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Symptom
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Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency of
hepatosplenomegaly
in endemic areas is not proportional to the fecal ova count. This may be explained by epidemiological genetic. The occurrence of two or more cases of schistosomal
hepatosplenomegaly
in nuclear family is much higher than expected. The concentration is higher among siblings than it is among mothers and children of father and children. It is not significant between father and mother. If the mother, instead of the father, has hepatosplenic schistosomiasis the relative risk for the child to acquire
hepatosplenomegaly
is at least five times (the maternal affect). The inbreeding is higher in the hepatosplenic than in the hepato-intestinal patients. In some areas in Brazil the hepatosplenic form of the schistosomiasis mansoni occurs with much higher frequency in whites than in blacks. After treatment, reversion of hepatosplenic schistosomiasis occurs more frequently in non-whites. It seems that the resistance of blacks to the hepatosplenic form of schistosomiasis may be related to the glyoxalase system, perhaps associated to another genetic marker. The hepatosplenic schistosomiasis is less frequent in longilineal individuals. In some areas the hepatosplenic form of schistosomiasis is more frequent in A blood group of
ABO
system. The family heredograms do not suggest a single mendelian inheritance, but probably a multifactorial and possibly polygenic one.
...
PMID:Influence of the host related factors in the development of the hepatosplenic form of schistosomiasis mansoni. 134 24
Two siblings born 6 years apart presented with similar findings of
hepatosplenomegaly
, dermal hematopoiesis, hemoglobinuria, and increased platelet consumption, but only moderate anemia and normal serum bilirubin. ABO incompatibility was identified, and other causes were excluded. A review of the current understanding of mechanisms that promote and prevent antibody-mediated hemolysis in the fetus is reviewed. Due to the low ratio of observed to expected significant clinical events among
ABO
incompatible mother-infant pairs, and the multiplicity of mechanisms that diminish hemolysis, we speculate that severe ABO hemolytic disease of the newborn occurs when there is a specific failure in one of these preventive mechanisms.
...
PMID:ABO hemolytic disease of the newborn: a unique constellation of findings in siblings and review of protective mechanisms in the fetal-maternal system. 1077 97
Virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) is a potentially fatal complication of immunosuppression for transplantation. However, it presents with heterogeneous clinical symptoms (fever, disturbed consciousness, and
hepatosplenomegaly
) and laboratory findings (pancytopenia, elevated hepatic enzyme levels, abnormal coagulation, and hyperferritinemia), impeding diagnosis. Case 1: A 39-year-old female developed fever 4 years after
ABO
-incompatible living-related renal transplantation. Laboratory findings revealed thrombocytopenia, elevated hepatic enzymes, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA seropositivity, and hyperferritinemia. EBV-associated HPS was confirmed by bone marrow aspiration. Steroid pulse therapy and etoposide were ineffective. Disseminated intravascular coagulation resulted in multiple organ failure, and the patient died 32 days after disease onset. Case 2: A 67-year-old male was admitted with rotavirus enteritis a month after living-unrelated renal transplantation. He developed sudden-onset high fever, disturbance of consciousness, and tachypnea 8 days after admission. Laboratory findings revealed elevated hepatic enzyme levels, hyperkalemia, and hyperferritinemia. Emergency continuous hemodiafiltration ameliorated the fever, and steroid pulse therapy improved abnormal laboratory values. Varicella-zoster virus meningitis was confirmed by spinal tap. Acyclovir improved consciousness, and he was discharged 87 days after admission. Fatal virus-associated HPS may develop in organ transplant patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy. Pathognomonic hyperferritinemia is useful for differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome in renal transplant recipients: report of 2 cases from a single center. 2583 52