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 new pathologic findings in two sibs with Farber lipogranulomatosis. The first child, a 3-month-old boy, presented with only hepatosplenomegaly and had a fulminant clinical course suggestive of malignant histiocytosis. The second child, a 5 1/2-month-old girl, had the typical clinical presentation of Farber disease, with hoarseness and painful swollen joints. At autopsy, storage material was demonstrated in the second child at laryngeal and periarticular subcutaneous sites. Visceral involvement was prominent in both sibs, although not typical of the disease, and included a newly described nephropathy with elevated urine ceramide levels. Liver and spleen contained massive histiocytic infiltrates in association with elevated ceramide levels. Lymph nodes also contained histiocytic infiltrates but without the sinusoidal involvement typical of proliferative histiocytic disorders. These two cases demonstrate new pathologic anomalies in Farber disease, indicating that biochemical analyses of biopsy specimens may be necessary to establish the diagnosis of Farber disease when atypical clinical and morphologic anomalies are present.
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PMID:Farber disease: pathologic diagnosis in sibs with phenotypic variability. 313 Aug 60

The autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) and ALPS-like syndrome are variable clinical conditions characterized by lymphoproliferative disease, autoimmune cytopenias and susceptibility to malignancy. A 59-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital for intractable generalized pain and stiffness with multiple swollen joints for 2 weeks. A low-grade fever, intermittent hypotension and confusion were associated with the pain. The evaluation revealed multiple joint bony erosions with effusion and a ruptured Baker's cyst and positive AFB testing on the joint biopsy of the right wrist. In addition, there were a macular skin rash with telangiectasia and perivascular lymphocyte infiltration, a cytopenia without abnormal cells, a hepatosplenomegaly, a pericardial thickness with effusion and pleural effusion. The patient was treated with anti-mycobacterial drugs, NSAIDs and glucocorticoids for 10 months. But with the symptoms worsening, the patient developed cervical lymph node enlargements and was diagnosed as a diffuse large B cell lymphoma with hemophagocytosis on biopsy.
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PMID:Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome-like syndrome presented as lupus-like syndrome with mycobacterial joint infection evolved into the lymphoma. 1882 Sep 32