Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
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It is generally accepted that the risk for fetal infection is greatest with maternal primary cytomegalovirus CMV infection and much less likely with recurrent infection. Here, we report a fatal case of congenital CMV infection following recurrent maternal infection after a 7-year interval. A 3-month-old female baby presented with fever, jaundice, vomiting and stopping breast-feeding. Physical examination revealed mild respiratory distress, hepatosplenomegaly, microcephaly and growth retardation. Laboratory examination included bilirubin concentrations Total: 7.17 mg/dl; conjugated 6.67 mg/dl, aspartate transaminase 141 IU, and alanine transaminase 499 IU. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test results revealed + CMV IgM and + CMV IgG. She died on the 10th day of admission with the diagnosis of CMV hepatitis, pneumonia, and multi-organ failure. Nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions were demonstrated in the lung, liver and brain on postmortem biopsy. This case highlights that the outcome of babies born to mothers with recurrent maternal CMV infection may be more severe and fatal than previously thought.
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PMID:Fatal congenital cytomegalovirus infection following recurrent maternal infection after a 7-year interval. 1726 7

Since vitamin K2 (VitK2) syrup prophylaxis has become a routine measure for neonates and young infants, the incidence of vitamin K deficiency (VitK-D) in infancy has markedly decreased. However, we recently experienced 2 infantile cases of VitK deficiency, in whom intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) was the first clinical sign of CMV hepatitis. Case 1 is a breast-fed boy who received VitK2 syrup orally at birth and at the age of 1 month. He did not suckle well and developed a generalized tonic convulsion twice at the age of 8 weeks. Case 2 is a mixed-fed boy who also received VitK2 syrup twice but developed vomiting and drowsiness at the age of 4 months. In both cases, laboratory tests showed anemia, leukocytosis, liver dysfunction with cholestasis, and coagulopathy, consistent with VitK-D abnormality. Their serological analyses showed that cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgG and IgM were both positive. In case 1, CMV DNA was positive, as judged by the PCR method. In case 2, CMV antigenemia was positive. Hence we diagnosed these two patients as having VitK-D ICH caused by CMV hepatitis with cholestasis. CMV hepatitis is a risk factor of VitK-D ICH.
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PMID:Vitamin K-deficient intracranial hemorrhage as the first symptom of cytomegalovirus hepatitis with cholestasis. 1759 20

Ganciclovir treatment in children with cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is still controversial and only indicated in selected cases. The aim of thi study was to evaluate clinical and demographic features of CMV hepatitis in immunocompetent children and to determine the effect of ganciclovir treatment in these patients retrospectively. The study was carried out in a group o 29 children with CMV hepatitis. All the patients were investigated for signs of infection, inborn errors of metabolism, genetic diseases, extrahepatic biliary atresia and other causes of hepatitis. Two patients with congenital CMV infection and two patients with biliary atresia were excluded from the study group. The patients included in the study were divided into two groups: non-cholestatic hepatitis (n=16) as Group I and cholestatic hepatitis (n=9) as Group II. Four (25%) patients in the non-cholestatic group and four (44.4 in the cholestatic group were treated with ganciclovir for a median of 21 days. The mean age was 9.6+/- 10.9 months (median age 6 months) in Group I, while cholestatic hepatitis patients in Group II were significantly younger, with a mean age of 2.7+/-0.9 months (p<0.01). The most prominent symptoms at admission were diarrhea and vomiting (25%) in Group I. In Group I, all cases (100%) and in Group II, three of four cases (75%) treated with ganciclovir had recovery from acute CMV hepatitis. In the non-cholestatic group, no relapses were observed while one patient in the cholestatic group relapsed and progressed into chronic liver disease. Patients who received supportive treatment showed a marked decrease in GGT, ALT, AST and bilirubin levels spontaneously and no relapses of hepatitis were observed in at least one year of follow-up. Although ganciclovir therapy is not indicated particularly in immunocompetent cases, since most were self-limited infections, in case of progressive and persistent hepatitis, such as in our cases, ganciclovir was a treatment option; no side effect due to ganciclovir therapy was observed in our cases. Although ganciclovir seems to be effective in progressive CMV hepatitis, multicenter randomized studies in a large study group are necessar to determine the efficacy and indications for ganciclovir treatment.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus hepatitis and ganciclovir treatment in immunocompetent children. 1877 67