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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical characteristics of a 16-year-old white girl with mucolipidosis type III included early growth retardation, severe dysostosis multiplex, restricted joint motion, tight indurated skin, swollen eyelids, late-onset hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, corneal opacities, and only slightly impaired mental and neurological development. Cultured fibroblasts contained numerous coarse perinuclear retractile inclusions. Biochemical findings indicated the following: (1) normal levels of urinary acid mucopolysaccharides, (2) deficient activities of multiple lysosomal hydrolases in cultured fibroblasts, (3) elevated activity levels of seven serum lysosomal hydrolases, and (4) elevated activity levels of four lysosomal hydrolases in urine.
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PMID:Mucolipidosis type III. Multiple elevated serum and urine enzyme activities. 15 78

The purpose of this review is to asses the current knowledge of mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS), with reference to the serious complications which may arise in connection with anaesthesia and operation. MPS consists of a heterogeneous group of hereditary diseases which are characterized by an abnormal accumulation of mucopolysaccharides, especially in cartilaginous and bone tissue. Because of their progressive and disabling nature, frequent surgical intervention is common, and is associated with a high degree of per- and postoperative risk. The clinical manifestations of MPS are frequently dwarfism, scaphocephaly, grotesque facial features with snub nose, hypertelorism, macroglossia and dental anomalies. The chest is deformed by pectus carinatum or excavatum, club-formed ribs and kyphosis with gibbus. Furthermore, cardiomegaly, abdomen pendens, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, corneal clouding, conductive deafness and subnormal intelligence are common findings. Prior to operation, patients should be thoroughly evaluated through clinical examination and laboratory investigations. In particular, lung function should be optimized by lung physiotherapy and treatment of airway infections. When inducing general anaesthesia, spontaneous respiration is recommended until the patient has been intubated, as airway anomalies, bleeding and salivation may make intubation extremely difficult. Local or regional anaesthesia is often preferable, though age and mental status are relative contraindications. When used in combination with careful sedation, many problems may be overcome. Postoperatively, it is important to treat stagnation of secretions and airway infections with lung physiotherapy positive end-expiratory pressure, and antibiotics. In connection with anesthesia, it is vital to monitor the patient carefully before, during and after anaesthesia.
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PMID:Mucopolysaccharidoses and anaesthetic risks. 310 30

We studied two cases of beta-glucuronidase deficiency. One patient's disease was present at birth and the other patient's disease appeared in early childhood. The symptoms observed in both patients, although of differing severity, included peculiar facies, cloudy cornea, hepatosplenomegaly, hernia, kyphosis, recurrent infections, short stature, and developmental delay, as well as increased excretion of urinary chondroitin sulfate A/C and decreased levels of beta-glucuronidase activity. We reviewed all of the reported cases and examined the biochemical and clinical heterogeneity observed in this disorder.
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PMID:Beta-glucuronidase deficiency. A heterogeneous mucopolysaccharidosis. 315 9

A radiological diagnosis of gastric volvulus (GV) was made in 11 of 576 consecutive upper gastrointestinal series at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, over a two-year period. The clinical symptoms were thoracico-abdominal in three and abdominal in eight; these cases were evaluated as acute in three, acute upon chronic in two, and chronic in six. There was a significant delay in the diagnosis in all cases (except a neonate in the series), and no case was diagnosed on clinical grounds alone.THE PREDISPOSING FACTORS (EXCEPT THE CLINICAL MISDIAGNOSIS OF THE NEONATE) IN SIX OF THE SEVEN CASES THAT CAME TO SURGERY WERE: diaphragmatic hernia and perigastritis (left lung abscess, thoracic empyema), arteriomesenteric compression of the duodenum in pregnancy (peptic ulcer), splenomegaly (hepatosplenomegaly, ascites, esophageal varices), previous gastrojejunostomy (stomal ulcer, left subphrenic abscess) and two cases of intestinal malrotation with mesenteric abnormalities (small bowel obstruction in one and duodenal atresia in the other). In one idiopathic case, gastric outlet obstruction was clinically suspected prior to surgery. Thus, the putative rarity of GV in black Africans is not supported by this experience.Gastric volvulus is a clinico-radiologic entity that may present with a confusing thoracico-abdominal symptom complex. A greater awareness of the radiologic features is quintessential to an expeditious and usually successful surgical management that will avoid potentially serious complications. Negative surgical findings do not exclude GV as the underlying cause of acute abdomens necessitating emergency laparotomies.
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PMID:Volvulus of the stomach: an African series and a review. 356 Feb 44

