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:C0038002 (
splenomegaly
)
9,873
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The thymic region of neonatal Swiss mice was exposed to doses varying from 1000 R to 2000 R of X-irradiation. The animals did not show any signs of wasting syndrome up to 6 months after irradiation. At this time hyperplasia of the thymus with an associated lymphocytosis was evident in irradiated animals. Antibody production to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) was not affected. However, at 12 months post-irradiation the animals showed signs of
wasting
disease with a progressive increase in their numbers at 18 and 24 months of age. The percentage incidence of animals with
wasting
disease was dose dependent. At this stage in the majority of the animals with the disease the thymus showed varying degrees of atrophy along with
splenomegaly
. There were no significant differences in the number of lymphocytes but the number of granulocytes showed a substantial increase. This was more evident in animals exposed to 2000 R to the thymic region. Though one observed a lowered ability to form antibodies to bovine serum albumin (BSA) with advancing age, the thymic irradiation did not affect the immune response to BSA even in animals manifesting
wasting
disease. An interesting observation has been the development of a severe loss of muscle power and tone in the hind limbs in a large majority of animals.
...
PMID:Effects of neonatal thymic exposure to high doses of X-irradiation. 31 96
A variant strain of Rauscher leukemia virus (RLV-A) obtained from a transplantable murine monomyelocytic leukemia causes a disease characterized by frank anemia,
wasting
, hepatosplenomegaly and erythroblastosis. The involvement of platelets in this disease are reported here. The RLV-A induced a severe thrombocytopenia (25 percent of control level) at the terminal stage of disease. This thrombocytopenia was not associated with disseminated intravascular coagulopathy since the prothrombin times were always within normal limits. The partial thromboplastin time was elevated in the terminal stages of disease and was found to be associated with factor deficiencies, possibly owing to the presence of anti-factor antibodies, in the intrinsic coagulation pathway, especially factor VIII. Further, splenectomy did not abolish the thrombocytopenia, since splenectomized, virally infected animals also developed severe thrombocytopenia (29 percent of control levels). The ensuing
splenomegaly
during progression of disease was not the cause of the thrombocytopenia. A physiological response to the severe thrombocytopenia was the production of larger size platelets. At terminal stages of the disease, platelet volume increased to 4.2 mu 3 (normal is 3.0 mu 3). An increase in platelet volume was also observed in splenectomized, virally infected animals. Electron microscopy indicated that these circulating platelets contained c-type viral particles. Viral infection was associated with decreased life span of circulating platelets, as measured by 75Se-methionine at mid and terminal stages of the disease. Our results suggest that direct viral infection of platelets and/or megakaryocytes with subsequent cell lysis is a possible cause of the observed thrombocytopenia observed in RLVA-induced disease and may also occur in other retrovirally-induced diseases.
...
PMID:Thrombocytopenia in a retrovirally-induced murine erythroleukemia. 145 28
Reactive hemophagocytic syndrome (RHS) or hemophagocytic histiocytosis is a disease with anatomo-pathological features of systemic proliferation of non-neoplastic histiocytes, with prominent hemophagocytosis, associated to infection of other diseases. The cases of three patients afflicted with RHS are presented. 2 of them secondary to a brucellosis and the other of unknown origin. The clinical features were similar: high fever,
wasting
, and
splenomegaly
. Pancytopenia existed together with liver disfunction, CID and hyperferremia. Marrow infiltration of reactive histiocytes with important hemophagocytic phenomenon, demonstrated by aspirated and bone marrow biopsies, were observed in all cases. Studies of the immunology system were performed, showing changes in two of them. All of them fully recovered after antibiotic treatment.
...
PMID:[The reactive hemophagocytic syndrome associated with infection: a study of 3 cases]. 210 68
1. Laennec's lung disease lasted for at least 20 years. Its stigmata included chronic cough, sputum production and intermittent wheeze. 2. Laennec had long term stigmata commonly associated with chronic bronchiectasis, sinusitis, physical frailty, and short stature (5ft 2in). 3. Chronic diarrhoea of at least 20 years duration is not strongly associated with tuberculosis. 4. During Laennec's last illness his physicians equivocated as to whether he had respiratory disease at all. Bronchial breathing at the apex, if indeed present, could have been caused by compensatory emphysema secondary to middle lobe bronchiectasis rather than to active tuberculosis. 5. Laennec did not have haemoptysis in his final illness. 6. Laennec's last illness, a
wasting
illness characterised by intermittent fevers, cardiac murmur, and persistent tachycardia followed a dental manipulation. The painful "abdominal abscess" noted by Laennec's colleagues may actually have been
splenomegaly
. These features suggest endocarditis. The cardiac murmurs associated with pulmonary hypertension secondary to bronchiectasis are not usually audible at a remote distance from the patient. Endocarditis was a disease largely unknown to physicians of the early 19th century before Osler clarified its pathology in the 1880s.
