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

Congenital hepatic fibrosis (CHF) is a recognized cause of portal hypertension with oesophageal varices, gastro-intestinal haemorrhage and cholangitis in children without significant impairment of hepatic or renal function. This report describes the varied clinical presentation of CHF as seen at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH & RC) and emphasizes the clinical patterns that should enable a pediatrician to consider the diagnosis. Fourteen children with CHF were diagnosed between 1981 and 1988. The age at presentation ranged from 1.8-14 years (mean: 7.5 years); clinical manifestations at diagnosis were splenomegaly (12), hepatomegaly (11), failure to thrive (10), marked abdominal distention (4), and fever (4). Liver function tests were normal except for high alkaline phosphatase. Eight patients had polycystic kidneys confirmed on ultrasound examination. Upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy showed oesophageal varices of variable severity in all eight patients examined. Splenoportography revealed splenic vein occlusion in one patient. One patient died within days of admission with convulsions, coma, and aspiration pneumonia. One patient was lost to follow-up. The remaining 12 patients are all alive and receive regular follow-up. Two patients required splenorenal shunt. In view of the prevalence of consanguinity in Saudi Arabia, the diagnosis of CHF should be considered in children with hepatomegaly despite normal liver function tests, and particularly in those with renal abnormalities and/or evidence of portal hypertension.
...
PMID:Congenital hepatic fibrosis in Saudi Arabia. 178 58

A 57-year-old woman with congenital syphilis had a productive cough, fever, cholecystolithiasis, and paralytic ileus. She had a 30-year history of recurrent bronchitis accompanied by yellowish serous sputum. A chest radiograph showed bilateral infiltrates resulting from aspiration pneumonia, and a reduction in volume of the right middle and right lower lobes. After recovering from paralytic ileus, she still had fever and biliptysis. Bronchoscopy revealed bile filling the right basal bronchi. Emergency laparotomy and throacotomy revealed a gall stone, splenomegaly, marked atrophy of the right lobe of the liver, and adhesion between the right pleura and the diaphragm. A T-tube cholangiogram showed that the right hepatic duct communicated with the right basal bronchus. Despite ligation of the right hepatic duct, biliptysis continued. The patient died due to rapidly progressing hepatorenal failure. Syphilis gummosa due to congenital syphilis was suspected as a cause of the bronchobiliary fistula, but was not confirmed pathologically. The surgical specimen showed only nonspecific fibrosis with calcification. Bronchobiliary fistula is rare in Japan; we know of only 6 other reported cases.
...
PMID:[Bronchobiliary fistula]. 874 36

Wilson's disease (WD) has varied phenotypic presentations. Here we report the case of a 16-year-old boy who presented with a history of multiple pathological fractures, severe joint deformities, hepatic dysfunction, cognitive decline and limb dystonia. On examination, the patient had pinched out facies, pallor and leukonychia totalis. Bilateral Kayser Fleischer (KF) ring was present. Musculoskeletal examination revealed pectus carinatum, bilateral genu valgus and gun-stock deformity of the left elbow joint. Splenomegaly and moderate ascites were present. Neurological examination revealed mild rigidity and intermittent episodes of dystonic posturing of all four limbs. On this basis a diagnosis of WD with dystonia with cirrhosis of liver with portal hypertension with renal tubular acidosis with renal rickets was thought likely. Investigations confirmed the diagnosis. The patient was started on treatment but he did not improve. He suffered aspiration pneumonia during his hospital stay and succumbed to the illness.
...
PMID:Pathological fractures as an initial presentation of Wilson's disease. 2357 56