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)

An autopsy case of a 19-year-old boy who had shown typical gargoyle features, strictly consistent with mucopolysaccharidosis type II (Hunter's syndrome) was reported. Histologically, cytoplasmic vacuolar change was found in hepatocytes, sinusoidal epithelium of spleen, follicular cells of thyroid, Sertoli cells of testis, chromophobe cell of pituitary and generalized fibroblast-like cells including meninges, cardiac valve and periosteum. The vacuoles consisting of membrane-bound structures with flocculus protein-like material and occasional electron dense bodies on electron microscopy, were considered to be the site of mucopolysaccharide deposition by histochemical analysis. Deposition of lipid material consistent with so-called membranous cytoplasmic body was observed in the neurons of central, peripheral and autonomic nervous system. Hepatosplenomegaly could be explained by cytoplasmic deposition, but the cause of cardiomegaly remained further to be studied. Biochemically hepatic mucopolysaccharide was identified as heparan sulfate, while in the kidney dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate were detected. The correlation between morphology and biochemistry, and between deposition and degeneration was discussed.
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PMID:Morphological and biochemical studies of a case of mucopolysaccharidosis II (Hunter's syndrome). 13 78

A case of the syndrome of sea-blue histiocyte is presented in a 53-year-old Japanese woman, which is the first recorded case in Japan. The patient had hepatosplenomegaly, bleeding manifestations, mild thrombocytopenia, fatty metamorphosis and cirrhosis of the liver, as well as abnormal serum lipid profiles. Her parents were consanguineous and her maternal grandmother with hepatomegaly died of hepatic failure. Histologically, peculiar histiocytes containing numerous, intracytoplasmic sea-blue stained granules on May-Giemsa stain were demonstrated in biopsy materials of the bone marrow, lymph node and liver. The sea-blue granules in these histiocytes proved to have histochemical staining characteristics of lipogenic ceroid-like pigment. Ultrastructurally, these granules showed membrane-bound, pleomorphic inclusions of heterogeneous nature, including electron-dense amorphous or variegatedly osmiophilic, frequently laminated materials. Enzyme cytochemically, localization of acid phosphatase activity was demonstrated in and around the intracytoplasmic inclusions. With regard to the pathogenesis of the sea-blue histiocytes in this case, it may be suggested that the existence of the abnormality in lipid metabolism plays an important role in intralysosomal ceroidogenesis in these histiocytes.
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PMID:Syndrome of the sea-blue histiocyte--the first case report in Japan and review of the literature--. 21 60

The second case of infantile Niemann-Pick disease was reported in a Thai newborn baby who presented with respiratory distress and hepatosplenomegaly from birth and who succumbed from bronchopneumonia 20 days later. Autopsy examination showed generalized accumulation of foam cells in reticuloendothelial organs. The parenchymal cells of visceral organs as well as neurones in the central nervous system also showed cytoplasmic vacuolization. Electron microscopic study demonstrated characteristic intracytoplasmic electron-lucent membrane-bound bodies. The histologic and ultrastructural findings were similar to those described in the literature.
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PMID:Niemann-Pick disease: a case report. 228 94

We report 3 cases of Nasu-Hakola disease found in 2 families. These cases had identical clinical features with progressive spastic paraplegia and severe dementia after adolescence. They had no history of any skeletal symptoms, but roentgenographs of their bones presented characteristic evidence of polycystic osteodysplasia. All cases revealed not only manifestations of this condition in the central nervous system, but also peripheral neuropathy with axonal degeneration. The membranous structures in the adipose tissues appeared histochemically to be composed of a kind of compound glycolipid or glycoprotein. Histopathologically, the biopsied rectum showed the infiltration of many histiocytes in the mucosa and ultrastructurally, the granules in these histiocytes showed many membrane-bound vacuoles of different sizes. Interestingly, the histochemical reactivity of the material in the granules was very similar to that of membranous structures in adipose tissues. In the biochemical analysis of lipids in affected adipose tissues, no marked abnormalities were found in the patients. Nasu-Hakola disease is not a typical form of lysosomal storage disease, because lysosomal enzyme activities remain normal and there is no accumulation of urinary oligosaccharides and lipids, no vacuolation of lymphocytes, and no hepatosplenomegaly. However, histochemical findings suggest that the lysosomes may be secondarily involved in this disease, and that the formation of membranous structures might be related to the disturbance of glycolipid or glycoprotein metabolisms.
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PMID:Nasu-Hakola disease (membranous lipodystrophy). Clinical, histopathological and biochemical studies of three cases. 274 91