The present paper describes 3 out of a total of 9 siblings, aged 9, 17, and 18, with the following symptoms: gargoyle-like facial features, clouding of the cornea in both eyes, dysostosis multiplex, slightly impaired intelligence, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, and increased secretion of mucopolysaccharides in the urine, in particular dermatan and heparan sulfate. Some of the symptoms are mid-way between those of Hurler's and Scheie's syndromes, both having the same deficiency of the enzyme alpha-1-iduronidase. McKusik developed the theory that the genes responsible for the clinical pictures of Hurler's and Scheie's syndromes are alleles and hence cases such as those described here should be considered as allelomorphic compounds.
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PMID:[Compound Hurler-Scheie disease in 3 siblings]. 393 47

We describe a 10 month old boy with alpha-mannosidosis who presented with recurrent bronchopneumonia and diarrhea. Facial coarsening, deafness, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, pectus carinatum and widespread Mongolian spots were distinguishing features. He also had mild skeletal deformities grouped together as 'dysostosis multiplex', and vacuolated lymphocytes on peripheral blood smear. These findings coupled with an abnormal urinary oligosaccharide pattern led to the suspicion of a lysosomal storage disease in the patient which proved to be alpha-mannosidosis. An exceptionally low level of alpha-mannosidase activity was subsequently found in serum and cultured skin fibroblasts. The patient's brother, who had died at the age of 10 months, had similar features. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case reported from Turkey.
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PMID:Alpha-mannosidosis: the first Turkish case. 779 63

We present a case of alpha-mannosidosis with its mutational analysis. She was referred to our hospital with the provisional diagnosis of mucolipidosis. She was the first child of second-degree relative parents. She had a coarse face with flat and wide nasal bridge, hepatosplenomegaly, umbilical hernia, lumbar gibbus, motor and mental retardation and deafness. On peripheral blood smear, lymphocytes revealed vacuoles and neutrophils contained some granules resembling Reilly bodies seen in mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS). Based on these findings, the diagnosis of alpha-mannosidosis was suspected. Her urine oligosaccharide chromatography showed an abnormal pattern with a heavy trisaccharide band. Enzyme studies on white cells confirmed a deficiency of alpha-mannosidase activity, which was 2.6 micromol/g/hr. Her DNA analysis showed a S453Y mutation.
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PMID:Alpha-mannosidosis and mutational analysis in a Turkish patient. 1271 72

