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)

A retrospective survey of 700 marrow examinations in Papua New Guinea in a 2 1/2 year period has been carried out. Over half of the total came from the Port Moresby General Hospital. Anaemia and splenomegaly were the commonest indications. A disturbing proportion of the specimens were unsatisfactory for interpretation. Hypercellular marrows with erythroid hyperplasia were very common. Iron stores were absent or nearly absent in almost half of the evaluable specimens; this proportion rose to over 95% amongst pregnant or post-partum women with anaemia. Other relatively frequent findings included: a combination of features consistent with hypersplenism; mild degrees of eosinophilia and/or plasmacytosis; and mild degrees of megaloblastic changes. Haematological malignancies were found in over 10% of evaluable specimens. Of 611 assessable marrows from Melanesians, only 11 (1.8%) were entirely normal, but another 151 (24.7%) contained only minor abnormalities.
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PMID:A review of 700 bone marrow aspirations in Papua New Guinea. 26 75

Lethally irradiated mice transplanted with bone marrow cells infected with a novel recombinant retrovirus (murine stem cell virus-interleukin 6 [MSCV-IL-6]) bearing a mouse IL-6 gene developed a fatal myeloproliferative disease within 4 wk of engraftment. The hematologic manifestations of the syndrome included elevated peripheral leukocyte counts (up to 430 x 10(3) cells/mm3) with a predominance of neutrophilic granulocytes, microcytic anemia, and thrombocytosis or thrombocytopenia. The mice showed extensive neutrophil infiltration of the lungs, liver, and occasionally lymph nodes, plus splenomegaly resulting from enhanced splenic myelopoiesis (30-60-fold increase in progenitor numbers). Despite the chronic stimulation of neutrophil excess by IL-6, bone marrow from affected mice was capable of repopulating the hematopoietic tissues (bone marrow and spleen) of lethally irradiated hosts during repeated serial transplantation. In the longest documented case, the progeny of a single MSCV-IL-6-marked cell transferred the myeloproliferative disease to two secondary, four tertiary, and two quaternary recipients (the clone endured for a total of 72 wk). These results, demonstrating considerable proliferative longevity of the IL-6-producing cells, support an in vivo role of IL-6 in the maintenance of hematopoietic precursors. Dysregulated IL-6 production also had significant systemic effects. The mice displayed increased mesangial cell proliferation in the kidney, frequent liver abnormalities, and marked alterations in plasma protein levels. Unlike previous studies where constitutive expression of exogenous IL-6 genes resulted in lymphoproliferative disorders characterized by massive plasmacytosis, minimal plasma cell expansion occurred in the MSCV-IL-6 mice during the observation period. Potential explanations for the differences in disease phenotypes observed in the present and previous studies are different cell types expressing the exogenous IL-6 genes, higher sustained circulating levels of IL-6 achieved using the MSCV-IL-6 retroviral delivery system, and/or the premature death (3-15 wk after transplantation) of the MSCV-IL-6 mice before the onset of plasmacytosis. This animal model should prove useful for further investigation of the function of IL-6 in normal and abnormal hematopoiesis and in inflammatory responses.
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PMID:Transplantable myeloproliferative disease induced in mice by an interleukin 6 retrovirus. 140 59

Splenomegaly is a frequent clinical finding in multicentric angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (MAFH). However, pathologic descriptions of the spleen in MAFH have been reported in only a few cases. The author studied the spleens of seven patients with MAFH (two hyaline-vascular type and five plasma cell type) and reviewed the literature on the pathology of the spleen in this disorder. The histologic features of the seven spleens paralleled those of the lymph nodes. The two hyaline-vascular cases were characterized by white pulp hyperplasia with numerous atrophic and hyaline-vascular germinal centers, and rare plasma cells. In contrast, four plasma cell cases exhibited white pulp hyperplasia with a spectrum of germinal centers ranging from large, hyperplastic centers to typical hyaline-vascular centers, and prominent plasmacytosis. Marked white pulp fibrosis with severe lymphocyte depletion was seen in the fifth plasma cell case, and marginal zone fibrosis with prominent plasmacytosis was seen in one of the other plasma cell cases. The author concludes that the presence of altered germinal centers, white pulp or marginal zone fibrosis, and prominent plasmacytosis should suggest a diagnosis of MAFH in the spleen.
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PMID:Multicentric angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia. Pathology of the spleen. 334 87

Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL) is the most frequent AIDS related manifestation in homosexual men. From May 1984 to March 1985, 45 (38%) out of 117 intravenous (iv) drug abusers evaluated had PGL. Thirty-two were males and 13 females (median age 25 years). All patients referred to the frequent sharing of syringes. The median duration of lymphadenopathy was 3 months (range 3-60) with a median number of involved extrainguinal sites of 4 (range 2-7). Systemic symptoms and energy to skin tests were common, whereas splenomegaly and past infections were less frequently encountered. Hypergammaglobulinemia and an inverted T helper/suppressor ratio and lymphopenia were found in 78%, 43%, and 20% of the patients, respectively; the presence of HTLV-III antibodies was demonstrated in 12 (46%) of the 26 tested patients. Histologically, excised lymph nodes from 14 patients exhibited a marked follicular hyperplasia, diffuse plasmacytosis, and a conspicuous capillary proliferation. All patients are followed on a regular basis with clinical examination and laboratory tests; in no case has AIDS or a malignant lymphoma so far developed.
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PMID:Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy: clinical characteristics of a lymphadenopathy syndrome in intravenous drug abusers. 348 71

The authors describe five white patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma. Four patients were older than 65 years. All cases presented with a short clinical course and advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. Clinical manifestations included asthenia, weight loss, peripheral and abdominal lymphadenopathy. One case showed tonsillar involvement and subcutaneous lymph node enlargement; hepatomegaly was present in four cases, two of them with splenomegaly. Only one case presented peripheral lymphocytosis and antibodies to human T-leukemia virus. Although three cases were classified as diffuse mixed lymphomas and two as poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphomas, there were some common characteristics: diffuse infiltration by different proportions of small lymphoid cells and large immunoblasts, some of them multinucleated and similar to Reed-Sternberg cells; accumulation of histiocytes, plasmacytosis, eosinophilia, venular proliferation and compartmentalization were also found. Bone marrow infiltration was observed in two patients. Results of monoclonal markers showed four cases to be OKT4+ and the other OKT8+. The morphologic and immunologic characteristics of these patients were typical and similar to those reported from other geographical areas.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma. A clinical, histologic, and immunologic study of five cases. 387 77

Dogs with acute Ehrlichia canis infection showed the established clinical features of acute ehrlichiosis and had thrombocytopenia, anemia, increased serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase activity, and decreased total serum protein and albumin concentrations during the first weeks after infection, and increasing gamma globulin concentrations after the third week. Gross lesions in hemic and lymphoreticular tissues were transient lymphadenomegaly, splenomegaly, and increased red long-bone marrow. Lymphoreticular hyperplasia in the paracortical area of lymph nodes and in the splenic red pulp occurred during the second week of infection. Later, small lymphocytes were replaced by medium-sized lymphocytes and plasma cells. Activity of germinal centers increased initially, as shown by numerous mitotic figures and macrophages, but diminished later, and the follicles blended with interfollicular and paracortical tissue because of a decrease in small lymphocytes in the mantle layer. We saw splenic hemorrhages near the perifollicular sinus, and vasculitis, most often phlebitis, in the kidney between weeks 2 and 4. Multifocal reticuloendothelial hyperplasia occurred in the liver during the early stage and injured adjacent hepatocytes by compression. Lesions typical of ehrlichiosis in these dogs were interstitial pneumonia, subendothelial aggregates of mononuclear cells in pulmonary blood vessels, renal periglomerular and perivenular plasmacytosis, hemopoietic hyperplasia, and perivascular cuffs of lymphocytes and plasma cells in many organs.
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PMID:Acute experimental canine ehrlichiosis. I. Sequential reaction of the hemic and lymphoreticular systems. 746 72