We describe a 19-year-old white male with juvenile galactosialidosis. He presented with hip arthralgia and was found to have facial "coarseness," corneal clouding, mitral and aortic insufficiency, and hepatosplenomegaly. Ultrastructural studies of skin biopsy and peripheral blood lymphocytes showed membrane-bound inclusions containing sparse fibrillogranular material. Biochemical analysis showed elevated urinary sialyloligosaccharides and no free sialic acid. Fibroblast enzyme analysis showed low activities of both alpha-neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase. To date, most patients with juvenile galactosialidosis have been Japanese. However, unlike those patients, our patient did not have macular cherry-red spots, neurologic abnormalities, or mental retardation. We speculate that this young man represents a new subtype of juvenile galactosialidosis with a potentially different molecular defect from that of the Japanese variant.
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PMID:Juvenile galactosialidosis in a white male: a new variant. 314 49

A newborn infant with oedema, ascites and hepatosplenomegaly is described. In ascites fluid foamy macrophages were found, in a liver biopsy cytoplasmic inclusions and membrane-bound vacuoles were seen. Furthermore the child excreted excessive amounts of sialic acid-rich oligosaccharides in the urine, and therefore a neurovisceral degenerative disorder was assumed. The diagnosis of sialidosis was confirmed by enzymatic assay in cultured fibroblasts, in which a complete deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme neuraminidase could be demonstrated. After recurrent septicaemias the child became dystrophic and died at the age of 6 months. Our case is compared with sialidosis observed by other authors, the wide phenotypic diversity within this biochemical defect is emphasised. The occurrence of hydrops fetalis in lysosomal storage diseases is discussed.
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PMID:Neuraminidase deficiency presenting as non-immune hydrops fetalis. 624 Apr 3

A boy, who started remittent fever reaching 40 degrees C at the age of 4 years and 9 months and gradually developed hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, pancytopenia, and hypergammaglobulinemia, is reported. Aspirated bone marrows contained sea-blue histiocytes, and nitroblue tetrazolium test was abnormal. X-ray examination revealed a tumor mass in the right lung, uremia occurred terminally, and he died at the age of 10 years and 3 months. Surgical specimens, obtained by splenectomy, and necropsy revealed the presence of characteristic sea-blue cells in the bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, liver, and kidneys, and pseudotuberculous granulomas with or without aspergillus in the lungs, epicardium, liver, and lymph nodes. Histochemically, sea-blue granules accumulating in the cytoplasm of the histiocytes were proved to be a lipogenic ceroid-like pigment. Electron microscopically, these granules were comprised of round or ovoid, membrane-bound or free lipid droplets of various sizes and electron densities, occasionally containing poorly oriented, lamellar structures. The nature and possible pathogenesis of the sea-blue histiocytosis in this case are discussed briefly.
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PMID:Chronic granulomatous disease of childhood and sea-blue histiocytosis. A pathologic study of an autopsy case. 652 83

