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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Congenital cutaneous candidiasis (CCC) is a rare disease acquired by an ascending route, liable to affect the offspring of pregnant women suffering from vulvovaginitis. The cutaneous lesions are present at birth or within the first hours of life. Some infants may present with respiratory distress or clinical signs of
sepsis
during the first 2 days of life. We report four new cases of CCC, three of which presented transient respiratory distress and clinical signs of
sepsis
with
hepatosplenomegaly
. The evolution was favourable in all three cases with topical and oral therapy. We emphasize the self-limited character of this disease, although preterm infants may be at risk of systemic spread. Only one infant presented paronychia as a late complication.
...
PMID:Congenital cutaneous candidiasis: report of four cases and review of the literature. 204 6
We report a patient with the syndrome of large granular lymphocytes in whom the initial clinical features were polyarthritis,
hepatosplenomegaly
and neutropenia. Relative lymphocytosis was also demonstrated at the expense of a subpopulation with morphology and surface markers characteristic of large granular lymphocytes (CD2+, CD8+, CD16+ and HNK-1+). After 6 months of asymptomatic course, without changes in clinical or laboratory data, the patient died from an acute abdomen with mesenteric ischemia of different likely causes as suggested by necropsy data (multivisceral diffuse infiltrate by large granular lymphocytes, systemic vasculitis and Clostridium
sepsis
). The association between this syndrome and systemic vasculitis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Vasculitis associated with proliferation of large granular lymphocytes]. 225 May 16
Severe hepatotoxicity from phenobarbital occurred in an infant boy who had a complicated illness with chronic bilateral subdural hematomas and
sepsis
. Skin rash began after 2 weeks of treatment, and signs of hepatocellular failure developed 3 weeks after phenobarbital had been started. Signs of severe liver disease included elevated aminotransferases, conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, significant coagulopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly
and ascites. Other features of this adverse drug reaction were unremitting fever, leukocytosis with eosinophilia and atypical lymphocytosis, and proteinuria. Sepsis, viral hepatitis, and metabolic liver disease were excluded. The child was on no other medication and had been previously well. In-vitro rechallenge of the patient's lymphocytes with cytochrome P-450 generated metabolites of phenobarbital showed extensive cytotoxicity compared to control. These data support the hypothesis that a defect in drug detoxification was responsible for the child's susceptibility to this drug hepatotoxicity.
...
PMID:Phenobarbital hepatotoxicity in an 8-month-old infant. 233 96
A case of large granular lymphocyte (LGL) leukemia with ascites and CNS involvement was reported. A 39-year-old Japanese female was admitted to our hospital in March, 1987 because of high fever. Her clinical and hematological features were characterized by generalized lymphadenopathy, marked
hepatosplenomegaly
, high serum LDH level (3,257 mU/ml), marked leukocytosis (71,000/microliters) with 74% LGLs and bone marrow infiltration with 57% LGLs. Despite of chemotherapy, ascites, retroperitoneal mass and CNS involvement developed and she died of
sepsis
after three months. LGLs from the patient's blood, marrow and ascites, stained positively for acid phosphatase. These LGLs were E rossete+ and Fc (IgG) receptor+ and were positive for CD2, OKM1, HLA-DR and Leu11, but were negative for CD1, CD3, CD4, CD8 and Leu7 as well as for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity. The natural killer activity against K562 target cells was high and was significantly augmented after stimulation by recombinant human interleukin 2. These LGLs also demonstrated normal antibody-dependent cytotoxicity activity. Cytogenetic study on bone marrow cells and ascitic cells revealed clonal chromosomal abnormalities. These clinical, hematological, immunological and cytogenetic findings suggest that this patient had a neoplastic proliferation of natural killer cells.
...
PMID:[CD3-, OKM1+, Leu7-, Leu11+ large granular lymphocyte leukemia with ascites and CNS involvement]. 247 53
An eight-year-old child from Zaire died in Sweden in 1982 after a clinical course compatible with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In 1975, at the age of 5 months, the infant had an acute viral infection with a rash; this illness was followed by a chronic cough. During the course of the disease he had recurrent
septicemia
, fever (frequently with miliary lung infiltrates), disseminated lymphadenopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly
, candidiasis, and diarrhea. Late in the illness the child developed lethal disseminated disturbances of the central nervous system. Immunologic investigations revealed a pronounced hypergammaglobulinemia, normal C3 but low C4 values, decreased number of T-lymphocytes, and decreased lymphocyte stimulation with T-cell and B-cell mitogens. Samples of serum taken in 1981 and 1982 were analyzed and found to be positive for antibodies to HTLV-III virus. The course of the disease in this child was more prolonged than most of the pediatric cases described earlier. It is likely that this child developed AIDS early in 1975, long before the AIDS epidemic was apparent in the United States.
...
