Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (splenomegaly)
9,873 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors have studied the case of a female patient with rheumatoid polyarthritis, who developed a lymphocytic proliferation in the blood, the marrow, and the liver, associated with a neutropenia. Several similar cases have been recently reported in the literature. The cellular proliferation is made of large granulous lymphocytes and the study of membrane markers enables to find the following homogeneous phenotype: E rosette+, CD8+, HNK-1+, FcR+, CD4-luminal diameter "divided by degrees - -, IgS-, HLA class II-. This lymphocytic sub-population produces little interleukin-2, responds weakly to mitogens (PHA, CON A, PWM), and inhibits the response of normal lymphocytes to the same mitogens. These lymphocytes have a weak natural killer activity but, on the contrary, develop a very strong cytotoxic activity which is antibody-dependent. Clinically, splenomegaly, anemia and infections are frequent and hepatomegaly or thrombopenia more rare. Adenopathies are never present. The evolution is chronic in nature and not very aggressive, although the lymphocytic proliferation is monoclonal in origin, as demonstrated in molecular biology studies. The neutropenia might be secondary to an inhibiting effect of lymphocytes on the granular precursors of the bone marrow. There is a definite association between this lympho-proliferative syndrome and rheumatoid polyarthritis, and this association appears to be different from the Felty's syndrome.
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PMID:[Characterization of chronic lymphocytic proliferation in a female patient having rheumatoid polyarthritis with neutropenia]. 361 55

LGL leukemia results from a chronic, clonal proliferation of LGL. Chronic neutropenia with recurrent bacterial infection and splenomegaly are common clinical manifestations. Rheumatoid arthritis coexists in some of these patients, who thus resemble patients with Felty syndrome. Other hematologic abnormalities that may occur include pure red-cell aplasia and adult-onset cyclic neutropenia. Lymphoid infiltration of bone marrow, splenic red pulp cords, and hepatic sinusoids is characteristic; lymph node and skin involvement are rare. Multiple serologic abnormalities are frequently present, including positive tests for rheumatoid factor and/or antinuclear antibody, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, and circulating immune complexes. Antineutrophil and antiplatelet antibodies are often present. Leukemic LGL exhibit phenotypic heterogeneity; the most common phenotype in our patients is CD2+, CD3+, CD8+, HNK-1+, CD16-. Despite markedly increased numbers of LGL, functional activity of the cells is usually decreased. The mechanism of cytopenias is uncertain: in pure red-cell aplasia, it appears to be due to suppressive effect on erythropoiesis by abnormal LGL, but in patients with chronic neutropenia it may be antibody-mediated. Although most patients appear to have a relatively benign clinical course, mortality from infections and progressive lymphoproliferation is substantial. Optimal therapy remains undefined. Some preliminary evidence suggests that LGL leukemia may be associated with infection with a retrovirus similar to HTLV-I. Although relatively rare, LGL leukemia is of interest because a better understanding of this disease process may contribute to our knowledge of autoimmune diseases, the immunoregulatory functions of LGL, and the mechanisms controlling normal hematopoiesis.
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PMID:Large granular lymphocyte leukemia. Report of 38 cases and review of the literature. 362 48

Two patients with classic rheumatoid arthritis developed severe neutropenia and increased numbers of large granular lymphocytes in the blood and bone marrow. These lymphocytes exhibited homogeneous surface membrane immunophenotypes of Leu5+, Leu11-, Leu4+, Leu3-, Leu2-, Leu7+ and Leu5+, Leu11+, Leu4+, Leu3-, Leu2+, Leu7-, respectively. In both patients, neutropenia was initially corrected with corticosteroid therapy; long-term improvement followed low-dose oral cyclophosphamide and methotrexate therapies. In these 2 patients and 12 previous patients with rheumatoid arthritis associated with expanded populations of immunophenotypically homogeneous large granular lymphocytes, neutropenia occurred in all 14, thrombocytopenia in 6, anemia in 7, and mild or moderate splenomegaly in 12. In contrast to Felty's syndrome, granular lymphocyte expansions in rheumatoid arthritis usually occur in older patients, may appear simultaneously with arthritis, and are usually associated with normal or elevated blood leukocyte counts. Mild hemocytopenias in these patients can often be managed with observation. Therapy with corticosteroids or immunosuppressive-cytotoxic drugs may be beneficial in more severe cases, but splenectomy is not recommended.
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PMID:Rheumatoid arthritis associated with expanded populations of granular lymphocytes. 394 76

Five patients with polyarthritis and neutropenia had numerous circulating large granular lymphocytes with a phenotype attributed to immature natural killer cells. All five had splenomegaly and recurrent infections. Arthritis was most prominent at the wrists and hands, and all patients were considered to have atypical cases of Felty's syndrome. Antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, antineutrophil antibodies, and immune complexes were detected in most patients. Bone marrow biopsies revealed a maturation arrest at the myelocyte stage and lymphoid infiltrates. Large lymphocytes with azurophilic cytoplasmic granules were found on peripheral blood smears and showed a characteristic reactivity pattern with monoclonal antibodies suggesting a natural killer cell lineage. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells showed less than normal natural killer activity against K562 target cells. Increased numbers of large granular lymphocytes with a phenotype of immature natural killer cells may be important in the pathogenesis of neutropenia, humoral immune disturbances, and synovitis in a subset of patients with Felty's syndrome.
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PMID:Polyarthritis and neutropenia associated with circulating large granular lymphocytes. 402 84

