Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The long-term follow-up of a 30-year-old patient who had a correction of the syndrome of left ventricular diverticulum and thoraco-abdominal defects is presented. The main features of the syndrome include a diverticulum of the left ventricle, a ventricular septal defect, and sometimes other cardiac anomalies. The thoraco-abdominal defects consist of foreshortened sternum, pericardial and diaphragmatic defects, and umbilical hernia. The association of these anomalies is thought to be due to a developmental failure of the primitive paramidline mesoderm. The diagnosis can be made clinically by the presence of a pulsatile, epigastric mass associated with signs of cardiac septal defects and dextrocardia. The prognosis of patients with this syndrome depends mainly on the associated abnormalities although rupture of the diverticulum can be a fatal complication. The treatment of choice is resection of the diverticulum combined with repair of associated anomalies which can give good early and late results.
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PMID:Syndrome of congenital ventricular diverticulum and midline thoraco-abdominal defects. 40 65

Four Collie littermates had multiple cardiac and diaphragmatic anomalies. Ventricular septal defect was found in 3, pulmonic stenosis in 2, atrial septal defect in 1, mitral regurgitaion in 1, and pericardial diaphragmatic hernia in 3. Five additional littermates died within 72 hours of birth but were not necropsied. On the basis of available evidence, it was believed that the defects were congenital but not hereditary.
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PMID:Congenital pericardial diaphragmitic hernia and multiple cardiac defects in a litter of collies. 55 66

A case of asplenia with the assoicated congential defects of a diaphragmatic hernia, hydrocephalus, anophthalmia, and dysostosis of the frontal skull bones is reported. A small ventricular septal defect was also present. The case is discussed with particular emphasis on the embryologic malformations.
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PMID:Asplenia associated with a congenital diaphragmatic defect and neurologic anomalies. 71 99

Close phenotypic similarity between two cases carrying a rec(3) dup q,inv(3) (p25q21), 12 additional infants from the same inv (3)(p25q21) kindred who lived less than 1 year, and eight cases studied in other medical centers has led us to postulate the existence of a distinct chromosome 3 duplication-deletion syndrome. In the presence of trisomy for (3)q21 leads to qter and monosomy for (3)p25 leads to pter, the facial dysmorphy is unique: a distorted head shape due to irregular cranial sutures, thick low eyebrows, long eyelashes, persistent lanugo, distended veins on the scalp, hypertelorism, oblique palpebral fissures, a very short nose with a broad depressed bridge and anteverted nares, protruding maxilla, thin upper lip, micrognathia, low-set ears, and a short webbed neck. Port-wine stains, congenital glaucoma, cloudy corneas, cleft palate and harelip also occur frequently. Each infant has difficulty sucking and swallowing. Congenital anomalies of the cardiovascular system, of midgut rotation, and of the urogenital system are noted for the infants who died neonatally. Most frequent is a ventricular septal defect, followed by atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, patent foramen ovale, and coarctation of the aorta. Omphalocele, umbilical hernia, hyperplastic kidneys, polycystic kidneys, double ureter, hydro-ureter, hydronephrosis, and undescended testes often occur. The extremities are short in proportion to the length of the trunk. Clinodactyly, coxa valga, talipes, and spina bifida are frequently observed.
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PMID:Chromosome 3 duplication q21 leads to qter deletion p25 leads to pter syndrome in children of carriers of a pericentric inversion inv(3) (p25q21). 120 27

An 8-year-old boy with an uncorrected ventricular septal defect, pulmonary stenosis, mental retardation, and gigantism died 24 hours after partial resection of a large right-sided Wilms' tumor. The presence of other abnormalities, including a small umbilical hernia and overgrowth of the external genitalia, raises the possibility that this case represents a variant of the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. The typical facial features of Sotos' syndrome were not present. Gross examination of the surgical specimen revealed that tumor was present in the resected margin of left renal vein. Necropsy showed that death resulted from extensive cerebral infarction due to occlusion of the left internal carotid artery and its branches by tumor emboli. Paradoxical embolism had occurred during or soon after partial resection of the tumor mass due to passage of tumor fragments into the systemic circulation through the ventricular septal defect.
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PMID:Fatal paradoxical embolism to the left carotid artery during partial resection of Wilms' tumor. 132 57

Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) with partial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 4 has been exceptionally diagnosed in fetuses. We report prenatal diagnosis of five cases of monosomy 4p. The fetuses were karyotyped for severe intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) diagnosed on routine ultrasound (US). In addition, cleft-lip and palate and diaphragmatic hernia respectively were found in two cases. The quantity of amniotic fluid was normal in all cases. At autopsy, the fetuses showed the typical craniofacial dysmorphy but without microcephaly. Major renal hypoplasia was the only constant visceral anomaly. Midline fusion defects were observed in all the fetuses, ranging from minor abnormalities such as scalp defect, hypertelorism, pulmonary isomerism, common mesentery, hypospadias and sacral dimple, to cleft palate, corpus callosum agenesis, ventricular septal defect, and diaphragmatic hernia. On post-mortem X-rays, a delayed bone age was always observed. All the placentae were hypotrophic, and two exhibited vascular lesions, although there was no maternal hypertension. Chromosomal studies showed that the breakpoints were within the 4p16 band in three cases, the 4p15 band in one case, and the 4p14 band in one case. The deletion was de novo in four cases, and resulted from a paternal translocation in one case. This study emphasizes the importance of karyotyping all fetuses with IUGR, especially when the quantity of amniotic fluid is normal, and suggests the possibility of recognizing on US the particular phenotype of WHS in utero.
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PMID:The Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome in fetuses. 149 41

We describe 2 sibs with the syndrome of diaphragmatic hernia, abnormal face, and distal limb anomalies. Both infants died shortly after birth with severe respiratory distress. Postmortem examination showed gross internal anomalies: Dandy-Walker malformation, ventricular septal defect, and renal cystic dysplasia. This combination of anomalies, also termed the Fryns syndrome, appears to be a distinct MCA syndrome with variable expression and probable autosomal recessive inheritance. Prenatal ultrasonographic diagnosis was successful in both patients.
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PMID:The syndrome of diaphragmatic hernia, abnormal face and distal limb anomalies (Fryns syndrome): report of two sibs with further delineation of this multiple congenital anomaly (MCA) syndrome. 323 72

A unique case of a female born with four major malformations, ectrodactyly, diaphragmatic hernia, ventricular septal defect, and agenesis of the corpus callosum is reported. The patient had a normal birth weight, normal head circumference and a normal karyotype. There was no significant facial dysmorphism. The family history was unremarkable for birth defects, recurrent pregnancy loss, limb anomalies or consanguinity. We propose that this represents a new constellation of multiple malformations.
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PMID:Ectrodactyly, diaphragmatic hernia, congenital heart defect, and agenesis of the corpus callosum. 755 Nov 62

Lobar transplantation represents a therapeutic option for children and some adults with severe end-stage pulmonary disease. Six patients including two neonates, three children, and one adult underwent lobar transplantation. Ages ranged from 17 days to 21 years. Transplant procedures were unilateral in the neonates and two of the children and bilateral in the child and adult who had cystic fibrosis. The donor lobes were from cadavers in the two neonates and living related donors in the children and the adult. Unilateral grafts involved use of the right upper lobe in the 12-year-old patient with bronchopulmonary dysplasia; right middle lobe with a ventricular septal defect repair in the 4-year-old patient with Eisenmenger's syndrome, left upper lobe in the 28-day-old patient with primary pulmonary hypertension, and the right upper and middle lobes in the 17-day-old patient with diaphragmatic hernia. Bilateral lobar transplantations were performed with the right lower and left lower lobes in the two patients with cystic fibrosis (aged 13 and 21 years). The two neonates underwent emergency transplantation with the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation as a bridge. Perioperative survival was 83%, with only the 4-year-old patient with ventricular septal defect/Eisenmenger's syndrome dying early. No airway complications were observed. The unilateral grafts received most of the blood flow as shown by perfusion scanning (range 74% to 99%). Living related donor complications included prolonged air leaks (> 6 days) in two patients. In urgent situations, such as an infant requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, and in the existing milieu of donor shortage, lobar transplantation (living related or cadaveric) is a surgically feasible procedure and can provide a donor source in the limited time frame of these clinical situations. Bilateral lobe transplantation may be a viable option for patients with cystic fibrosis and life-threatening respiratory decompensation.
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PMID:Lobar transplantation. Indications, technique, and outcome. 807 33

This study reports on the initial clinical experience using anterior rectus sheath as potentially growing graft material in congenital heart lesions. The first seven patients with complex congenital lesions requiring a rectus sheath graft because of inadequate available pericardium are reviewed. The initial operations were: TOF (unicusp pulmonary valve) (re-op), two Konno procedures (one VSD and one RV patch), two arterial switch procedures for TGA (neoaortic augmentation), two Fontan (re-op) atrial augmentation patch and pulmonary arterioplasty (re-op). Ages ranged from 1 week to 15 years. Follow-up ranged from 1 to 72 months and included open visual inspection at reoperation in 5 cases, angiography in 3 cases, and echocardiography in 4 cases. One early respiratory death occurred in the fourth postoperative week. So far no early bleeding from rectus sheath patches, infection, aneurysmal dilatation, or scar contraction was observed. No manifestation of peripheral emboli was seen. Hernias of the harvest site were absent. We concluded that in absence of pericardium and in areas where future cicatrization or aneurysmal dilatation is undesirable, anterior rectus sheath appears to be a reasonable alternative.
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PMID:Initial clinical experience with rectus sheath grafts in congenital heart defects. 852 56


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