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)

We describe 3 children with a progressive encephalopathy that was characterised by irritability, convulsions, cranial nerve palsies, ataxia, nystagmus, walking difficulties, delayed psychomotor development, hemiplegia/tetraplegia, visual disturbance, vomiting, neck stiffness, and non-specific signs of raised intracranial pressure. A final diagnosis was made in all 3 patients from necropsy material. The clinical features were ascribed to multiple inflammatory, predominantly lymphocytic, reactions and raised intracranial pressure. This condition is an atypical form of haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, which normally presents with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and cytopenias. By contrast, the disease pattern in our 3 children was dominated by cerebromeningeal involvement, which can precede the typical systemic symptoms of haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. An awareness of this condition is important because treatments are available.
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PMID:Cerebromeningeal haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. 134 23

Patients grouped into categories termed type C Niemann-Pick disease and the Nova Scotia isolate called type D Niemann-Pick disease are characterized by mild to moderate hepatosplenomegaly, sea-blue histiocytes in the bone marrow, supranuclear gaze paresis in the vertical plane, slowly progressing ataxia, and mental deterioration. These signs are caused by abnormal intracellular cholesterol homeostasis. Cholesterol that enters cells from the circulation through the LDL receptor is not processed in a timely, normal manner by cells in parenchymal organs and the CNS. It therefore accumulates in toxic quantities as unesterified cholesterol causing cellular and tissue damage. Knowledge of the primary, consistent disturbance in cholesterol disposition has led to the development of tests to diagnose patients, identify heterozygotes, and assure the prenatal detection of these disorders. Therapeutic strategies include reduction of dietary cholesterol, apheresis techniques designed to reduce LDL cholesterol available to cells, and reduction of formation of LDL and increase of synthesis of HDL to lower cellular uptake of cholesterol and enhance egress of this lipid from intracellular storage sites. The development of procedures that block cholesterol formation but do not up-regulate LDL receptors on plasma cell membranes is considered to be highly important for the therapy of types C and D Niemann-Pick disease.
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PMID:Niemann-Pick disease types C and D. 264 22

Two cases of Niemann-Pick disease type C are described in order to illustrate the variable neurological features of this rare condition. One presented with a predominantly akinetic-rigid syndrome at the age of 5 years. The second developed progressive ataxia, accompanied by a vertical gaze palsy, when she was 13. Neither patient had hepatosplenomegaly; the diagnosis of Niemann-Pick disease type C was based on finding foamy storage cells in bone marrow aspirates.
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PMID:The diverse neurological features of Niemann-Pick disease type C: a report of two cases. 314 17

Increased amounts of free sialic acid were found in body fluids, leukocytes, cultured fibroblasts, and liver tissue of a four-year-old boy with mental retardation, ataxia, and clinical and radiologic findings of a mild mucopolysaccharidosis. A diagnosis of Salla disease was made though in contrast to earlier reports, recurrent upper respiratory infections and hepatosplenomegaly were present already in infancy, and skeletal abnormalities of dysostosis multiplex were found in early childhood. Free sialic acid in the urine was identified as N-acetylneuraminic acid by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Sialidase activities were normal. Increased amounts of bound sialic acid were found in liver and cultured fibroblasts and were attributed to an intracellular inhibition of sialyloligosaccharide-degrading neuraminidase by excessive amounts of free neuraminic acid. The molecular basis of N-acetylneuraminic acid storage disease is unknown but may be related to a defective transport mechanism preventing neuraminic acid from leaving the lysosomal compartment.
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PMID:N-Acetylneuraminic acid storage disease. 404 64

In this paper we report a case of malignant lymphoma with neoplastic angioendotheliosis in the brain. A 44-year-old man with transient episodes of deafness, hypersomnia, and anorexia over a 5-month period acutely deteriorated. He presented with low grade fever, dementia, frontal lobe signs, general hyperreflexia, muscle weakness of the extremities, and ataxia. He did not have hepatosplenomegaly, lymph node swelling, or skin eruptions. On the 15th day after admission to the hospital he developed convulsions and died. Post-mortem examination revealed multiple infarcts in the central nervous system, especially in the bilateral cerebral white matter and basal ganglia, where mononuclear tumor cells were widespread within the lumens of small blood vessels, accompanied by lymphocytic infiltration and degenerative and occulsive changes of the vessels. Intravascularly in many visceral organs and in the adrenal glands, both intra- and extravascularly, proliferation of tumor cells was observed. Furthermore, a small nest of malignant lymphoma of diffuse mixed cell type was found in a para-aortic lymph node, and the lymphoma cells were identical to tumor cells observed in the brain and other organs.
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PMID:Malignant lymphoma presenting with neoplastic angioendotheliosis of the central nervous system. 685 Dec 98