...
PMID:Rene Laennec: his brilliant life and tragic early death. 266 72
Three repeated cross-sectional surveys were undertaken among children (1 month to 15 years) of a rural community in southeastern Tanzania. The study was part of a longitudinal project on the interactions among nutrition, parasitic infections and immunity within a primary health care programme emphasizing village health workers. All children underwent interviews and parasitological, anthropometric, anamnestic and clinical examinations. Out of 550-590 children examined each year, a cohort of 170 children could be followed for three consecutive years. Malaria was holo- to hyperendemic in the community, P. falciparum accounting for greater than 90% of the infections. The parasite and spleen rates were 88% and 67%, respectively, and the average
enlarged spleen
index was 2.0 among children from 2-9 years in 1982. Transmission of malaria was high and stable as indicated by a parasite rate of 80% among infants between 1 month and 1 year during the whole period of study. G. lamblia, hookworm (N. americanus), Strongyloides spp. and Schistosoma haematobium were highly prevalent and annual incidence rates were high, while Entamoeba histolytica, Ascaris and Trichuris were of minor importance. Prevalence and incidence of parasitic infections did not differ by sex. Multiparasitism was very frequent and less than 11% of all children were parasite-free in each year. Not a single child remained parasite-free for three consecutive years. An anthropometric assessment showed a high degree of stunting (35-71%) and a substantial proportion of
wasting
(3-20%). The growth potential was normal in girls and boys during the whole period of study. There were indications that malaria was the main contributory factor to growth retardation among young children. Hookworm infection did not significantly affect the packed-cell volume of the children, probably owing to the low intensity of infection. Due to the multiparasitism and the lack of parasite-free individuals, single-parasite and single-nutrient effects were difficult to unravel. A latrine campaign followed by a single mass treatment against hookworm (single oral dose of albendazole, 400 mg) and/or G. lamblia (single oral dose of ornidazole, 40 mg/kg) only temporarily affected the prevalence and incidence of G. lamblia, and only resulted in a decrease in the intensity of hookworm infections up to six months after the interventions. As the effects of the latrine campaign and a single mass treatment on the parasite load were only transient, no sustained impact on nutritional variables was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Longitudinal study on the health status of children in a rural Tanzanian community: parasitoses and nutrition following control measures against intestinal parasites. 289 Dec 67
The possibility was examined that the toxicity induced in mice by Actinomadura madurae, 'Streptomyces pelletieri' and Nocardia brasiliensis was due to lipid and cell-wall constituents. Mice were inoculated intraperitoneally with heat-killed bacteria, lipid extracts and cell-wall preparations emulsified in mineral oil: toxicity was evaluated by recording weight loss and deaths. Killed cells and cell-wall preparations of all three actinomycetes produced a pronounced loss of body weight, tissue necrosis,
splenomegaly
, a granulomatous inflammation and sometimes death. Mice inoculated with lipid extracts from A. madurae and 'S. pelletieri' neither died nor showed toxic effects, but mice injected with lipids isolated from N. brasiliensis did suffer toxic effects. They showed more marked
wasting
symptoms than observed after inoculation of heat-killed bacteria or of the cell-wall preparation.
...
PMID:Mouse toxicity induced by lipids and cell walls isolated from actinomycetes. 379 60
A syndrome of acquired immunodeficiency within a group of outdoor-housed rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with unusually high mortality has been identified at the California Primate Research Center. The cause of death for most of the affected animals included septicemia and/or chronic diarrhea with
wasting
, often complicated by other problems. In many cases, multiple or unusual infectious agents were isolated or recognized, including cytomegalovirus, Cryptosporidium spp., and Candida albicans. Septicemias due to usually innocuous agents such as Staphylococcus epidermidis and Alcaligenes faecalis were seen. Two animals developed cutaneous fibrosarcomas. Affected animals had generalized lymphadenopathy and
splenomegaly
, with depletion of T-cell populations, initially follicular hyperplasia followed by depletion, and absence of plasma cells. This spontaneous disease syndrome in nonhuman primates has similarities to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans, providing an animal model for the study of the complex factors modulating the immune system.
