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 66-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for fever on January 19, 1998. He began showing periodic high fever in June 1997 and an increased serum LDH in August 1997. His history included surgery for esophageal cancer in 1993. On admission, the patient's body temperature was 38.5 degrees C. Physical examination was negative for lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and skin rash. Peripheral blood revealed a hemoglobin level of 8.6 g/dl and a platelet count of 7.9 x 10(4)/microliter. Bone marrow examination showed hypocellularity with marked histiocytic hemophagocytosis. The various bacterial cultures were negative. Serum LDH was elevated to 1,606 IU/l, and ferritin was greater than 3,000 ng/ml. Antinuclear antibodies were negative. No significant elevation of viral antibody titers including that to Epstein-Barr virus was found. Hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) was diagnosed, but no underlying diseases was identified. The patient's condition was complicated by interstitial pneumonia and pleural effusion. gamma-globulin and pulse methylprednisolone both proved ineffective for the HPS; however, complete remission was achieved with cyclic intravenous administration of etoposide (VP-16, 150 mg/day). Interestingly, the interstitial pneumonia resolved promptly with etoposide therapy. The patient relapsed, in July 2001, exhibiting high fever, cytopenia, and marrow hemophagocytosis. His condition was ameliorated by administration of etoposide. This was a rare case of chronic and recurrent HPS of unknown etiology accompanied by interstitial pneumonia. Etoposide should be considered as a primary therapy for HPS and its complications in cases such as our patients.
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PMID:[Successful use of etoposide in an elderly patient with chronic recurrent hemophagocytic syndrome]. 1270 51

Systemic form of juvenile xanthogranuloma with involvement of liver and bone marrow is reported in a 2-month-old female infant who presented with hepatosplenomegaly, severe anemia, and thrombocytopenia. There was no skin lesion, nor bone lesion. The enlarged liver has generalized yellowish spots. The diagnosis of juvenile xanthogranuloma was made by pathologic findings of marrow and portal tract infiltration by S-100 negative, CD1a negative, CD68 positive, and Factor XIIIa positive large pale to foamy histiocytes with Touton giant cells, and lack of Langerhans cell granule by electron microscopic examination. The patient was treated with Vinblastine and Etoposide, and experienced slow and gradual disease regression in one year. To the best of knowledge, this is the first documented case of bone marrow involvement in systemic juvenile xanthogranuloma.
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PMID:Systemic form of juvenile xanthogranuloma: report of a case with liver and bone marrow involvement. 1563 May 37