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 29-year-old man had a febrile illness accompanied by chest pain and tachycardia. The ECG suggested either myocarditis or acute ischemia. Heart muscle enzymes were normal, the peripheral blood count showed absolute and relative lymphocytosis, and an echocardiogram disclosed a small pericardial effusion. After defervescence, splenomegaly was noted and the SGPT level was elevated to four times normal. There was a greater than fourfold rise in titer of IgM antibodies to cytomegalovirus. This is only the second report in detail of perimyocarditis caused by cytomegalovirus mononucleosis. An interesting aspect of the case was an afebrile prodrome that lasted for more than one week, during which prostration, palpitations, and breathlessness on exertion were present and the sole physical finding was tachycardia.
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PMID:Perimyocarditis. Report on an unusual cause. 253 10

In an attempt to assess concepts of disease, we questioned 33 Ethiopian Jews (Falashas) in Ethiopia about 13 diseases: 8 western and 5 cultural syndromes (in the Amharic language): birrd (cold), wugat (stabbing chest pain), moygnbagegn (neurologic disorder), mitch (sunstroke), and attent hono kere (retained fetus becoming bone). Disease causation was often attributed to spirits and the sun. None of the interviewees understood the cause of: a) epilepsy, most attributing it to spirits and recommending smelling match smoke as treatment, b) prolonged labor, attributed by most to the evil kole spirit and is managed by traditional birth attendants; and c) abortion, believed to be caused by exposure to sun or cold. Less than 20% linked malaria to mosquitoes. Most correlated splenomegaly with malaria. Hepatitis was believed to be caused by a bird or bat flying around the affected person. Multiple factors were linked to diarrhea, including a journey in the sun. Moygnbagegn is the only condition treated by venisection from brachial veins; wugat is treated by "cupping". Modern medicine was recommended by < 30% of those questioned for epilepsy, splenomegaly, hepatitis, and Ethiopian cultural diseases. It was recommended most for malaria (52%), sexually transmitted diseases (55%), and diarrhea (69%).
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PMID:Traditional beliefs and disease practices of Ethiopian Jews. 875 85

Psittacosis, also referred to as ornithosis, is a disease primarily of birds, which may be transmitted to humans. Psittacosis is caused by Chlamydia psittaci, an obligate intracellular parasite found worldwide. Humans are infected with C. psittaci when the organism enters the blood stream, usually through inhalation of dried excrement from diseased birds or through wound contamination with infected avian secretions. C. psittaci replicates in the liver and spleen and infects the lung and other organs hematogenously.1 The clinical manifestations of human psittacosis range from a mild respiratory infection to a severe systemic illness.1,2 Symptoms are frequently described as flu-like with fever, headache, body aches, and dry or productive cough. Sore throat, chest pain, abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea are variably present. Physical findings may include a pulse-temperature dissociation, localized lung crackles, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and a pale macular skin rash. Chest radiographs may demonstrate lesions that are atelectatic, patchy, miliary, nodular, or consolidated in one or both lungs. White cell counts, erythrocyte sedimentation rates, and liver function tests are usually normal. In severe illness, signs and symptoms of liver dysfunction, neurological impairment, and respiratory and renal failure may be present. Since 1879 when psittacosis was recognized as a disease entity, cases have been reported in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. However, reports of psittacosis in Africa have been rare. An Ethiopian group, studying community-acquired pneumonia, published what they claimed to be the first report of psittacosis in Africa in 1994.3 The report published here is believed to be the first documented case of human psittacosis in Egypt.
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PMID:Psittacosis in Egypt: A Case Study. 981 79

Imiglucerase, the recombinantly produced enzyme, is gradually replacing the human placental derived alglucerase in the treatment of gaucher patients. We describe the first case, to the best of our knowledge, of an anaphylactoid reaction to imiglucerase in a patient who tolerated alglucerase. The patient was diagnosed at the age of 2 4/12 years with anemia and hepatosplenomegaly. Over the years he had suffered from marked splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia and recurrent bleeding episodes. At the age of 24 he started treatment with imiglucerase. After 3 months of treatment, immediately after starting an infusion, he experienced flushing, cough, tachycardia, palpitation, chest pain and excessive sweating, which reoccurred on a consecutive administration. Substitution with alglucerase was tolerated well, with only mild rash when he was premedicated with benadryl. Immediate skin tests to alglucerase, imiglucerase and gelatin were negative. IgG against alglucerase was undetectable. The in vitro mast cell degranulation test was positive for alglucerase, imiglucerase heamaccel (a gelatin based plasma substitute, which is a component of imiglucerase). This sensitivity to imiglucerase but not to alglucerase, raises the question of future treatment for this patient, since the production of alglucerase may cease, once imiglucerase production will cover the need for replacement enzyme.
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PMID:Anaphylactoid reaction to imiglucerase, but not to alglucerase, in a type I Gaucher patient. 1038 90

A 23-year-old man, admitted because of high fever, polyarthralgia, butterfly rash and chest pain, was diagnosed as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) from the findings of positive antinuclear antibody and anti-DNA antibody. He was treated with 60 mg prednisolone daily, but as reducing the dose, white blood cell counts and platelet counts were decreased and fever, polyarthralgia, decrease of complements, increase of ferritin, hepato-splenomegaly and liver dysfunction were observed. Bone marrow specimen revealed phagocytosis of blood cells by histiocytes and he was diagnosed as hemophagocytic syndrome(HPS) due to active SLE. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy was effective temporarily, HPS recurred while reducing steroid, and cyclosporin was added. After a temporary remission, marked extensive swelling in the face appeared suddenly. Facial skin biopsy showed necrosis of fat cells and hemophagocytosis by histiocytes. Accordingly, he was diagnosed as panniculitis due to HPS and was treated successfully with intravenous cyclophosphamide pulse therapy and high dose of gammaglobulin. Several cases of HPS due to SLE have been reported recently, but this is a rare case of cytophagic histiocytic panniculitis (CHP) due to SLE.
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PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus with hemophagocytic syndrome and cytophagic histiocytic panniculitis]. 1129 53

