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)

A case of tyrosinemia in a three-month-old boy is presented. The patient appeared jaundiced initially with markedly elevated levels of serum tyrosine and a positive Millon-reacting urine. Jaundice persisted and hepatosplenomegaly gradually increased. He died due to liver failure on the 51st day after admission. At autopsy, the liver showed the features of severe giant cell hepatitis including giant cell formation, fibrosis and bile retention. The pancreas and the brain showed characteristic postmortem findings as previously reported in patients with tyrosinemia.
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PMID:Tyrosinemia. 46 58

The acute form of tyrosinemia type I usually causes severe hepatocellular dysfunction. We report a 4-month-old infant with hepatosplenomegaly, ascites, and multiple intrahepatic mass lesions mimicking hepatoma. A marked increase of serum alpha-fetoprotein (97.6 micrograms/ml) and multiple small low-density lesions in the liver demonstrated by computed tomography suggested the presence of hepatoma. The liver specimens obtained at laparatomy showed mixed nodular cirrhosis with fatty metamorphosis. Serum levels of tyrosine (6.6 mg/100 ml) and methionine (5.9 mg/100 ml) were increased. Urinary organic acid analyses disclosed increased excretions of succinylacetone (1,330 mg/g creatinine) and delta-amino-levulinic acid (113.6 mg/g creatinine). Histological abnormalities and biochemical evidences led to the correct diagnosis. This case emphasizes the need for complete investigations of puzzling cases and warns against undue reliance on noninvasive imaging techniques.
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PMID:An acute form of tyrosinemia type I with multiple intrahepatic mass lesions. 169 41

A 1-3/12-year-old Turkish boy born of consanguineous parents was hospitalized in poor general condition with disorientation, hepatosplenomegaly, and rickets. Laboratory tests showed pronounced symptoms of hepatic dysfunction, rickets, and Fanconi's syndrome with acidosis. The diagnosis juvenile type I tyrosinemia was based on the anamnesis, hepatorenal symptoms, and elevated tyrosine and methionine blood levels as well as the pathognomic findings of heavy succinylacetonuria and absent fumarylacetoacetase activity in the fibroblasts. Etiology, pathobiochemistry, clinical symptoms, differential diagnosis, and therapy of this rare autosomal-recessive inherited metabolic disease were discussed.
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PMID:[Juvenile form of tyrosinemia type I]. 260 Dec 81

A child with intractable seizures from the age of 10 months and developmental retardation developed jaundice and hepatosplenomegaly at 23 months. She died at the age of 25 months. Methionine and tyrosine were elevated in urine, plasma, CSF, and brain. These elevations were more marked in the CNS than in the blood. 4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase, an enzyme involved in the metabolism of tyrosine, was undetectable in skin fibroblasts and liver. This finding together with other biochemical data suggest that our case had an inherited disorder of tyrosine metabolism, in the category of tyrosinemia I. Disturbances of tyrosine and methionine metabolism in the CNS in tyrosinemia I may be more important than has been realized. The disorder should be considered in children with unexplained epilepsy and in those who develop hepatic dysfunction while on anticonvulsants.
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PMID:Tyrosinemia and intractable seizures. 661 Dec 56

A female infant with hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy associated with hypertyrosinemia was successfully treated with living-related liver transplantation (LRLT). On the 12th day of life plasma amino acid analysis revealed a marked elevation of tyrosine, so the patient was fed on a low-tyrosine and low-phenylalanine diet. However, hepatosplenomegaly, hypotonia, alopecia, eczema and psychomotor delay did not improve and recurrent episodes of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) caused her condition to deteriorate. Liver biopsy on the 230th day revealed marked fatty change accompanied by mild to moderate cholestasis. Therefore, LRLT from her father was performed on the 286th day resulting in improvement of all the aforementioned signs and symptoms. Despite a thorough examination, no diagnosis of a known disorder could be established. However, her elder brother had also been born with severe hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy, and died of DIC on the second day of life. Thus, the disorder is designated as a new entity, namely 'congenital hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy associated with hypertyrosinemia'.
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PMID:Liver transplantation in a case of hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy. 958 13