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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
After her first grand mal seizure a 30-year-old woman was given a fructose infusion by an emergency doctor. On admission to hospital she complained of severe
nausea
. Ultrasonography revealed
hepatosplenomegaly
and the gamma-GT concentration was raised to 25 U/l. As hyperinsulinism was suspected an oral glucose tolerance test was suggested, but refused by the patient. She reported marked aversion to all sweet foods. Examination of an endoscopically obtained liver biopsy revealed clear reduction in fructoaldolase activity in liver tissue, i.e. the diagnosis of hereditary fructose intolerance. Three of the patient's siblings were also affected. The widespread use of infusion solutions containing sorbitol and fructose has twice proved acutely hazardous in this patient and is generally life-threatening for persons with an inborn error of metabolism whose pathologic status often remains undiagnosed to an adult age.
...
PMID:[Adults with hereditary fructose intolerance: risks of fructose infusion]. 196 93
For studying the side effects of praziquantel in children with active intestinal bilharziasis 6 groups of children were followed: group P-1 (active intestinal bilharziasis +/-
hepatosplenomegaly
). They were treated with praziquantel (40 mg/Kg b.w. orally every 6 months). group P-2 (children with active mansoniasis +/-
hepatosplenomegaly
. They were treated with an initial full dose of praziquantel (40 mg/kg) to be followed by suppressive dose (20 mg/kg) at 3-months intervals, group P-3 (school children with active mansoniasis +/-
hepatosplenomegaly
). Initial loading praziquantel dose was followed by suppressive dose at monthly intervals, group N-1 (non-bilharzial children given an oral monthly praziquantel prophylactic dose of 20 mg/kg, group N-2 (non-bilharzial children given an oral 3-monthly praziquantel prophylactic dose of 20 mg/kg), group N-3 (non-bilharzial school children given an oral placebo in the form of vitamin B complex tablets at 3-monthly intervals. Surveillance for praziquantel adverse reactions for all these groups was done. It revealed that the adverse reactions were
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal colic, diarrhea, dizziness, headache and pyrexia. These were noticed more after full therapeutic praziquantel dose than half doses (subcurative or prophylactic) & among bilharzial children than non-bilharzial cases. As regards school children with active urinary hematobiasis 3 groups were followed: Group 1 (school children with active urinary hematobiasis treated with praziquantel orally 40 mg/kg b.w. every 6 months). Group 2 (non-bilharzial school children given oral monthly prophylactic dose of 20 mg/kg b.w. praziquantel). Group 3 (non-bilharzial school children given oral placebo in the form of two vitamin B-complex tablets monthly).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Side effects of praziquantel in bilharzial children on a field level. 212 46
A 17-year-old male was admitted to our hospital complaining of fever, headache and
nausea
. On physical examinations cervical and inguinal lymphadenopathy and
hepatosplenomegaly
were noted. Neurological examination revealed meningeal signs. Blood examination showed slightly increased lymphocytes and atypical lymphocytes (1-4%), increased ESR, CRP (2+), slightly elevated EBV VCA IgG (X20), and normal EBV VCA IgM (less than X 10). Initial pressure of CSF was 195mmH2O, cells 46/3mm3, protein 50mg/dl. Slowing of back ground activity of EEG such as theta and delta wave was noted. CT scan revealed normal. During the course EBV VCA IgG elevated to X160, EBV VCA IgM elevated to X20. Slight respiratory disturbance, photophobia, and dysosmia were noted. One month later, clinical symptoms and laboratory data improved, the patient was discharged. Forty days after the discharge, headache was excerbated and increased CSF protein (100mg/dl) and pleocytosis (33/3mm3) were noted. The patient was readmitted to the hospital. After 2 weeks in the hospital, symptoms were diminished and laboratory findings revealed normal. During 2 years before the third admission he was asymptomatic and could enjoy the college life. At age 19, he was admitted to our hospital complaining of fever, headache and
nausea
. Neurologically slight meningeal irritation was noted. Blood examination revealed 1% atypical lymphocytes. EBV VCA IgG was elevated (X320) and EBNA was X80. CSF protein was slightly increased (52mg/dl). During the clinical course CSF protein was elevated to 105mg/dl and cell count to 502/3mm3 (N: L = 27: 409, with 66 atypical lymphocytes). Persistent hiccup was noted. After 50 days CSF findings were improved and he was discharged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of recurrent Epstein-Barr virus meningitis]. 254
In the past four months a new syndrome has caused more than 100 deaths in Spain. The most striking feature is a toxic-allergic pneumonopathy with respiratory distress and radiological evidence of interstitial (occasionally alveolar) exudation. Other features are fever, headache,
nausea
, muscular and abdominal pains, rash,
hepatosplenomegaly
, and eosinophilia; later, thrombotic phenomena and neurological disorders may appear. The epidemic has been traced to ingestion of rapeseed oil, denatured with aniline and containing acetanilide. The syndrome does not resemble intoxication with aniline or acetanilide, and is provisionally ascribed to "oleoanilide", a product formed by reaction of acetanilide with fatty acids.