Two siblings with marked reduction of plasma high density lipoprotein (HDL) were found in a Japanese family. Their plasma cholesterol levels were very low (30-60 mg/dl), especially in the HDL fraction (0-1 mg/dl). The concentration of apolipoprotein (Apo) A-I in their plasma was 2-3 mg/dl and that of Apo A-II was 1.5-2.0 mg/dl, determined by means of a single radial immunodiffusion technique. An ultracentrifugally separated HDL fraction contained two different populations of lipoprotein particles, as shown by electron microscopy; a small particle with a diameter of 50-70 A and a relatively large particle at 200 A. Plasma lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase activity was substantially retained in both cases. Hepatosplenomegaly was present and liver biopsy revealed lipid deposition in reticuloendothelial cells, although the tonsils were apparently normal. No severe atherosclerotic lesions were noticed. The results from these two cases were consistent with the characteristic features of homozygotes of familial HDL deficiency (Tangier disease). HDL cholesterol levels were relatively low in the parents and two children from one patient, which is consistent with the heterozygote state. Two other cases in the kindred were also found to have relatively low HDL cholesterol levels, besides these 4 cases of obligate heterozygotes. Apo A-I and Apo A-II levels in the plasma of the obligate heterozygotes, however, were within the normal range. Plasma low density lipoprotein in the patients moved faster in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis than those of normal subjects, as did those in the heterozygotes.
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PMID:A Japanese family with high density lipoprotein deficiency. 665 15

Cultured fibroblasts from two sibs with generalized hypertonia, hepatosplenomegaly, and psychomotor retardation within the first year of life were found to have unusual morphologic features. When examined by phase microscopy, the unstained and unfixed cells contained a large number of vacuolated structures whose gross appearance resembled that of a honeycomb in the cell cytoplasm. Electron microscopy studies, following fixation, showed the "honeycombing" to be the result of numerous, closely packed, cytoplasmic, membrane-bound vacuoles. In some of these structures the remains of fibrilogranular material could be detected. Biochemical analysis of crude sonicates of these cells revealed increased levels (4--7 x N) of an acid soluble component that reacted with thiobarbituric acid. Analysis of trimethylsilyl derivatives of this material by gas liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry showed it to be indistinguishable from sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid). Quantitation of this material from the cells of one of the sibs after isolation on a Dowex column yielded 39.8 nmoles of free (unbound) sialic acid per mg protein whereas normal fibroblasts had 1--2 nmoles per mg. Bound sialic acid levels were at the upper limits of normal (24.8 versus 11--23 nmoles per mg protein). The concentration of cytidine monophosphate-sialic acid was normal. After incubation of the patient's fibroblasts with [3H]-N-acetylmannosamine for 72 h, there was a 7-fold increase (compared to normal fibroblasts) in the amount of radioactivity in free sialic acid present in the acid soluble fraction. The amount of labeled, bound sialic acid in the acid-insoluble pool, however, was the same in both patient and control fibroblasts.
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PMID:Alterations in cultured fibroblasts of sibs with an infantile form of a free (unbound) sialic acid storage disorder. 685 93

This study describes a variant of hypo-alpha-lipoproteinemia in a 57-year-old male patient. The total plasma cholesterol level was 258 mg/dl with 64% in esterified form. The concentration of triglycerides was 205 mg/dl. The lipoprotein electrophoretic pattern revealed the absence of alpha-lipoproteins, whereas the other lipoproteins showed an intermediate electrophoretic mobility. The concentration of HDL cholesterol (heparin: MgCl2 precipitation) was extremely low (3 mg/dl). The activity of lecithin; cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) and the postheparinlipolytic activity were within the normal range. Determination of apolipoproteins revealed a marked deficiency of both apoprotein A-I (17 mg/dl) and apolipoprotein A-II (11 mg/dl). The concentration of apolipoprotein-B was elevated (186 mg/dl). Unlike the clinical manifestations of Tangier disease, our patient did not show skin lesion, abnormal tonsils, hepatosplenomegaly, peripheral neurologic abnormalities or corneal deposits. Also in contrast to Tangier disease our patient had coronary artery disease with myocardial infarction accompanied with severe occlusive peripheral arterial disease.
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PMID:Hypoalpha-hyperbeta-lipoproteinemia in a patient with coronary artery disease and occlusive peripheral arterial disease. 708 13


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