Mucopolysaccharidosis VI (MPS VI) is a lysosomal storage disease with progressive multisystem involvement, associated with a deficiency of arylsulfatase B leading to the accumulation of dermatan sulfate. Birth prevalence is between 1 in 43,261 and 1 in 1,505,160 live births. The disorder shows a wide spectrum of symptoms from slowly to rapidly progressing forms. The characteristic skeletal dysplasia includes short stature, dysostosis multiplex and degenerative joint disease. Rapidly progressing forms may have onset from birth, elevated urinary glycosaminoglycans (generally >100 microg/mg creatinine), severe dysostosis multiplex, short stature, and death before the 2nd or 3rd decades. A more slowly progressing form has been described as having later onset, mildly elevated glycosaminoglycans (generally <100 microg/mg creatinine), mild dysostosis multiplex, with death in the 4th or 5th decades. Other clinical findings may include cardiac valve disease, reduced pulmonary function, hepatosplenomegaly, sinusitis, otitis media, hearing loss, sleep apnea, corneal clouding, carpal tunnel disease, and inguinal or umbilical hernia. Although intellectual deficit is generally absent in MPS VI, central nervous system findings may include cervical cord compression caused by cervical spinal instability, meningeal thickening and/or bony stenosis, communicating hydrocephalus, optic nerve atrophy and blindness. The disorder is transmitted in an autosomal recessive manner and is caused by mutations in the ARSB gene, located in chromosome 5 (5q13-5q14). Over 130 ARSB mutations have been reported, causing absent or reduced arylsulfatase B (N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfatase) activity and interrupted dermatan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate degradation. Diagnosis generally requires evidence of clinical phenotype, arylsulfatase B enzyme activity <10% of the lower limit of normal in cultured fibroblasts or isolated leukocytes, and demonstration of a normal activity of a different sulfatase enzyme (to exclude multiple sulfatase deficiency). The finding of elevated urinary dermatan sulfate with the absence of heparan sulfate is supportive. In addition to multiple sulfatase deficiency, the differential diagnosis should also include other forms of MPS (MPS I, II IVA, VII), sialidosis and mucolipidosis. Before enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with galsulfase (Naglazyme), clinical management was limited to supportive care and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Galsulfase is now widely available and is a specific therapy providing improved endurance with an acceptable safety profile. Prognosis is variable depending on the age of onset, rate of disease progression, age at initiation of ERT and on the quality of the medical care provided.
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PMID:Mucopolysaccharidosis VI. 2038 7

A 7-year-old boy presented with umbilical hernia and short stature. Growth retardation, recurrent upper respiratory tract infections and delayed developmental milestones were present from infancy. Umbilical hernia was diagnosed at the age of 5 years. On examination, he had short-trunk dwarfism, large head circumference, coarse facial features, joint stiffness, hepatosplenomegaly, and mild mental retardation. He had normal biochemical parameters, thyroid function tests and arterial blood gas analysis. Radiological evaluation showed that the child had Hunter syndrome with findings of J-shaped sellaturcica, proximal bulleting of metacarpals, spatulated ribs and anterior beaking of lumbar vertebrae. The second case was a 6-year-old girl with umbilical hernia, short stature, normal biochemistry and radiological findings of mucopolysaccharidosis. However, she also had corneal opacity; confirmed by slit-lamp examination, which led to the diagnosis of Hurler-Scheie syndrome. Enzymatic studies could not be done in both the cases, as they are not available at most centers.
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PMID:Short stature with umbilical hernia - Not always due to cretinism: A report of two cases. 2262 20

The article presents a clinical case of mucinous adenocarcinoma in vivo diagnosis of vermiform appendix with metastasis in the navel. Neoplasms vermiform appendix--an extremely rare tumor pathology: the total share of all malignant tumors are less than 1%. Mucinous carcinoma is a rare tumor, according to various authors the frequency of its occurrence ranges from 3 to 10% of all malignancies. By Localization mucinous carcinoma more frequently is found in the colon and rectum (about 20% of cases), ovary (5-10% of all malignant ovarian tumors), stomach, uterus and also in the pancreas (only about 2%). Metastasis in the navel is a very rare disease and is known as Sister Mary Joseph's Nodule, the primary site often localized in the digestive tract (52%), much less--in the female reproductive organs (28%), unspecified localization is approximately 15-20% of cases. The difficulty of diagnosis in the present case was that, in spite of life conducted during survey of the colon, organic pathology was not identified. The presence of hepatosplenomegaly and ascites at the initial examination gave cause to the erroneous diagnostic conception of the presence of liver cirrhosis. It is also was not paid due attention to the presence of changes in the umbilical ring, which were regarded as an umbilical hernia. To verify the diagnosis allowed the infiltrate biopsy of the umbilical region, followed by histological examination of the preparation and identification of a characteristic picture of mucinous cancers.
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PMID:[Difficulties in vivo diagnosis of mucinous adenocarcinoma of vermiform appendix with metastasis in the navel]. 2262 27


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