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)
Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI), an autosomal recessive defect of diamino acid transport, is characterized chemically by renal hyperdiaminoaciduria, especially lysinuria, and by impaired formation of urea with hyperammonemia after protein ingestion. Our 20 patients thrived during breast-feeding, but ingestion of cow's milk caused diarrhea and vomiting. When able to select their diet, they rejected all protein-rich foods. They were short staturated and had weak atrophic muscles, osteoporosis, hepatomegaly and often
splenomegaly
. Four patients were mentally retarded. Fifteen patients had leukocyte counts below 4,000/mm3, and 17 patients had platelet counts below 150,000/mm3. Serum lactate dehydrogenase activity was constantly increased, and transaminase and
aldolase
activities were often increased. In the infants' livers, changes were only revealed by electron microscopy: increased and vesicular smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and abundance of glycogen particles in the hepatocytes. In the older patients, light microscopy demonstrated clearly limited areas where hepatocytes had large pale cytoplasm and small pyknotic nuclei. The diamino acids lysine, arginine and ornithine had plasma concentrations only one-third to one-half the normal mean; the renal clearances were clearly increased. Oral diamino acid loading tests suggested impaired intestinal absorption. Urea is built in the liver through transformation of ornithine to arginine, and cleavage of arginine to ornithine and urea. The addition of ornithine to an intravenous I-alanine loading prevented the hyperammonemia and normalized the urea production. Therefore, the diet has been supplemented with arginine, and more protein has been added. This therapy has lead to a remarkable catch-up growth in some patients. The pathophysiology of LPI is explained. Because of defective intestinal absorption and incrased renal loss, the diamino acids have a low plasma concentration. Their transport from plasma to hepatocytes is also impaired, and the liver becomes deficient in ornithine. This retards the urea cycle, and leads to postprandial hyperammonemia and protein aversion. The presence of the transport defect in the hepatocytes distinguishes LPI from other hyperdibasicaminoacidurias.
...
PMID:Lysinuric protein intolerance. 115 80
Ingestion rate of granulocytes in osteomyelofibrosis with
splenomegaly
, which is still a matter of controversy, was measured in 32 patients. The mean ingestion rate in patients' granulocytes was similar to that of the controls; the results, however, were more dispersed in the patients than in the controls, with very high (three patients) and very low (three patients) ingestion rates. Ingestion alterations were serum-independent. Neutrophil glycolytic enzymes and adenylate-kinase were measured in order to assess: (1) if they could be responsible for the observed abnormalities and (2) if enzyme abnormalities, previously described in red blood cells, also occur in the neutrophils. Major increases in
phosphofructoaldolase
and in 3-phosphoglycerate kinase activities, contrasting with a decrease in pyruvate kinase activity were observed. These, however, did not correlate with ingestion alterations. In conclusion, we showed that the granulocyte ingestion rate is altered in a few patients only, that the alterations are unrelated to the serum, to adenylate kinase or to glycolytic enzyme abnormalities. The latter, however, are important. The mechanisms of their occurrence are unknown and hypotheses such as those proposed for red blood cells enzyme modifications in myeloproliferative disorders could be applicable.
...
PMID:Ingestion rate and glycolytic enzymes in neutrophils of patients with agnogenic osteomyelofibrosis and splenomegaly. 671 65
Two cases of red cell
aldolase
deficiency associated with congenital nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia are reported. The proband is a fourteen-month-old Japanese boy. Consanguineous marriage was not proven but probable in this family, as the parents were born in the same small island. The proband had moderate to mild anemia aggravated by upper respiratory infections, 1 cm hepatomegaly and 2.5 cm
splenomegaly
, but was unremarkable in other respects and has thus far not shown mental or growth retardation. He did not have dysmorphic features. The red cell
aldolase
activity was 6% of the normal mean. The enzyme was unstable with respect to heat, and Km for fructose 1,6-diphosphate (F-1,6-DP) was high. The parents and other heterozygotes showed intermediate activity between that of the proband and that of normal subjects. Red cell F-1,6-DP concentration in this case was remarkably increased. Red cell glucose consumption, and lactate formation, as well as hexose monophosphate shunt activity, were decreased as compared with a comparable reticulocyte-rich hereditary spherocytosis patient. Hexose monophosphate dehydrogenase by a high concentration of F-1,6-DP in his red cells. As a result of family study, another homozygous
aldolase
deficiency case associated with hemolytic anemia was found. He is 13 years old and a nephew of the proband's paternal grandmother. His hemolytic anemia also is moderate to mild and aggravated by upper respiratory infections. He does not seem to have mental or growth retardation, nor does he possess dysmorphic features.
...
PMID:Two cases of red cell aldolase deficiency associated with hereditary hemolytic anemia in a Japanese family. 733 96
In four unrelated patients with chronic haemolysis and markedly reduced red blood cell (RBC) glutathione (49.5%, 12.6%, 11.5% and 15% of the normal concentration respectively), a severe glutathione synthetase (GSH-S, EC 6.3.2.3) deficiency was found. One case exhibited a neonatal haemolytic anaemia associated with oxoprolinuria, but without neurological manifestations. The family study revealed GSH-S activity in both parents to be around half the normal level, a finding consistent with the presumed autosomal recessive mode of inheritance of this enzymopathy. Two cases exhibited a well-compensated haemolytic syndrome without anaemia or
splenomegaly
at steady state. One of these cases was diagnosed after an episode of acute haemolytic anaemia after fava bean ingestion. The remaining patient suffered from moderate to severe chronic non-spherocytic haemolytic anaemia and
splenomegaly
, and required occasional blood transfusion for a haemolytic crisis associated with drug ingestion. In this patient, the anaemia was corrected by splenectomy. In addition to GSH-S, a panel of 16 other RBC enzyme activities was also studied in all the patients. Hexokinase,
aldolase
, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate kinase activities all increased; these increases were to be expected, given the rise in the number of circulating reticulocytes. In two patients, the incubation of RBCs with hydrogen peroxide revealed an enhanced production of malonyldialdehyde. DNA analysis showed a homozygous state for 656 A-->G mutation in patients 2 and 3. The GSH-S gene of patient 1, studied elsewhere, revealed an 808 T-->C. The GSH-S gene of patient 4 was not available for study. The present study demonstrates that GSH-S deficiency is also present in Spain and further supports the molecular and clinical heterogeneity of this enzymopathy
...
PMID:Hereditary non-spherocytic haemolytic anaemia due to red blood cell glutathione synthetase deficiency in four unrelated patients from Spain: clinical and molecular studies. 1116 50