...
PMID:The pathology of an epizootic of acquired immunodeficiency in rhesus macaques. 669 18
The syndrome of fever,
wasting
, and
enlarged spleen
or lymph glands resulting from visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is usually fatal unless treated. While VL is endemic in parts of southern Sudan, it was first reported in Western Upper Nile (WUN) during a confirmed epidemic in 1989 among a population of mainly Nuer and Dinka people who had no immunity. Civil war has been a major contributing factor to the continuation and spread of the epidemic, and continues to impede the provision of treatment, data collection, and control measures. The first of three clinics to treat VL was established in WUN in 1989. Data have since been collected in seven retrospective surveys in villages and among patients. Survey death rates were used to estimate mortality from VL and excess mortality above expected levels. Mortality was high at all ages. The overall death rate is estimated at 38-57% since the epidemic started in 1984, and up to 70% in the most affected areas. Approximately 100,000 deaths, among approximately 280,000 people in the epidemic area, may be attributable to VL.
...
PMID:The epidemic of visceral leishmaniasis in western Upper Nile, southern Sudan: course and impact from 1984 to 1994. 892 68
A unique experimental model has been developed for dissecting the integrity of CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity to a persistent gammaherpesvirus under conditions of CD4+ T cell deficiency. Respiratory challenge of major histocompatibility complex class II -/- and +/+ C57BL/6J mice with the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) leads to productive infection of both lung and adrenal epithelial cells. Virus titers peak within 5-10 d, and are no longer detected after day 15. Persistent, latent infection is established concurrently in splenic and lymph node B cells, with higher numbers of MHV-68+ lymphocytes being found in all lymphoid sites analyzed from the +/+ mice concurrent with the massive, but transient
splenomegaly
that occurred only in this group. From day 17, however, the numbers of infected B lymphocytes were consistently higher in the -/- group, while the frequency of this population diminished progressively in the +/+ controls. Infectious MHV-68 was again detected in the respiratory tract and the adrenals of the -/- (but not the +/+) mice from day 22 after infection. The titers in these sites rose progressively, with the majority of the -/- mice dying between days 120 and 133. Even so, some CD8+ effectors were still functioning as late as 100 d after infection. Depletion of CD8+ T cells at this stage led to higher virus titers in the -/- lung, and to the development of
wasting
in some of the -/- mice. Elimination of the CD8+ T cells from the +/+ group (day 80) increased the numbers of MHV-68+ cells in the spleen, but did not reactivate the infection in the respiratory tract. The results are consistent with the interpretation that CD8+ T cell-mediated control of this persistent gammaherpesvirus is progressively lost in the absence of the CD4+ T cell subset. This parallels what may be happening in AIDS patients who develop Kaposi's sarcoma and various Epstein Barr virus associated disease processes.
...
PMID:Progressive loss of CD8+ T cell-mediated control of a gamma-herpesvirus in the absence of CD4+ T cells. 906 46
Mother-to-child rates of HIV transmission are high in Africa. Findings are presented on 62 HIV-positive infants admitted to the Missionaries of Charity Orphanage, Addis Ababa, who were followed from July 25, 1991, to July 30, 1995. The infants were provided with regular clinical examination and treatment by a physician, as well as the monitoring of their HIV serostatus every 3 months until age 18 months and every year thereafter. Among infants over age 18 months, 14 were HIV seropositive and alive, and 4 were HIV positive, but died. 11 children were HIV positive and died before age 18 months and 33 seroreverted to HIV seronegative status. The level of mother-to-child HIV transmission was 29-47%. Among the clinical signs presented, generalized lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly,
splenomegaly
,
wasting
, stunting, and delayed motor development were more often found in the definitely HIV-positive children. Upper respiratory tract infections, acute diarrhea, pneumonia, pyogenic skin infections, sepsis, and candidal infections were the most commonly seen illnesses.
...
PMID:A four-year cohort study of HIV seropositive Ethiopian infants and children: clinical course and disease patterns. 957 11
1
2
3
Next >>