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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mucopolysaccharidosis represent a broad spectrum of disorders due to the deficiency of one of a group of enzymes which degrade three classes of mucopolysaccharides: heparan sulfate, dermatan-sulfate and keratan sulfate. The general phenotype includes coarse facies, corneal clouding,
hepatosplenomegaly
, joint stiffness, hernias, dysostosis multiplex, mucopolysaccharides excretion in the urine and metachromatic staining in peripheral leukocytes and bone marrow. Various components of the MPS phenotype are also found in the mucolipidoses, glycoprotein storage diseases. Detailed clinical and radiologic evaluation and identification of the type of MPS excreted in the urine help to narrow the diagnosis possibilities. Definitive diagnosis requires assay of specific enzymes in various tissues such as cultured skin fibroblasts. For the moment there are 14 types of known mucopolysaccharidoses, including several subtypes. They are classified into Hurler's syndrome (MPS I-H); Scheie's syndrome (MPS I-S); Hurler-Scheie's syndrome (MPS I-H/S); Hunter's syndrome A, B (MPS II-A, B); Sanfilippo's syndrome A,B,C,D (MPS II-A,B,C,D); Morquio's syndrome A,B,C (MSP IV-A,B,C); Maroteaux-Lamy's syndrome (MPS VI) and Sly's syndrome MPS VII). The mucopolysaccharidosis incidence is around 0.04-0.3% of the newborn and they are 1.5% of all congenital disorders. All mucopolysaccharidosis are autosomal recessive disorders, except for Hunter's syndrome that is
X-linked
and recessive. Patient suffering of MPS, usually, don't show clinical sign from their birth in fact they develop later their characteristics. The average surviving of this patients is around 20-30 years old, and the exitus is due to cardiac failure or to infections to the gastrointestinal tract or to instability of atlantoaxial joint.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Mucopolysaccharidosis. A case report of Morquio's type-A disease (MPS IV-A)]. 129 76
Three distinct clinical syndromes occur in patients with increased numbers of circulating LGL. Patients with T-LGL leukemia have clonal proliferations of CD3+ LGL typically associated with chronic neutropenia and autoimmune features. NK-LGL leukemia is characterized by clonal CD3- LGL proliferation with an acute clinical presentation marked by massive
hepatosplenomegaly
and systemic illness. However, most patients with increased numbers of CD3- LGL do not have clinical features of NK-LGL leukemia and have a chronic clinical course.
X-linked
gene analyses have supported a polyclonal LGL lymphocytosis in this syndrome. Further studies are needed to determine whether clonal progression can occur in these patients.
...
PMID:Clonal diseases of large granular lymphocytes. 827 46
A five-year-old boy in the acute phase of
X-linked
lymphoproliferative (XLP) syndrome (Duncan disease) with high fever and
hepatosplenomegaly
was treated successfully with high-dose methylprednisolone and VP-16 for 15 months. He had been alive for four years after diagnosis as of this writing. We recommend high-dose methylprednisolone and VP-16 in patients with XLP who have to wait for a suitable donor before bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Treatment of X-linked lymphoproliferative disease (Duncan disease) with high-dose methylprednisolone and etoposide (VP-16). 870 87
The
X-linked
lymphoproliferative disease (XLP) is an inherited immunodeficiency characterized by an abnormal responses to infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), resulting in fatal infectious mononucleosis, hypogammaglobulinemia, virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome, and malignant lymphoma. Mutations in the gene coding for a T cell-specific SLAM-associated protein (SAP) have been recently identified in XLP patients. We report on a 1-year-old boy representing fulminant hemophagocytic syndrome. He developed high fever, lymphadenopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly
with liver dysfunction, and pancytopenia with marrow hemophagocytosis. EBV DNA was abnormally increased in the blood. Polymerase chain reaction failed to amplify SAP mRNA and genomic DNA products from the patient' As peripheral blood. A large deletion of the SAP gene was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). FISH analysis also disclosed that the patient's mother was a carrier. We conclude that FISH can be useful in the diagnosis of XLP with large deletions of the SAP gene and its carrier state.
...