Humans chronically infected with Schistosoma mansoni most commonly present with the relatively asymptomatic intestinal form of the disease, whereas a small minority develop hepatosplenism characterized by severe hepatic disease with portal hypertension. Investigation of hypotheses describing the pathogenic mechanisms underlying the clinical forms of the human disease has been limited by the absence of an animal model that predictably develops such a spectrum of disease. We report that inbred male CBA/J mice that are chronically infected with S. mansoni develop two distinct syndromes, hypersplenomegaly syndrome (HSS) and moderate splenomegaly syndrome (MSS). Pathologically and immunologically, MSS and HSS remarkably parallel the intestinal and hepatosplenic clinical forms, respectively, in humans. HSS affects approximately 20% of these mice and consists of massive splenomegaly, ascites, thymic atrophy, severe anemia, and cachexia. The remaining majority of mice with MSS develop moderate splenomegaly only. Histopathological features of HSS include 1) relatively extensive hepatic fibrosis and granulomatous inflammation, 2) splenic congestion, 3) lymph node plasmacytosis, and 4) worms and eggs in the pulmonary vasculature. Immunologically, the idiotypes present on antisoluble egg antigen antibodies from HSS mice are distinct from those from mice with acute infections or the chronic MSS infection. These idiotypic differences are similar to those observed in patients with intestinal and hepatosplenic forms of the disease and may have regulatory importance. Investigation of the cellular and molecular events that lead to the development of MSS and HSS may advance current understanding of the pathogenesis of the clinical forms of chronic schistosomiasis in humans.
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PMID:Two distinct pathological syndromes in male CBA/J inbred mice with chronic Schistosoma mansoni infections. 845 34

A 62 year-old man had fever, splenomegaly, systemic lymphadenopathy and palpable petechiae. Laboratory studies showed leukocytosis (10,200/microliters) with plasma cells (23%) and polyclonal gammopathy. Southern blot analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells showed no rearrangement of immunoglobulin genes, indicating polyclonal plasmacytosis in peripheral blood. A diagnosis of Castleman's disease was made by the cervical lymph node biopsy, which showed onion-skin structures in the germinal centers and plasmacytosis in the interfollicular region. A skin biopsy of the purpura lesion disclosed leukocytoclastic vasculitis. This is an unusual case of Castleman's disease presenting plasmacytosis in peripheral blood and leukocytoclastic vasculitis.
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PMID:[Polyclonal plasmacytosis in peripheral blood and leukocytoclastic vasculitis in Castleman's disease]. 957 45

The candidate proto-oncogene BCL3 was isolated through its involvement in the t(14;19) found in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and other B-cell neoplasms. As a member of the I kappaB family, BCL3 plays a role in the immune response by interactions with the NF-kappaB family of transcription factors. In order to study the role of BCL3 overexpression in lymphoid malignancies, we generated five lines of E mu-BCL3 transgenic mice. Transgenic animals develop normally but show splenomegaly and an accumulation of mature B cells in lymph nodes, bone marrow and peritoneal cavity. A hyperresponsive immune system is suggested by the follicular hyperplasia and plasmacytosis in lymph nodes of unimmunized animals, increased incidence of antibodies to self-antigens, and a heightened response to cross-linking of surface IgM. Statistically significant decreases in serum IgM and IgG3, but an increase in IgG1 and IgA were also observed. No lymphoid neoplasms have been identified in transgenic animals. The expansion of B cells in vivo is consistent with the overexpression of BCL3 as being one step in the multi-step process of leukemogenesis. The phenotype also suggests that BCL3 plays a part in B cell proliferation and isotype switching.
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PMID:Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and altered immunoglobulin production in BCL3 transgenic mice. 962 May 50

Splenomegaly is uncommon in myelodysplasia (MDS) and, although cytopenias may be severe, therapeutic splenectomy is rarely performed. We report the histologic, histochemical, and immunophenotypic findings of nine cases of surgical splenectomy and four postmortem spleens from MDS patients. Four histologic patterns were identified: one dominated by erythrophagocytosis, one characterized by red pulp plasmacytosis, one with extramedullary hematopoiesis as the only salient finding, and one with marked red pulp expansion caused by a monocytic proliferation. Wright-Giemsa and histochemical stains were performed on touch preparations in three cases and played a critical role in the precise subclassification of one MDS patient's hematologic disorder, which ultimately proved to be chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. Splenectomy led to sustained improvement of cytopenias in three cases, but did not eliminate transfusion dependence for the remaining patients. Three splenectomy cases exhibited clustered Leder-negative mononuclear elements: two of these patients experienced disease progression to refractory anemia with excess blasts in transformation or acute myelogenous leukemia during post-splenectomy follow-up, whereas none of the three splenectomy patients without clustered mononuclear elements did. We conclude that splenomegaly in MDS usually reflects the sequelae of dyspoiesis rather than evidence of a proliferative phase, that clustering of Leder-negative large cells may correlate with either a substantial monocytic component or, possibly, increased risk of disease progression, and that the spleen can provide diagnostic as well as prognostic information in MDS patients with splenomegaly.
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PMID:Splenic pathology in myelodysplasia: a report of 13 cases with clinical correlation. 977 88


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