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)

Five weeks after a four-day visit to Malta, a 39-year old white male German national developed septic temperatures of up to 40 degrees C, progressive jaundice and a pronounced hepatosplenomegaly. The initial examination showed a very sick, somnolent patient with jaundice, cyanosis, tachypnea and a markedly enlarged liver on both physical examination and sonography. The laboratory evaluation revealed a moderate leukocytosis, markedly accelerated ESR, poor liver function with strongly elevated gamma-GT and alkaline phosphatase levels. Primary antibiotic therapy consisted of doxycycline. Ultrasound examination of the liver four days after admission revealed multiple hypodense abscesses. On the sixth day after admission, gram-negative rods were first isolated from blood cultures; antibiotic therapy was switched to ofloxacin (2 x 400 mg/day) and amoxycillin (3 x 2 g/day) after sensitivity testing. As a result of treatment with this combination of antibiotics, the patient was free of fever 10 days after hospitalization; on the same day yersinia enterocolitica was isolated from the first blood cultures taken on admission. The diagnosis of non-enteric forms of yersinia infection can prove very difficult, especially if the serology is not clear cut and there are no immunological complications. A presentation including intermittent fever, moderate leukocytosis, strongly accelerated ESR and multiple hypodense abscesses in the liver should lead one to consider a non-enteric type of yersinia infection. Hepatic abscesses usually occur in patients who have an iron overload.
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PMID:[Yersinia enterocolitica infection with extraintestinal manifestations: case report and overview]. 819 10

Tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE) is considered to be a variant of human filarial infection. The pulmonary manifestations of TPE have been well described. Extra-pulmonary features of the disease, although not commonly seen, have been reported previously. A 9-year-old Malay girl with a history of recurrent cough and wheezing was admitted because of cardiac failure. Physical examination revealed a very sick girl with tachypnoea, central cyanosis, finger clubbing, elevated jugular venous pulse, generalized crackles and rhonchi in the chest, a loud second heart sound and hepatosplenomegaly. A chest radiograph showed cardiomegaly and right pleural effusion. Laboratory investigations revealed hypochromic, microcytic anaemia with persistent blood eosinophilia (absolute eosinophil counts varied from 1.9 to 5.5 x 10(9)/1). The ELISA test for antifilarial IgG antibodies was strongly positive. She responded promptly to treatment with diethylcarbamazine. In summary, this is a patient with TPE who presented with cor pulmonale, probably due to late-stage interstitial pulmonary fibrosis. In order to prevent the long term morbidity of cardiorespiratory disability, the early signs of TPE should be recognized and the infection treated.
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PMID:Cor pulmonale: an unusual presentation of tropical eosinophilia. 917 82

Here we report two unusual patients with Gaucher disease type I. Both girls admitted with hepatosplenomegaly, growth retardation, and anemia at four and 2.5 years of age, and Gaucher cells were seen on bone marrow aspirates. Thalassemic face was first noted at 8 and 11 years of age, respectively, with frontal bossing and maxillary hypertrophia. Although they had unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia, high reticulocytes, polychromasia, and normoblasts on peripheral smear, other laboratory tests for hemolytic disease were negative. Radiological examination revealed typical bone involvement of Gaucher disease, as well as costal enlargement and obliteration of paranasal sinuses, the latter two reported in hemolytic diseases. Cyanosis, digital clubbing and recurrent lung infections led to contrast echocardiography that revealed diffuse pulmonary arteriovenous shunting in both. Diagnosis was confirmed by low leukocyte beta glucosidase levels and mutations N370S7/L444P (Case 1) and N370S/? (Case 2). These features, all reported for the first time, may show a new clinical course in Gaucher disease.
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PMID:Gaucher disease type I: analysis of two cases with thalassemic facies and pulmonary arteriovenous fistulas. 1159 16

Diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) in children is usually based on presumptions from several elements: clinical picture and course, x-rays, tuberculin test, and culture of pathology later on. TB is usually found in a child because of symptoms of primary disease, or through case-finding of a contact. TB is children is often a primary infection and may be gradual or acute in onset. Some of the symptoms of primary TB are low-grade fever, pallor, fatigue, and anorexia. The child may have erythema nodosum, a yellow module on the conjunctiva, hilar or mediastinal lymphadenopathy, a primary TB complex on the lung (3-10 mm), segmental density, or a positive PPD test. Children with pulmonary disease do not have adult-type cavity lesions, but may have a primary cavity that drains into the bronchi, mechanical complications, fistulas, or atelectasis. Acute TB often appears as meningitis. The pathognomonic signs are cerebrospinal fluid high in lymphocytes with very high albumin (0.6-2 g) and low glucose (0.4-0.2 g/l). TB organisms are rarely seen, but may be cultured. TB meningitis is also notable for choroidal tubercles, which are yellow nodules visible in the fundus. These presumptive signs, as well as increasing neurological findings, prompt immediate treatment. Children also may have acute miliary TB, marked by high fever, gastrointestinal symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly, dyspnea, cyanosis, and respiratory distress, with characteristic diffuse grainy spots on the chest x-ray. A child may have both conditions and may also have localized TB infection elsewhere. Thus, clinical findings may point to possible cultures of urine, gastric lavage, pleural fluid or biopsy, pericardial fluid, bone marrow, or ascitic fluid, any of which should be cultured to rule out other causes. The most common sites for extra-pulmonary TB are cervical nodes, spine, knee. shoulder, hip and peritoneum. Pelvic and urinary tract infections are rare in children.
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PMID:Diagnosis of tuberculosis in children. 1234 39