...
PMID:Toxic-allergic syndrome caused by ingestion of rapeseed oil denatured with aniline. 611 11
Twenty five cases of Burkitt's lymphoma in Thai children were diagnosed at the Department of Pediatrics, Siriraj Hospital during the period of 13 years (January 1969 to April 1982). Males were more affected than females with the ratio of 1.7:1. The age ranged from 2 to 11 years with the median age of 4-5 years. The most common clinical manifestations were abdominal mass associated with
nausea
vomiting, abdominal pain, anorexia, weight loss and generalized lymphadenopathy which occurred in 50-60% of cases. Additional symptoms and signs included anemia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, edema and pleural effusion. Jaw tumor was found in only 37.5% of the patients. Definite diagnosis depended on the characteristic starry sky appearance of the lymph node biopsy or section of abdominal mass. In advance cases, the tumor cells could be discovered in bone marrow aspiration, ascitic fluid pleural fluid and cerebrospinal fluid. The typical blast cells were detected in the peripheral blood in 4 cases. Antibody to Epstein-Barr virus could be detected in almost all cases with high titers in some cases. Most patients responded very well to local irradiation and chemotherapy with prednisolone plus cyclophosphamide and vincristine or methotrexate. However, relapse occurred rapidly and 80% of the patients died within 3 months after diagnosis with the median survival of only 1 month. Five cases expired early before any specific treatment. The main causes of death were disease, sepsis, excessive bleeding and hyperkalemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Burkitt's lymphoma in Thai children: an analysis of 25 cases. 631 66
We report a case of brucellosis in a young Mexican man who had weight loss, fever, and
nausea
. Physical examination revealed
hepatosplenomegaly
, and examination of the blood showed pancytopenia. This case illustrates the need for a high index of suspicion when patients living in the southern United States have these symptoms.
...
PMID:Intermittent fever and pancytopenia in a young Mexican man. 963 29
Here we report an unusual case of T-cell lymphoma presenting as ascites. A 49-yr-old woman was admitted to the hospital for abdominal discomfort associated with increasing abdominal girth over the course of 3 mo. She also complained of
nausea
, vomiting, and diarrhea. On physical examination, a tense and distended abdomen and edema of the lower extremities were noted. Neither
hepatosplenomegaly
nor lymphadenopathy was found. A CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis showed a large abdominal/pelvic mass surrounding the small bowel and omentum and small nodes in the para-aortic and mesenteric regions. The cytospin prepared from the peritoneal fluid was hypercellular and composed of a population of monotonous, noncohesive cells with a high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio and a single prominent central nucleolus. The cells were positive for leukocyte common antigen and Leu-22 (CD43) but negative for keratin, L26, UCHL-1, kappa, lambda, CD3, Ki-1 (CD30), S-100, and carcinoembryonic antigen. Morphologic and immunologic findings were suggestive of T-cell immunoblastic lymphoma. Peripheral T-cell lymphomas rarely present as ascites; this case demonstrates the value of effusion cytology in making this diagnosis.
