfer factor and Interleukin-2 were unremarkable. High antibody titers to EBV, liver dysfunction and hypo-oxygenemia continued. He died of respiratory and heart failure on 24 October 1987. The most interesting finding of autopsied specimens was stenosis of pulmonary artery associated with interstitial pneumonitis. Hemophagocytosis was seen in liver, spleen and bone marrow.
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PMID:[An autopsied case of chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection with various symptom]. 164 35

Clinical features observed in 60 cases of childhood HIV infection at the Cliniques Universitaires of Kinshasa is reported. Exposure mode, demonstrated in 92% of cases, was essentially maternofetal (65%) and related to blood transfusion (27%). The clinical signs appeared the first year of life in children born to seropositive mothers (82%). The main clinical features were: failure to thrive, high recurrent fever, persistent cough, chronic diarrhea, recurrent respiratory infections, hepatosplenomegaly, generalized lymphoadenopathy and oral candidiasis. Pulmonary lesions were very common (90%). These lesions were related to bacteria in 20 cases, to tuberculosis in 17 cases and to interstitial pneumonitis in 20 cases.
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PMID:[Clinical manifestations of AIDS in children in Kinshasa]. 166 39

Eleven children were identified as being seropositive for HIV-1 at the Ethio-Swedish Children's Hospital, Addis Abeba, Ethiopia between January 1988 and September 1989. The diagnosis was confirmed by both ELISA and Western blot methods performed at the National Research Institute of Health, Special Laboratory for AIDS. The mean age was 2 years and 5 months, with a range of 1 week to 10 years. There were 7 boys and 4 girls. The most common admitting diagnoses were pneumonia (5), gastroenteritis (5), marasmus (5), disseminated tuberculosis (4), and abandonment (3). One patient had extensive facial molluscum contagiosum. Symptoms at admission or during hospitalization included diarrhoea (9), failure to thrive (8), fever (7), and cough (7). Physical findings included hepatosplenomegaly (5), lymphadenopathy (3), and oral candidiasis (2). No patient with an opportunistic infection or radiographic evidence of lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis (LIP) was identified. Five patients were classified as marasmic and 4 as underweight. Evidence suggestive of encephalopathy (developmental delay and/or microcephaly) was present in 5 patients. The VDRL was non-reactive in the 5 patients in whom it was tested. Nine children were presumed to have acquired the infection by perinatal transmission, though the passive transfer of maternal antibodies or postnatally acquired infection could not be excluded. One child was thought to have acquired the infection by blood transfusion. Three children died during their hospital stay. Paediatric HIV infection exists in Ethiopia; however, these children do not present with characteristic opportunistic infections but with signs and symptoms reflecting the most common paediatric problems seen in the country. Prevention of HIV infection in children entails the prevention of infection in women of childbearing age, counselling of infected women, and effective screening of blood products.
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PMID:Clinical and epidemiological features of HIV-1 seropositive hospitalized Ethiopian children. 206 May 7

Streptobacillus moniliformis is an uncommon human pathogen contracted from exposure to rodents. It usually produces a mild, protracted illness (rat-bite fever, Haverhill fever, erythema arthriticum epidemicum) that has either a favorable response to antibiotic therapy or spontaneously resolves. This report describes a fatal case of Streptobacillus moniliformis in an infant bitten by a wild rat. The autopsy findings included an interstitial pneumonia, fibrinous endocarditis, mild mononuclear meningitis, hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, erythrophagocytosis, and sinusoidal mononuclear cell infiltrates in regional lymph nodes and the liver. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of the autopsy pathology findings of this agent.
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PMID:Fatal Streptobacillus moniliformis infection in a two-month-old infant. 271 62

Oral thrush developed during the second month of life in the 5-month-old son of a patient with haemophilia A. He did not feed well, and interstitial pneumonitis, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and a cellular immune defect consistent with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) followed. Both parents had signs of pre-AIDS during the year before their son's illness. Transmission presumably occurred in 3 steps: parenterally, via factor VIII concentrate in the haemophiliac; heterosexually, from the haemophiliac to his wife; and vertically, from mother to infant, or via close paternal-infant or maternal-infant contact. This first report of AIDS in the child of a haemophiliac supports the theory that AIDS is caused by an infectious agent. Concentrate-treated haemophiliacs may transmit this agent to their spouses or children, resulting in pre-AIDS or AIDS.
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PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the child of a haemophiliac. 285 14

To date, the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has been identified in over 50 children in the US, including those with associated hemophilia, high-risk environmental factors (Haitian background, parental intravenous drug abuse, or prostitution), and blood transfusions. The evaluation of an infant or young child in whom AIDS is suspected requires exclusion of congenital disorders of immune function. A specific test is not currently available, but inclusion criteria for childhood AIDS have been developed. The diseases accepted as indicative of underlying cellular immunodeficiency children are the same as those used in defining AIDS in adults, with the exclusion of congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the 1st month of life or cytomegalovirus infection in the 1st 6 months of life. Specific conditions that must be excluded in children are primary immunodeficiency diseases (e.g., DiGeorge syndrome, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, ataxia-telangiectasia, neutrophil function abnormality) and secondary immuno-deficiency associated with immunosuppressive therapy, lymphoreticular malignancy, or starvation. Almost all young children with AIDS have hepatosplenomegaly, interstitial pneumonitis, and poor growth. The average age of 36 US child AIDS victims studied in detail was 5 months at presentation with findings suggestive of severe immunodeficiency. Mucocutaneous candidiasis was present in 75% of these 36 children, and Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus were each isolated from 30% of cases. Normal T4:T8 ratios occur in about 15% of pediatric AIDS cases. Laboratory evidence of polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia generally supports the AIDS diagnosis. Recurrent infection and malnutrition are major problems in the clinical management of child AIDS patients.
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PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome in childhood. 298 8

Two infants with AIDS who presented with interstitial pneumonitis, failure to thrive, lymphadenopathy, and hypergammaglobulinemia have been studied. Antibody to human T-lymphotropic retrovirus (HTLV-III) was identified by ELISA and Western blot analysis in serum samples from both patients. The T4/T8 ratios of peripheral blood T-lymphocytes in both patients were mildly decreased, with normal absolute numbers of lymphocytes and positive T4 cells. Lung biopsies from both patients demonstrated similar histopathologic features with features of lymphocytic interstitial infiltrates and accumulation of macrophages in the air spaces. Immunoperoxidase studies of the lung biopsy from 1 patient revealed that the lymphocytic infiltrate was composed predominantly of T cells of the T8 subset. Each patient was treated with prednisone, with improvement or resolution of pulmonary symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and growth failure. Neither patient has had any opportunistic infections. One patient has been followed for more than 4 years and the other for 8 months.
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PMID:The pathology and treatment of interstitial pneumonitis in two infants with AIDS. 350 45


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