A 19-year-old male patient with type 1 Gaucher disease was put on regular biweekly infusions of alglucerase. After 1 yr of treatment, hepatic and splenic volumes decreased from 38 and 45 mL/kg to 31 and 34 mL/kg, respectively. In addition, hemoglobin concentration, platelet count and white cell count increased, acid phosphatase level decreased, and the patient gained weight and energy. Despite improvement, the patient refused enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) because of muscle rigidity, chest pain, trembling and anxiety, which he attributed to enzyme substitution. Two and 4.5 year after cessation of therapy, hepatic and splenic volumes increased to 36 and 53 mL/kg and to 53 and 110 mL/kg, respectively. The patient developed non-tractable hematuria because of compression and dislocation of the left kidney by the enlarged spleen, which necessitated splenectomy. This report suggests that cessation of ERT in Gaucher disease may result in severe and complicated rebound visceromegaly.
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PMID:Rebound hepatosplenomegaly in type 1 Gaucher disease. 1258 Nov 95

We report on a 58-year-old male diagnosed as having primary myelofibrosis with thrombocytopenia, who died of fatal septic shock and rhabdomyolysis after platelet concentrates (PCs) transfusion. The initial diagnosis of primary myelofibrosis was established by splenomegaly, leukoerythroblastosis and bone marrow fibrosis. PCs were transfused because of thrombocytopenia with marked bleeding tendency. Soon after the PCs transfusion in March 2000, he had attacks of chest pain, back pain and myalgia, then went into shock and died of unknown causes. PCs were suspected as being the cause of death, because Streptococcus pneumoniae was found in the culture of PCs in the WBC-reduction in-line filter and fresh frozen plasma from the same donor preserved in the Japan Red Cross Center. Rhabdomyolysis, neutrophil infiltration and phagocytosed bacteria were found from the autopsy materials, which were identified by DNA analysis as the same species found in the PCs. PCs are kept at room temperature because platelet function is lost in the cold. When PCs are contaminated with bacteria, marked multiplication induces fatal bacteremia. This is a rare report in Japan of fatal septic shock caused by PCs with bacterial contamination. We must pay strict attention to bacterial contamination in blood components.
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PMID:[Fatal septic shock and rhabdomyolysis following transfusion of platelet concentrates contaminated with Streptococcus pneumoniae]. 1288 16

We present an unusual association of mediastinal germ cell tumor containing seminoma and angiosarcoma components and splenic histiocytic sarcoma. A 15-year-old boy presented with chest pain. Histopathologically, an anterior mediastinal mass contained typical seminoma, immature teratoma, embryonal carcinoma, angiosarcoma, yolk sac tumor, and polyembryoma. An abdominal ultrasonogram revealed a huge splenomegaly with multiple ill-defined low echogenic nodules, 1 month after the second cycle of chemotherapy. Histopathologically, large, round-to-oval tumor cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm often contained eccentrically placed nuclei with vesicular chromatin and an irregular nuclear membrane. The tumor cells were immunoreactive for CD68, CD31, and CD4. The cytogenetic results showed deletion of the long arm of chromosome 5 and trisomy 8. This lesion might have been on the pathway of multistep tumorigenesis toward a final leukemia.
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PMID:Mediastinal germ cell tumor associated with histiocytic sarcoma of spleen: case report of an unusual association. 1608 90

Splenic rupture following infectious mononucleosis is rare. The case history is presented of a man who presented with sudden onset pleuritic left chest pain. An ultrasound scan of the abdomen showed an enlarged spleen with an abnormal echo pattern and a CT scan of the abdomen showed severe splenic rupture. The patient remembered that he had been unwell 2 weeks earlier with flu-like symptoms and enlarged cervical lymph nodes. Serological examination was positive for Ebstein-Barr virus, confirming the diagnosis of splenic rupture following splenomegaly due to infectious mononucleosis. Management was initially conservative but he became haemodynamically unstable and an emergency splenectomy was performed.
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PMID:Infective splenic rupture presenting with symptoms of a pulmonary embolism. 1903 15

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the clinical features of childhood-onset Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) patients and to assess the phenotype-genotype correlation. The study included patients with childhood-onset FMF that followed up over a period of 18 years in the Division of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology clinic. Twelve MEFV mutations were investigated in all patients. The patients were classified into four groups according to mutations: 1, M694V homozygote; 2, M694V heterozygote; 3, compound heterozygote for M694V; and 4, other-other gene mutation group. The following parameters were evaluated: gender, age of onset, age at diagnosis, time interval between disease onset and diagnosis, fever, abdominal pain, chest pain, arthralgia, arthritis, myalgia, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, headache, erysipela-like erythema, protracted febrile myalgia, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, consanguinity, number of attacks before and after treatment, severity score, response to colchicine treatment. Of the 124 patients included in the study, 105 had at least one MEFV gene mutation. M694V homozygosity was the most common mutation, followed by M694V heterozygotes and M694V-M680I compound heterozygotes. Severity score was found significantly higher in patients with M694V homozygote and compound heterozygote for M694V compared with other groups. The data supported the findings in literature that FMF patients with M694V homozygote and compound heterozygote for M694V gene mutations experience a more severe clinical course.
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PMID:The clinical and genetical features of 124 children with Familial Mediterranean fever: experience of a single tertiary center. 1911 56


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