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 established cloned human renal carcinoma line RC-1, which has been continuously maintained in culture for several years and which produces erythropoietin, was injected s.c. into BALB/c athymic mice and produced tumors. Tumorigenicity was directly correlated with the number of RC-1 cells inoculated. Tumor cell histology resembled the original patient-derived tumor. Tumor-bearing mice developed hepatosplenomegaly and significant reticulocytosis with elevated hemoglobin and hematocrit values that were proportional to tumor mass. In addition, red cell mass and blood volume of nude mice increased over 100% as compared to control mice or to animals bearing nonrelevant neoplasms. Large amounts of immunoreactive erythropoietin could be extracted from the nude mouse RC-1 tumors. These results indicate that the RC-1 cell line is tumorigenic and produces biologically active erythropoietin in vivo in athymic mouse hosts, thus providing a reproducible model to study ectopic erythropoietin production and its regulation in vivo.
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PMID:Erythropoietin-induced polycythemia in athymic mice following transplantation of a human renal carcinoma cell line. 337 Jun 40

Hemoglobin Hammersmith, a rare unstable hemoglobin, was diagnosed in a 4-year-old Chinese girl living in Los Angeles. She presented with the typical manifestations of this disorder, including neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, followed by increasing hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice, bilirubinuria, and a severe hemolytic anemia exacerbated by mild infections. The most prominent manifestations of the peripheral smear were polychromasia, normoblastemia, and basophilic stippling. The diagnosis was confirmed by several techniques.
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PMID:Hemoglobin Hammersmith as the cause of severe hemolytic anemia in a Chinese girl. 371 15

Three hundred twenty-five previously untreated patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia were analyzed to identify significant prognostic factors for survival. Univariate analysis identified the following characteristics associated with survival: (1) clinical characteristics: age, race, sex, performance status, lymphadenopathy, and hepatosplenomegaly; (2) hematologic parameters: WBC count, absolute lymphocyte and granulocyte counts, hemoglobin level, and platelet count; and (3) biochemical parameters: serum albumin, calcium, uric acid, lactate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, BUN, and creatinine. Multivariate regression analysis in a randomly selected training subset of 217 patients demonstrated that the combination of uric acid, alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase, external lymphadenopathy, and age had the strongest predictive relation to survival time. The resulting model was validated in the remaining independent subset of 108 patients and led to classification of patients into low, intermediate, and high-risk groups with five-year survival rates of 75%, 59%, and 14%, respectively, and with distinctively different annual mortality rates (P less than .01). Both the regression model and Rai staging were highly effective in identifying risk groups among the entire patient population (P less than 0.001). Overall the regression model was superior to Rai staging in defining prognostic risk groups. In addition, it was able to separate patients into significantly different risk categories within each Rai stage, thus improving on the prognostic prediction of individual patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
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PMID:Prognosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: a multivariate regression analysis of 325 untreated patients. 381 21

Double heterozygosis condition for hemoglobin variants induce clinical syndromes known as intermediate thalassemias. Their diagnosis is often of certain difficulty because of their low frequency and heterogeneity of clinical expressions. We report a case of a 4 year child admitted to our medical center with a story of hepatosplenomegaly. An appropriate hematological study on patient's family permitted a diagnosis of double heterozygosis for Hb Lepore and beta-thalassemia. Results of hematological investigation are reported.
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PMID:[Hematologic characterization and analysis of genetic transmission in a case of double heterozygosity Hb Lepore/beta-thalassemia]. 383 15

Nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia, characterized by marked reticulocytosis, hepatosplenomegaly, hemosiderosis of reticuloendothelial organs and bone marrow myelofibrosis, and osteosclerosis, was diagnosed in 5 related Poodles. The unremitting anemia was clinically evident by 1 year of age, and was fatal as early as 3 years of age. Despite intense diagnostic endeavors including RBC fragility studies, RBC enzyme assays, and hemoglobin electrophoresis, the cause of this nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia remains to be determined.
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PMID:Familial nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia in poodles. 396 71

