Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
After a 3-year history of severe constipation, a 16-year-old girl required surgery to be relieved of impacted stools. Histologic examination showed ganglionitis in the myenteric plexus of the large bowel and ileum, whereas the submucosal plexus was spared. At this time, antineuronal nuclear antibodies (ANNA-1, anti-Hu) were found at high titer in the serum of the patient. One and a half years earlier, a paravertebral ganglioneuroblastoma had been removed. Histologic examination had shown undifferentiated neuroblasts and morphologically mature ganglion cells with both cell types embedded in an inflammatory infiltrate morphologically similar to the lymphoplasmocytic infiltration seen in the myenteric plexus. The patient's serum was found to bind to nuclei of mouse intestinal tract neurons, thus fulfilling defining criteria for ANNA-1. The serum also reacted with antigens of defined molecular weight in a Western blot, thus fulfilling defining criteria for anti-Hu. Expression of the Huantigen could be visualized in the nuclei of the patient's tumor cells by immunohistochemistry. These tests showed that an antitumor inflammatory response was the cause of the
bowel disease
. This is the first report of a tumor from the
neuroblastoma
group that caused paraneoplastic intestinal pseudoobstruction. Ganglionitis and subsequent aganglionosis are the hallmark of the morphologic diagnosis which cannot be obtained by suction biopsy in patients with intact submucosal plexus. Instead, serum testing for autoantibodies can reveal the etiology.
...
PMID:Autoaggressive inflammation of the myenteric plexus resulting in intestinal pseudoobstruction. 1032 94
In this report we describe an unusual case of
neuroblastoma
that presented with an initial manifestation of protein losing
enteropathy
secondary to intestinal lymphangiectasia.
...
PMID:Intestinal lymphangiectasia as a first manifestation of neuroblastoma. 1612 87
The term "Western diseases" refers to those conditions that are rare or absent in underdeveloped areas of the Third World and increase in frequency with adoptions of Western customs. In adults, they include such common conditions as coronary artery disease, essential hypertension, appendicitis, cholesterol gall stones, and colon cancer. The best examples of Western diseases in the pediatric population are asthma, allergies, appendicitis, and inflammatory bowel disease. Limited data from sub-Saharan Africa suggest other pediatric surgical conditions may fall into this category, including hypertrophic pyloric stenosis, gastroesophageal reflux, perirectal abscess, anal fissure, gastroschesis, and
neuroblastoma
. Existing theories for the origins of Western diseases have postulated a role for decreased dietary fiber, improved hygiene, fetal programming, and a protective effect of tropical
enteropathy
. How these factors might relate to the rise of appendicitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and possibly other common pediatric surgical diseases in industrialized societies remains poorly understood. Further research is needed to better define geographical differences in common pediatric surgical conditions and to investigate how genetic and environmental factors interact to modify risk of disease. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that give rise to Western diseases could lead to new therapeutic and prevention strategies for some of the most common pediatric surgical conditions in industrialized countries.
...
PMID:Western diseases: current concepts and implications for pediatric surgery research and practice. 1808 4
Neuroblastoma
and protein losing
enteropathy
(PLE) are diagnoses commonly seen by oncologists and gastroenterologists, respectively. The concurrence of these 2 entities is rare, and not well explained. We describe the sixth case of PLE in a child with
neuroblastoma
, and the first for which genetic information is available. Tumor DNA had a mutation in the PTPN11 gene, which has been described in
neuroblastoma
, and in Noonan syndrome-a diagnosis in which
neuroblastoma
and PLE independently have been reported. Constitutional DNA was normal. Genetic studies in future patients will be needed to support the link between
neuroblastoma
and PLE.
...
PMID:Somatic PTPN11 Mutation in a Child With Neuroblastoma and Protein Losing Enteropathy. 2918 14