We report a case of anaphylactoid shock occurring immediately after the initiation of second intravenous administration of high-dose immunoglobulin (IVIg) in a patient with Crow-Fukase syndrome. The patient was a 57-year-old woman, who was admitted to our hospital because of numbness and muscle weakness in the four extremities, difficulty in walking, and foot edema. On admission, her skin was dry and rough, and also showing scattered pigmentation, small hemangiomas, and hypertrichosis in both legs. She had distal dominant muscle weakness, more prominent in her legs, and was not able to walk. Deep tendon reflexes in her four extremities were markedly diminished or absent. She had a glove and stocking type of paresthesia, severe impairment of vibration, and absence of joint position sensation in her four extremities. On laboratory data, serum vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was markedly elevated to 5,184 pg/ml (normal: below 220 pg/ml). Cerebrospinal fluid examination revealed cell counts of 2/microliter and protein level of 114 mg/dl. Abdominal echo showed marked hepatosplenomegaly. On peripheral nerve conduction study, both motor and sensory conduction velocity were undetectable in her legs. We diagnosed her condition as Crow-Fukase syndrome, and started IVIg of polyethyleneglycol-treated gamma-globulin (PEG-glob) at 400 mg/kg/day for 5 consecutive days for polyneuropathy. Since the first IVIg mildly improved muscle weakness, we tried the second IVIg of PEG-glob. However, immediately after the initiation of second IVIg of PEG-glob, she developed hypotention, dyspnea, cold sweating, cyanosis, and became lethargic. We immediately stopped IVIg and started first-aid treatment with epinephrine and corticosteroid for these symptoms. This treatment was successful and the patient fully recovered without any sequelae. Since serum IgE level remained unchanged and lymphocyte stimulation test (LST) was positive against the same rot number of PEG-glob, we diagnosed these symptoms as anaphylactoid shock. Based on the results of LST, we speculated that PEG-glob was the causative agent of anaphylactoid reaction. Anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reaction as adverse effects of IVIg is very rare, and to our knowledge, there are only 4 previous reports of anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reaction caused by IVIg. Therefore, we speculated that the prominent high level of serum VEGF in the present patient might play a significant contributory role in the development of anaphylactoid shock, since the vascular permeability of VEGF is 50,000 times stronger than that of histamine. We consider that it is necessary to carefully monitor IVIg of PEG-glob administration for polyneuropathy in patients with high level of serum VEGF, like Crow-Fukase syndrome.
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PMID:[A case of anaphylactoid shock occurring immediately after the initiation of second intravenous administration of high-dose immunoglobulin (IVIg) in a patient with Crow-Fukase syndrome]. 1450 55

We present the case of a 14 years-old male (with poor living condition, non-smoker) hospitalized for a sudden onset of a rest dyspnea, mucopurulent cough. We found bronchial sibilant rales, wheezing, cyanosis, peripheral adenopathies, hepatosplenomegaly, purulent tonsillitis. the chest-x-ray revealed bilateral mediastinal lymphadenopathy and bilateral lung infiltrations. Spirometry: severe mixed ventilator dysfunction without reversibility. Sputum: negative microscopy and culture for Koch bacillus. Stool examination: cysts of Lamblia giardia. The patient refused bronchoscopy and mediastinoscopy, so it was performed axillary lymph node biopsy which confirmed sarcoidosis (non-caseating epithelioid granulomas). The treatment included antibiotics, antiparasites, oral and inhaled corticosteroids (CS), bronchodilators, oxygen, with clinical/functional improvement after 3 months. CS was followed 1.5 years with poor compliance. A relapse occurred after 3 years and the CS were reinserted. The computerized tomography (CT) scan revealed a diffuse interstitial fibrosis with bronchiectasis. The case particularity relies on the atypical early onset of the sarcoidosis, with respiratory failure and progression to lung fibrosis despite CS treatment. The association of proinflammatory risk factors such as multiple infections needs to be noted.
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PMID:Advanced Sarcoidosis with Apparent Onset by Respiratory Failure. 3004 88

Chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection (CAEBV) is a high-mortality form of EBV infection. However, chronic hypoxemia is rare in these patients. We herein reported a case of severe hypoxemia due to intrapulmonary shunting in CAEBV. A 17-year-old girl presented with fever, dyspnea, cyanosis, and hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory tests showed mild liver dysfunction and high copy numbers of EBV-DNA in the peripheral blood. A left supratrochlear lymph node biopsy showed infiltration of highly proliferative T lymphocytes with positive EBV encoded small RNA by in situ hybridization. Technetium-99m-labeled macroaggregated albumin and contrast-enhanced echocardiography confirmed the existence of intrapulmonary shunting, which was probably related to hepatopulmonary syndrome. The final diagnosis was CAEBV with intrapulmonary shunting. The patient was treated with cyclosporine A, etoposide, and dexamethasone. Finally, the patient died of respiratory failure. Intrapulmonary shunting is a rare complication of CAEBV. Early recognition and exploring the cause of hypoxemia should be highlighted in patients with CAEBV.
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PMID:Chronic active Epstein-Barr virus infection with intrapulmonary shunting: A case report. 3198 14