A nine-year-old black female who had been considered to have Hb SC disease was admitted with pain of the leg, neck, and upper chest. She had also been hospitalized approximately 20 times for treatment of recurrent pain. Further investigation by citrate agar gel electrophoresis and peptide mapping disclosed that the child had Hb SO Arab disease. She had mild hepatosplenomegaly and the hemoglobin concentration was 10.2 gm/dl. The clinical presentation of Hb SO Arab disease of our patient resembled that of Hb SD disease and was more severe than is Hb SC disease. The mother was found to have Hb O Arab trait. Two of the patient's siblings from a different father were found to have Hb CO Arab disease, an extremely rare condition. These children, 8 and 12 years old, are clinically asymptomatic. Clinical and laboratory data are presented.
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PMID:Hemoglobin SO Arab and hemoglobin CO Arab diseases. Clinical and laboratory study. 661 93

Plasma vitamin E levels were found to be decreased (less than 0.5 mg) in thalassemia and in 17 out of 20 patients with Gaucher's disease, where the levels were two standard deviations below the normal mean value. In the latter, the decrease in vitamin E levels correlated with the severity of the clinical expression of the disease and correlated inversely with the degree of hepatosplenomegaly and serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity. In both diseases, there was no evidence for intestinal malabsorption of the lipid-soluble vitamin. In spite of the different etiology, pathophysiology, and clinical expression, severe vitamin E deficiency could result in both diseases by a common mechanism. In thalassemia, rapid consumption of vitamin E occurs while neutralizing oxidative damage in the pathological erythrocyte membranes and in other tissues. In Gaucher's disease, lysosomal accumulation of glucocerebroside may stimulate phagocytes into a maintained "respiratory burst" with excessive production of oxygen free radicals, resulting in increased utilization and eventual deficiency of vitamin E. Efficacy of antioxidant therapy was evaluated by administration of vitamin E with and without canthaxanthin, which has similar antioxidant properties to beta-carotene, to patients with beta-thalassemia. The results showed increased serum vitamin E levels and a decrease in the extent of erythrocyte lipid membrane peroxidation, while no significant changes occurred in hemoglobin levels and in transfusion requirements.
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency due to increased consumption in beta-thalassemia and in Gaucher's disease. 675 58

The patient was an eight-year-old black male who presented to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHP) in June 1977 with foot pain. Abnormal findings on physical examination were diffuse shotty lymphadenopathy without hepatosplenomegaly. Examination of the extremities was normal. There was no evidence of increased bruising or bleeding. Laboratory data revealed a hemoglobin of 11.2 gm/dl, white blood cell count of 26,200/cu mm, and platelet count of 21,000/cu mm. Serum uric acid level was 4.2 mg/dl. The remainder of the laboratory findings were within normal limits. Bone marrow examination revealed a hypercellular marrow replaced with lymphoblasts. Immunologic evaluation showed these cells to have no surface immunoglobin and no rosette formation with sheep red blood cells. The patient received vincristine 1.5 mg/M2 daily, oral prednisone at 40 mg/M2 daily, L-asparaginase 6,000 IU/M2 for nine intramuscular doses, and methotrexate 12 mg intrathecally. After 28 days, bone marrow aspiration showed that the leukemia was in remission. He then received 2,400 rad cranial irradiation over three weeks, along with four more doses of intrathecal methotrexate, given once weekly. Maintenance consisted of monthly pulses of vincristine (1.5 mg/M2), prednisone (40 mg/M2 for five days), daily oral 6-mercaptopurine (75 mg/M2), and weekly oral methotrexate (20 mg/M2). After six months of maintenance, the patient was given a scheduled course of reinduction therapy with vincristine, prednisone, and L-asparaginase. Eleven months after diagnosis both testes were noted to be enlarged on physical examination. Wedge biopsy of both testes revealed leukemic infiltration. Examination of the bone marrow and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) at that time were unremarkable. The patient was treated with vincristine, prednisone, and L-asparaginase again for four weeks and received intrathecal methotrexate as central-nervous-system (CNS) prophylaxis. Twenty-four hundred rad were given to both testes at 200 rad/day with decrease in testicular size. Maintenance consisted of monthly pulses of vincristine and prednisone with oral methotrexate and 6-mercaptopurine. Seven months after his testicular relapse the patient had a bone marrow relapse. He expired eight months later with disseminated leukemia.
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PMID:Proceedings of the tumor board of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Testicular leukemia: incidence and management results. 694 80