PMID:Early case of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in a child from Zaire. 301 6
We report the clinical features of 7 men (mean age 22 years, range 7-53 years) with congenital hepatic fibrosis (CHF). Five patients presented with variceal bleeding and/or
hepatosplenomegaly
due to portal hypertension. Cholangitis was the presenting symptom in the other 2 cases. Diagnosis was established by histological examination of a surgical wedge biopsy (4 patients) or needle biopsy (3 patients). A portal-systemic shunting was performed in 6 patients, three times prophylactically. None of the 5 survivors developed chronic hepatic encephalopathy. Recurrent bouts of cholangitis with
septicemia
and hepatic abscesses were a major complication in 5 patients with a fatal outcome in 2 cases. Six patients had associated small and large cysts in the cortex of both kidneys, compatible with adult-type polycystic disease. One patient developed terminal renal insufficiency. In 3 patients kidney function remained normal at a mean follow-up time of 7.5 years (range 1-18 years). In 2 families (4 cases) an autosomal dominant inheritance of renal disease was suggested. This study demonstrates that CHF is a rare cause of portal hypertension in late childhood and in adults. Cholangitis is a severe and frequently fatal complication. Association with a variety of congenital renal abnormalities is very frequent. However, the association with adult-type polycystic disease as reported in 4 cases is very rare.
...
PMID:Congenital hepatic fibrosis. 341 Nov 2
We present the clinical, pathologic, and metabolic findings of an adult woman with debilitating coronary artery disease and
hepatosplenomegaly
who was discovered to have multiorgan infiltration by sea blue histiocytes. A diagnosis of sea blue histiocyte (SBH) syndrome was made and no further workup performed. The patient suffered from progressive heart failure and
sepsis
following coronary artery bypass surgery and died 9 months after presentation. Tissues examined at autopsy showed pronounced infiltrates of both granular sea blue histiocytes and foamy, vacuolated histiocytes, which were morphologically compatible with Niemann-Pick cells. Ultrastructural examination of these cells revealed lamellar myelin-like figures as described in Niemann-Pick (N-P) disease. Fibroblast enzyme assay studies and liver lipid analyses performed after the patient's death revealed pronounced sphingomyelinase deficiency and a lipid profile diagnostic of N-P disease, type B. This case adds further support to the claim that some cases of apparent SBH syndrome actually represent a type of N-P disease.
...
PMID:Adult Niemann-Pick disease masquerading as sea blue histiocyte syndrome: report of a case confirmed by lipid analysis and enzyme assays. 407 13
Twenty five cases of Burkitt's lymphoma in Thai children were diagnosed at the Department of Pediatrics, Siriraj Hospital during the period of 13 years (January 1969 to April 1982). Males were more affected than females with the ratio of 1.7:1. The age ranged from 2 to 11 years with the median age of 4-5 years. The most common clinical manifestations were abdominal mass associated with nausea vomiting, abdominal pain, anorexia, weight loss and generalized lymphadenopathy which occurred in 50-60% of cases. Additional symptoms and signs included anemia,
hepatosplenomegaly
, edema and pleural effusion. Jaw tumor was found in only 37.5% of the patients. Definite diagnosis depended on the characteristic starry sky appearance of the lymph node biopsy or section of abdominal mass. In advance cases, the tumor cells could be discovered in bone marrow aspiration, ascitic fluid pleural fluid and cerebrospinal fluid. The typical blast cells were detected in the peripheral blood in 4 cases. Antibody to Epstein-Barr virus could be detected in almost all cases with high titers in some cases. Most patients responded very well to local irradiation and chemotherapy with prednisolone plus cyclophosphamide and vincristine or methotrexate. However, relapse occurred rapidly and 80% of the patients died within 3 months after diagnosis with the median survival of only 1 month. Five cases expired early before any specific treatment. The main causes of death were disease,
sepsis
, excessive bleeding and hyperkalemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Burkitt's lymphoma in Thai children: an analysis of 25 cases. 631 66
Histiocytic medullary reticulosis (HMR) was originally defined as a neoplastic disorder. Some cases reported as HMR have been characterized by a systemic proliferation of mature histiocytes showing hemophagocytosis, bone marrow necrosis, pancytopenia, hepatitis, and coagulopathy. Clinically, these patients have fever and constitutional symptoms and often have
hepatosplenomegaly
and lymphadenopathy. Although there is a high mortality rate, this process appears to be reactive and has been associated with active viral infection. Similar cases have been briefly described that were associated with other agents or disease processes, but concomitant viral infections were not excluded. Three characteristic examples of this hemophagocytic syndrome that were associated with bacterial
sepsis
are described. Active infection by those viruses that have previously been associated with the syndrome was excluded. It appears that the hemophagocytic syndrome may be associated with various types of active disseminated infections.
...
PMID:Bacteria-associated hemophagocytic syndrome. 649 70
Fourteen infants with clinical and laboratory features of an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome were identified in a single metropolitan area from November 1980 to July 1983. Patients were predominantly of Haitian parentage, although two cases occurred in offspring of non-Haitian intravenous drug abusers. Only one patient had received a blood transfusion before the development of clinical findings. The predominant clinical findings included failure to thrive, persistent infection of the oral mucosa by Candida albicans, chronic pulmonary infiltrates,
hepatosplenomegaly
, lymphadenopathy, and diarrhea. Immunologic studies showed most of the infants to have inverted ratios of T-cell subsets, greatly increased immunoglobulin levels, and circulating immune complexes. Lymphopenia was not common, as it is in adult patients. Infectious agents responsible for opportunistic infections in this series included Pneumocystis carinii, herpesviruses, particularly cytomegalovirus, and C. albicans. Bacterial infections were common, and gram-negative
sepsis
was the major cause of death in the seven infants who have died. At autopsy, two infants had disseminated lymphadenopathic Kaposi's sarcoma. These observations suggest the likelihood of transplacental, perinatal, or postnatal transmission of an as yet unidentified infectious agent that causes this disease.
...
PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in infants. 660 81
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