4 patients are described with rheumatoid arthritis, splenomegaly, neutropenia and an unusual proliferation of T cells in the blood and marrow. These patients are clinically similar to patients with classical Felty's syndrome but can be distinguished from them by staining blood and marrow mononuclear cells with a panel of monoclonal anti-T cell antibodies. The T cells from patients with T cell proliferations stain with UCHT1 (OKT3 equivalent) and UCHT4 (OKT8 equivalent but do not stain with a panel of OKT1-like antibodies. In 7 patients with classical Felty's syndrome there was no increase of UCHT4 cells in the blood and the large majority of T cells stained with OKT1-like antibodies. The marrows from the patients with T cell proliferations contain plentiful haemopoietic progenitor cells and it is probable that the T lymphocytes suppress their normal maturation. There was a poor response to splenectomy in 2 patients with T cell proliferations, and single cytotoxic drug therapy may be more appropriate when therapy is required. The literature is reviewed and it is suggested that the T cell proliferations may be secondary to the rheumatoid process.
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PMID:Unusual T cell proliferations and neutropenia in rheumatoid arthritis: comparison with classical Felty's syndrome. 633 54

With the purpose of detecting granulocyte-specific membrane-directed autoantibodies, IgG was isolated from 14 patients with Felty's syndrome, from 5 patients with rheumatoid arthritis associated with neutropenia, and from 3 rheumatoid factor positive patients with autoimmune neutropenia. By means of indirect immunofluorescence suspensions of leukocytes from healthy controls were tested for their ability to bind whole IgG fractions or F(ab')2 fragments of IgG isolated from the neutropenic patients. By this method, whole IgG preparations from neutropenic patients and normal controls were invariably found to bind to the surface of granulocytes and a minor proportion of lymphocytes. In contrast. F(ab')2 fragments of IgG from the neutropenic patients failed to bind to the surface of granulocytes. Both whole IgG fractions and F(ab')2 fragments displayed displayed antinuclear antibody activity ruling out the possibility of loss of antibody reactivity during the preparation of F(ab')2 fragments. The neutropenia seen in rheumatoid arthritis with or without splenomegaly thus does not seem to be induced by granulocyte-specific membrane-directed IgG autoantibodies, but rather by a non-specific attachment of IgG most probably in immune complex bound form to Fc gamma receptors on neutrophils which thereby acquire surface properties facilitating removal from the circulating blood cell pool.
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PMID:Lack of evidence for granulocyte specific membrane-directed autoantibodies in neutropenic cases of rheumatoid arthritis and in autoimmune neutropenia. 634 99

The occurrence of the triad of leukopenia, splenomegaly and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) (Felty's syndrome) during childhood has not been reported previously. We describe an adolescent with onset during childhood of seropositive, nodular, erosive, polyarticular RA in whom both leukopenia and splenomegaly were accompanying features. Neither nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents nor plasmapheresis were therapeutically beneficial, but low dose oral prednisone therapy resulted in both clinical and hematological improvement.
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PMID:Felty's syndrome in a child. 652 Aug 39

The authors report 15 cases of nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) of the liver observed in 10 women and 5 men during a 9 year period. Gastrointestinal bleeding due to ruptured esophageal varices revealed the liver disease in 11 cases. Hepatomegaly and splenomegaly were noted in 9 cases and ascites in 7. Anicteric cholestasis was demonstrated in 10 cases. Another disease, e. g. myelofibrosis and monoclonal gammapathy, was present in 11 patients. In 10 patients, portal diversion was performed; outcome being favorable with a follow-up of one to six years. The analysis of these cases and of the 113 previously published reports calls for the following comments: 1) In most cases, NRH is characterized by small-sized hepatocytic nodules scattered throughout the entire liver with no surrounding fibrosis; however this histological pattern may vary somewhat, with adjacent normal zones being found adjacent to typical cirrhotic fibrosis; although a precise morphometric study was not performed in our patients, obstruction of the tiny branches of intrahepatic portal veins was not observed. 2) Histological diagnosis of NRH is difficult and in most cases requires surgical biopsy specimens and specific coloration of the reticulin network. 3) NRH must be considered as a new cause of intrahepatic (sinusoidal or presinusoidal) portal hypertension and/or of chronic anicteric cholestasis. 4) A number of various conditions may be associated with NRH, the most frequent being Felty's syndrome and myeloproliferative disorders. 5) The pathogenesis of NRH remains unknown. 6) Portal diversion generally has a favorable outcome in this disease.
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PMID:[Nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver. Study of 15 cases and review of the literature]. 662 10

A patient with splenomegaly, severe granulocytopenia and a strongly positive rheumatoid factor test initially had no clinical evidence of rheumatoid arthritis. Leukopenia responded to splenectomy and did not recur during one year of follow up. Symmetrical metacarpophalangeal joint swelling developed after nine months. This case emphasizes that arthritis may occasionally be a late and minor manifestation of Felty's syndrome.
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PMID:Felty's syndrome presenting without arthritis. 668 Nov 43

Between 1956 and 1981, 306 splenectomies for hematologic diseases were performed at the UCLA Medical Center. Of these operations, more than 75% were performed for therapeutic reasons to control anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, or painful symptoms of splenomegaly. Of the 65 patients who had idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, 77% showed an excellent response, and of the 39 patients who had hereditary spherocytosis, 90% responded. Other diseases with predictably good response rates were autoimmune hemolytic anemias, Felty's syndrome, and hairy cell leukemia. Forty patients with Hodgkin's disease had splenectomies for diagnostic purposes the last 10 years. The overall morbidity and mortality were 24% and 6%, respectively, the most common complications being pneumonia, wound infections, and local postoperative bleeding, and the most common cause of death being sepsis. The review supports the thesis that in carefully selected patients, therapeutic splenectomy can have desirable palliative effects and that diagnostic splenectomy has a sufficiently low risk to warrant its consideration in patients with Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Splenectomy for hematologic disease. The UCLA experience with 306 patients. 673 25


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