Joubert syndrome is an autosomal recessive inherited condition characterized by agenesis or hypoplasia of the cerebellar vermis, retinal dystrophy, chorioretinal colobomata, oculomotor abnormalities, episodic hyperpnea, ataxia, and mental retardation. Congenital hepatic fibrosis has not previously been described in Joubert syndrome. We report two unrelated children with Joubert syndrome and hepatosplenomegaly. On histopathological examination, both had congenital hepatic fibrosis. Both were also found to have congenital medullary cystic disease of the kidneys. Joubert syndrome appears to be one of a spectrum of congenital malformation syndromes involving the central nervous system, eye, liver and kidneys.
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PMID:Joubert syndrome with congenital hepatic fibrosis: an entity in the spectrum of oculo-encephalo-hepato-renal disorders. 753 63

We describe a 12-year-old black male who presented with cervical lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly of 3 months duration, and ataxia and incoordination of recent onset. Hodgkin's disease, stage IVB, was diagnosed. An MRI of the head demonstrated a nonenhancing, well-defined pontine lesion. The pontine lesion and the associated neurologic symptoms were consistent with central pontine myelinolysis. Treatment of Hodgkin's disease resulted in complete remission and complete disappearance of the pontine abnormality.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease associated with central pontine myelinolysis. 768 85

We report on a 12-year-old Chinese child with type C Niemann-Pick disease, who presented primarily with neurologic symptoms. He started to develop ataxia and dysarthria at the age of six years. Dementia, dysphagia, dystonia and seizures, in that sequence, followed within a couple of years. He was anarthric and bedridden five years after onset. Supranuclear vertical gaze palsy was found at the beginning of the illness. However, no hepatosplenomegaly or other physical abnormality was noted. Bone marrow aspirates revealed foamy storage cells and sea-blue histiocytes. However, sphingomyelinase activity in the cultured skin fibroblast was normal. The characteristic clinical presentations and typical pathologic and histochemical findings meet the diagnostic criteria of type C Niemann-Pick disease. We report the first Chinese case of type C Niemann-Pick disease and review 73 cases reported previously.
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PMID:Type C Niemann-Pick disease: report of a Chinese case. 790 66

The first case of infantile sialic acid storage disease in Czech Republic is presented in a four-and-half year-old girl. The clinical phenotype consisted of moderate hepatosplenomegaly and skin hypopigmentation, early psychomotoric and developmental arrest, associated with truncal ataxia and lower extremities spasticity, extinguished acoustic and visual perception (optic atrophy without macular alteration) and remarkable automutilation phenomena. The appearance was normosomatic and there were minimal dysostotic changes. Skin and liver biopsy displayed moderate amount of lucent storage lysosomes in epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural elements. Alder-Reily granules were found in the bone marrow and peripheral blood cells. The urinary excretion of mucopolysaccharides and oligosaccharides was not increased. The autopsy showed heterogenous neuronal and glial brain storage (lucent lysosomes, lipopigment, membranous cytoplasmic bodies), severe hypomyelination and severe storage in the splenic sinus endothelium. Diagnosis was made by proving thirteen fold increase of free sialic acid in the fibroblast culture. It is pointed out that in the case of a mucopolysaccharidosis-like storage disease unexplainable by a hydrolytic enzyme deficiency, it is the enzyme product storage which must be suspected. At present, the only candidate is the sialic acid storage disease.
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PMID:Infantile sialic acid storage disease (ISSD). Report on first case in Czech Republic with biopsy and autopsy findings. 799 7

N-acetylneuraminic acid (sialic acid) storage disease is a rare autosomal recessive lysosomal disorder. Clinically two major forms exist, an infantile type with severe progression leading to early death, and a milder form (Salla disease) with a protracted course. Intermediate forms may also exist. Diagnosis rests on the determination of an excessive excretion of sialic acid in urine and concomitant storage in fibroblasts, the severe forms exhibiting the highest excretion and storage. We present clinical, morphological, and biochemical data on three non-Finnish patients with sialic acid storage disease. Patient 1 was a preterm infant with neonatal ascites, coarse face, hepatosplenomegaly, pale skin, and wispy hair. Vacuolated lymphocytes were abundant in a peripheral blood smear and he excreted large amounts of free sialic acid. High levels of free sialic acid were also found in cultured skin fibroblasts. He died at age 6 months from progressive respiratory insufficiency. Patient 2 was an 11-month-old Egyptian girl with coarse face, frequent upper respiratory tract infections, hepatosplenomegaly, and severe psycho-motor retardation. Sialic acid excretion was elevated, likewise the storage in fibroblasts. Histological investigations documented vacuolar storage in a skin biopsy and in iliac crest tissue. Patient 3 was a 16-year-old girl with slightly coarse face, severe generalized muscular hypotonia, ataxia, and kyphoscoliosis originally diagnosed as having post-partum asphyxia. She suffered progressive motor function loss and had dysarthria. Urinary sialic acid was elevated and a skin biopsy demonstrated vacuolization. The clinical variability of sialic acid storage disease is exemplified by these three cases. Simple urinary screening for free sialic acid facilitates the diagnosis. The degree of urinary excretion may indeed correlate with clinical presentation and progression.
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PMID:The spectrum of free neuraminic acid storage disease in childhood: clinical, morphological and biochemical observations in three non-Finnish patients. 872 11


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