...
PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma presenting as ascites: a case report and review of the literature. 1035 13
From 1982 to 1995, 71 children admitted in our medical center were diagnosed to have typhoid fever by culture or serology. Of the 71 children, most (83%) were aged 5-15 years. These children usually presented with fever and gastrointestinal symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea,
nausea
or vomiting, and constipation.
Hepatosplenomegaly
was the most common physical sign observed and abdominal tenderness ranked the second. Thrombocytopenia occurring in 9 patients (13%) was the most common mode of complication. Other complications included intestinal perforation (3%), rectal bleeding (3%), ascites or pleural effusion (4%), and meningitis (1%). The incidence of complications tended to be higher among children 5 years of age or older (p = 0.31). Most patients responded well to appropriate antimicrobial therapies. There was no mortality. Relapse was observed in two children, although both had received 10 days of chloramphenicol therapy. The clinical isolates of Salmonella typhi were susceptible in vitro to all the antibiotics tested, including chloramphenicol, which, however, showed a higher MIC90 level than other drugs tested. In conclusion, there were age-specific differences of typhoid fever in children in terms of the incidence and morbidity and antibiotic resistance of S. typhi has not been a problem in this area at least up to 1995.
...
PMID:Typhoid fever in children: a fourteen-year experience. 1091 May 50
An 8-year-old male aborigine was referred to our hospital with a presumptive diagnosis of Kawasaki disease. The major symptom presented was a persistent fever for six days. Several other symptoms were drowsiness, headache,
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, nuchal rigidity, lymphadenopathy, subconjunctival hemorrhage, and muscle aching of the calf. During hospitalization, cerebrospinal fluid studies showed pleocytosis. Abdominal sonograms revealed
hepatosplenomegaly
, moderate ascites and gallbladder wall thickening. These data were suggestive of leptospirosis. The microscopic agglutination test of leptospiral antibodies further confirmed the diagnosis. After treatment with intravenous aqueous penicillin and gentamicin, the clinical course improved significantly.
...
PMID:Leptospirosis: report of one case. 1156 78
Leishmanioses are widespread in 88 countries of the tropical and subtropical zone, including regions of the Mediterranean Sea basin of Southern Europe. Actually, approximately 350 million of people live in Leishmania endemic areas and about 12 million of individuals are infected. Visceral leishmaniosis (kala-azar disease, tropical splenomegaly) is caused by at least 3 species of Leishmania protozoa: L. donovani, L. infantum and L. chagasi. The incidence of the disease is estimated at 500,000 new cases annually. The infection is transmitted by Phlebotomus or Lutzomyia mosquitos bites, in which intestines forms invasive to humans are developed. Leishmania spp. have a predilection to the reticulo-histiocytary system cells, leading to their proliferation and disruption, and after spreading to the circulation they invade spleen, liver and bone marrow. Visceral leishmaniosis should be suspected in travelers returning from tropical and subtropical areas with signs of splenomegaly and twice temperature spikes in a day. We reported a case of the kala-azar disease in the 22 year-old Polish patient seasonally working in Italy. The clinical picture was expressed by two daily pikes of fever proceeded by chills, excessive sweat,
hepatosplenomegaly
, lymphadenopathy, general weakness, abdominal pain and
nausea
. The Leishmania infection was complicated by candidiosis. Laboratory tests showed anaemia, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, hypergammaglobulinaemia and a suppression of immunological cellular response. The diagnosis was confirmed by a presence of amastigota forms in macrophages of the bone marrow aspirate and a detection of specific antibodies to L. infantum by Westernblotting. The patient was successfully treated with Glucantime.
...
PMID:[Visceral leishmaniasis]. 1291 Jun 4
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