PMID:Large deletion of the X-linked lymphoproliferative disease gene detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization. 1081 94
A 3-month-old boy born to a mother carrying an
X-linked
form of chronic granulomatous disease presented with persistent fever and
hepatosplenomegaly
. The diagnosis was confirmed as a gp91phox defect by genetic analysis, and the patient was managed with broad spectrum antibacterial agents, gamma-interferon and later amphotericin B. A liver biopsy revealed granulomata with budding yeast forms, and cultures of blood and urine grew Candida lusitaniae. The patient died 26 days after admission.
...
PMID:Fatal disseminated Candida lusitaniae infection in an infant with chronic granulomatous disease. 1200 97
Glycogen storage disease type IX (GSD type IX) results from a deficiency of hepatic phosphorylase kinase activity. The phosphorylase kinase holoenzyme is made up of four copies of each of four subunits (alpha, beta, gamma and delta). The liver isoforms of the alpha-, beta- and gamma-subunits are encoded by PHKA2, PHKB and PHKG2, respectively. Mutation within these genes has been shown to result in GSD type IX. The diagnosis of GSD type IX is complicated by the spectrum of clinical symptoms, variation in tissue specificity and severity, and its inheritance, either
X-linked
or autosomal recessive. We investigated 15 patients from 12 families with suspected GSD type IX. Accurate diagnosis had been hampered by enzymology not being diagnostic in five cases. Clinical symptoms included combinations of hypoglycaemia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, short stature, hepatopathy, weakness, fatigue and motor delay. Biochemical findings included elevated lactate, urate and lipids. We characterised causative mutations in the PHKA2 gene in ten patients from eight families, in PHKG2 in two unrelated patients and in the PHKB gene in three patients from two families. Seven novel mutations were identified in PHKA2 (p.I337X, p.P498L, p.P869R, p.Y116_T120dup, p.R1070del, p.R916W and p.M113I), two in PHKG2 (p.L144P and p.H48QfsX5) and two in PHKB (p.Y419X and c.2336+965A>C). There was a severe phenotype in patients with PHKG2 mutations, a mild phenotype with patients PHKB mutations and a broad spectrum associated with PHKA2 mutations. Molecular analysis allows accurate diagnosis where enzymology is uninformative and identifies the pattern of inheritance permitting counselling and family studies.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage disease type IX: High variability in clinical phenotype. 1768 25
Chitotriosidase (ChT) is an enzyme that is selectively activated in tissue macrophage. This property of ChT makes it a potential marker for many disease process and prognostication. Present study has been carried out to know the significance of ChT as a screening marker in lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) where tissue macrophage activation is commonly observed due to accumulation of substrate in various organs of the body. Study comprises of 20 healthy children in the age range of 10 days to 5 yrs and 56 children in the age range of 2.5 months to 13 yrs with regression of milestones, skeletal dysplasia, neuroregression and
hepatosplenomegaly
were selected for plasma ChT who had confirmed LSDs as carried out by specific lysosomal enzyme study from the leukocytes or fibroblasts. Plasma ChT was 55.21 +/- 20.81 nmol/ml/hr in twenty healthy age matched controls. Plasma ChT level was 42.88 to 79.78 nmol/ml/hr in thirteen of 56 (23.21%) children with LSDs like Morquio-B, Pompe, Metachromatic leucodystrophy (MLD), Sandhoff and Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPD-C). While in 43 (76.78%) children it was in the range of 213.74 to 23,511.40 nmol/ml/hr. who had LSDs like Morquio-B, Sly syndrome, MLD, GM2 Gangliosidosis, NPD-A/B and Gaucher disease (GD). Marked elevated ChT (4,000 to 23,511 nmol/ml/hr) was observed in all cases of GD (n=7) and
NDP
-A/B. It can be concluded from the present study that moderately raised activity of ChT can be utilized as a positive predictive test for certain LSD's. Those with marked elevated ChT have confirmed GD or NPD-A/B making it a strong screening marker for this group of diseases.
...
