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Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A female child of healthy, unrelated parents presented at 12 months of age with a history of moderately severe developmental delay, macrocephaly, dysmorphic facies, hypotonia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, mild generalized dysostosis multiplex, mucopolysacchariduria (dermatan and heparan sulfates), and Alder-Reilly bodies in peripheral blood leukocytes. Iduronate sulfatase activity in plasma was markedly depressed: 0.11 units/ml/h (normal, 1.75 +/- 0.56, N = 6). Analyses of arylsulfatases A, B, and C, heparan N-sulfatase, alpha-mannosidase,
beta-mannosidase
, beta-glucuronidase, beta-hexosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, and alpha-fucosidase activities in plasma, leukocytes, and/or cultured skin fibroblasts were all normal. Urinary sulfatide excretion was also within normal limits. Karyotypes of peripheral blood leukocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts were normal. Serum iduronate sulfatase activities in the parents were in the normal range (father, 1.63 units/ml/h; mother, 1.25 units/ml/h). The results of analyses of restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) of DNA from cultured skin fibroblasts with the use of probes for loci extending from Xpter to Xq28 showed X chromosome heterozygosity and confirmed the paternal origin of one of the X chromosomes. Studies on sulfur-35 uptake in mixed fibroblast cultures showed cross-correction of [35S]-glycosaminoglycan accumulation between cells from the patient and normal cells or cells from a patient with Hurler disease; however, there was no cross-correction between cells from the patient and those from boys affected with classical Hunter disease. This represents only the second confirmed case of Hunter disease reported in a karyotypically normal girl.
...
PMID:Hunter disease (mucopolysaccharidosis type II) in a karyotypically normal girl. 211 88
Beta-mannosidosis (OMIM 248510) is an inborn lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency of
beta-mannosidase
activity. This enzyme is encoded by a single gene (MANBA), located on chromosome 4q22-25. This autosomal recessive disorder is characterized by a wide range of symptoms including mental retardation, behavioural problems, hearing loss, recurrent respiratory infections, angiokeratoma, facial dysmorphism, skeletal deformation, seizures, hypotonia, demyelinating polyneuropathy, and
hepatosplenomegaly
. The age of symptom onset is variable. We describe a 14-year clinical follow-up of a patient with
beta-mannosidase
deficiency with symptoms of mental retardation, progressive spasticity and cerebellar ataxia, a clinical spectrum that so far has never been reported in beta-mannosidosis. A novel mutation in the MANBA gene was found in our patient. Evoked potentials were in favour of a demyelinating pathology of the central nervous system. Serial MRI showed generalized cortical and subcortical atrophy in the absence of white matter changes suggesting an additional axonal pathophysiological component.
...
PMID:Beta-mannosidosis: a new cause of spinocerebellar ataxia. 1898 Jul 95