There have been few reports of acute leukemia presenting with a hypocellular bone marrow. All patients diagnosed as having acute leukemia were identified during a recent six-year interval who had blast cells plus promyelocytes of greater than 30% and marrow cellularity of needle biopsy less than or equal to 50%. Of 195 patients analyzed, 15 (7.7%) fulfilled the criteria. Ten patients were men and five women; the median age was 68 years with a range of 40-82. Seven complained of fatigue of 6-12 months duration, five were seen with occult infection, and three were asymptomatic. Hepatosplenomegaly was absent in 93% and none had lymphadenopathy. Fourteen patients were pancytopenic with median leukocyte count at presentation of 1.5 X 10(9)/liter, hemoglobin of 9.0 g/dl, and platelet count of 55 X 10(9)/liter. Circulating blast cells were not observed in ten patients; in the other five they were less than 0.7 X 10(9)/liter. The morphology of all cases appeared myeloid and Auer rods were seen in three patients; however, in one the peroxidase was negative. Classification according to FAB criteria revealed ten to be M1, three to be M2, one M4, and one L2. Median survival of the entire group was seven months. Of seven patients receiving no chemotherapy, two survived longer than 1 year (14, 24.5 months), one is alive at 7+ months, and the median survival was seven months. Eight patients with life-threatening complications received various combination regimens including an anthracycline, cytosine arabinoside, 6-thioguanine, vincristine, and prednisone. Five died of treatment complications; two achieved durable complete remission and are free of disease at 17 and 27 months. It can be concluded that hypoplastic acute leukemia is a distinct nosologic entity affecting primarily older patients with myeloid leukemia. Remission induction therapy in patients who are seriously ill has a low success rate, and in some patients prolonged survival is possible with supportive care alone.
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PMID:Hypoplastic acute leukemia. 727 65

An autopsy case of a 42 year old man with the anerythremic form of acute erythremic myelosis (Di Guglielmo's syndrome) is reported. The patient was admitted because of a 1 month history of fatigue and fever. Physical examination showed hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory data showed leukopenia, mild normocytic anemia, and high levels of serum lactate dehydrogenase and vitamin B12. Bone marrow aspirate revealed an elevated number of erythroblasts, with dyserythropoiesis (E/M = 3.7). After admission, thrombocytopenia progressed rapidly, but blast cells were not seen in the peripheral blood throughout the clinical course. On the 56th hospital day, the patient died of pneumonia. At autopsy, the spleen weighed 550 g and the liver 1800 g. Histologically, the white and red pulps of the spleen and the portal region and sinusoid of the liver were diffusely infiltrated by blast cells that were positive for anti-hemoglobin (Hb) antibody on immunoperoxidase staining. The bone marrow, the lymph nodes, the adrenal glands, the pancreas, and the heart were also infiltrated by the blast cells. This was thus considered to be a rare case of the anerythremic form of acute erythremic myelosis (Di Guglielmo's syndrome), the findings showing that Hb immunoperoxidase staining is useful for the diagnosis of this condition.
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PMID:Anerythremic form of acute erythremic myelosis (Di Guglielmo's syndrome) causing hepatosplenomegaly due to the infiltration of hemoglobin-bearing blast cells: an autopsy case. 755 Oct 2


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