PMID:Plasma chitotriosidase activity in children with lysosomal storage disorders. 1993 66
Hunter syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type II [MPS II], OMIM309900) is a rare
X-linked
lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency of the enzyme iduronate-2-sulphatase, resulting in accumulation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), multisystem organ failure and early death. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with idursulfase is commercially available since 2007. Early access programs were established since 2005. However, limited information on the effects of ERT in young children is available to date. The aim of this analysis was therefore to determine the effects of ERT on patients younger than 5 years of age. We report data from six Spanish patients with confirmed Hunter syndrome who were younger than 5 years at the start of ERT, and had been treated with weekly intravenous infusions of idursulfase between 6 and 14 months. Baseline and treatment data were obtained from the Hunter Outcome Survey (HOS). HOS is an international database of MPS II patients on ERT or candidates to be treated, that collects data in a registry manner. HOS is supported by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc. (Cambridge, MA, USA). At baseline, all patients showed neurological abnormalities, including ventriculomegaly, hydrocephaly, cerebral atrophy, perivascular changes and white matter lesions. Other signs and symptoms included thoracic deformity, otitis media, joint stiffness and
hepatosplenomegaly
, demonstrating that children under 5 years old can also be severely affected. ERT reduced urinary GAG levels, and reduced spleen (n = 2) and liver size (n = 1) after only 8 months. Height growth was maintained within the normal range during ERT. Joint mobility either stabilized or improved during ERT. In conclusion, this case series confirms the early onset of signs and symptoms of Hunter syndrome and provides the first evidence of ERT beneficial effects in patients less than 5 years of age. Similar efficacy and safety profiles to those seen in older children can be suggested, although further studies including a direct comparison with older patients would still be required.
...
PMID:First experience of enzyme replacement therapy with idursulfase in Spanish patients with Hunter syndrome under 5 years of age: case observations from the Hunter Outcome Survey (HOS). 2070 29
X-linked
Hyper IgM is characterized by an absence of the CD40 ligand on activated T lymphocytes resulting in defects of both cellular and humoral immunity. Patients usually present with recurrent bacterial and opportunistic infections. Chronic liver disease is seen in about 75% of patients as a complication. Here, we report a 3.5-year-old boy with
X-linked
Hyper IgM referred to our clinic for bone marrow transplant. He was transplanted from an HLA-identical sibling donor using a new conditioning agent, treosulphan, together with cyclophosphamide. Since 6 months of age, he has had recurrent respiratory infections, and his XHIGM was diagnosed when he was 1.5 years old. The diagnosis was confirmed by sequence analysis of the CD40L gene. On physical examination, growth failure, bilateral fine crackles in both lungs, and
hepatosplenomegaly
were detected. The results of his liver function tests were abnormal, and a liver biopsy showed grade III fibrosis and compensated cirrhosis. After conditioning with treosulphan (12 g/m(2)/d x 3 d) and cyclophosphamide (50 mg/kg/d x 4 d), bone marrow from his HLA-identical sister was infused. CD40L expression on activated lymphocytes of the patient was 84% on day +21. His posttransplant period was uneventful. He is now at posttransplant 2 years, with full donor chimerism, and mild, chronic, graft-versus-host disease on his tongue. In conclusion, treosulphan is a new agent for conditioning regimen with less toxicity in patients with severe liver disease.
...
PMID:CD40 ligand deficiency with grade III liver fibrosis, transplanted by a treosulphan-based conditioning regimen. 2196 64
Hunter syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis II, MPS II) is a rare,
X-linked
disorder of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) catabolism caused by a deficiency in the activity of the lysosomal enzyme, iduronate-2-sulfatase (I2S). In this study, the medical records of 75 Korean patients with Hunter syndrome (74 males, 1 female) were retrospectively reviewed to investigate the frequency of organ involvement and survival at a single center. The three most common symptoms of organ involvement were
hepatosplenomegaly
(99%), facial dysmorphism (97%), and frequent otitis media (91%). Cardiovascular involvement was also common including valvular abnormalities (89%), left ventricular hypertrophy (68%), and hypertension (30%). The 19 patients who died had a median age of 16.8 years at the time of death. Four of them died within 1 year of the start of enzyme replacement therapy; autopsy showed myocardial infarction with severe coronary artery disease in one patient. Two other patients died due to pneumonia and sleep apnea. In one case, the cause of death was not investigated. The high incidence of hypertension, and the presence of valvular heart disease indicates that close cardiac monitoring is mandatory in all patients with Hunter syndrome, especially relatively older patients even if they are being treated with enzyme replacement therapy.
...
PMID:Retrospective analysis of the clinical manifestations and survival of Korean patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II: emphasis on the cardiovascular complication and mortality cases. 2210 82
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