Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirteen patients with systemic mast cell disease were studied in order to define the hepatic changes in this disease and to correlate the histologic lesions in the liver with the clinical findings. These patients often presented with multisystem disorders and 10 had hepatomegaly. Microscopically, the liver tissues in all patients showed fibrosis and chronic inflammatory cellular infiltration with plasma cells, lymphocytes, eosinophils, and mononuclear fibroblast-like cells in the portal area. The hepatic sinusoids were not significantly involved. A histologic diagnosis of systemic mast cell disease is seldom entertained in liver biopsy specimens embedded in paraffin and stained with hematoxylineosin, but can be facilitated in biopsy specimens embedded in plastic such as methacrylate. Tissue mast cells in the cellular infiltrate can be demonstrated best by special staining techniques with Giemsa, toluidine blue, and chloroacetate esterase. The severity of the histologic changes in the liver does not correlate well with the size of the liver or biochemical changes in the blood. Abnormal serum biochemical values were noted primarily in those with dehydration caused by diarrhea and vomiting, and in those with malnutrition. Hepatic function test results were usually normal, except for alkaline phosphatase level, which was elevated in all 13 patients. Although the clinical significance of hepatic involvement in systemic mast cell disease cannot be established with certainty in this study, it is believed that the prognosis of systemic mast cell disease is most intricately related to the systemic effects of mast cell involvement in many other organs, and not to hepatic involvement per se.
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PMID:Hepatic involvement in systemic mast cell disease. 370 70

Twelve cases of liver abscess in children and adolescents presenting at Children's Hospital at Los Angeles from 1974 to 1983 were reviewed. Most occurred in children younger than 5 years of age. The time from onset of symptoms to presentation did not differ over the 10-year period examined. However, diagnosis was made more rapidly in the latter half of the decade due to the development of advanced noninvasive imaging techniques and serologic methods. A constellation of fever, abdominal pain (whether or not localized in the right upper abdomen), vomiting or anorexia, hepatomegaly, elevated white blood cell count and sedimentation rate, and an unexplained anemia should prompt the clinician to include occult liver abscess in the differential diagnosis and proceed to early use of ultrasound or isotopic liver-spleen scan. History of travel or immigration or exposure to food handlers harboring the infection is important to differentiate amebic abscess from bacterial abscess. This suspicion may greatly alter the course of treatment.
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PMID:Primary liver abscesses in children and adolescents. Review of 12 years clinical experience. 394 58

In newborn twins at three hours of age adrenal calcification has been detected. In addition to hepatomegaly, vomiting and diarrhoea, characteristic radiological findings confirmed the diagnosis of the rare heritable lipidosis, Wolman's disease.
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PMID:Wolman disease in twins. 398 53

A patient with gout and schizophrenia is described who during a schizophrenic paroxysm with paranoid-hypochondriac-hallucinatory syndrome attempted to commit suicide and took 200 tablets milurit (20 g). He developed the picture of acute intoxication with nausea, vomiting, profuse diarrhea, abdominal pain, flushing, temperature, collapse manifestations, hepatomegaly, direct hyperbilirubinemia, elevated transaminase, leukopenia, accelerated ESR. After reanimation and infusion therapy, the patient recovered within 4 days and 2 weeks later all blood indices reached the limits of the norm.
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PMID:[Acute allopurinol (milurit) poisoning]. 402 4

Between January 1976 and December 1978, the Microbiology Department of University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, isolated Salmonella typhi from the blood cultures of 93 children aged 0-14 years, who were admitted to the paediatric wards. Clinical case notes were retrieved and reviewed in 64 (68.8%) of them. Fifteen (23%) of the 64 children were less than one year of age while 22 (34%) were under the age of five years. The commonest presenting symptoms were fever, anorexia, diarrhoea and vomiting. A febrile convulsion was the presenting symptom in 13 (20%) of the patients, all of whom were under the age of five years. Hepatomegaly was almost twice as frequently observed as splenomegaly. Intestinal perforation was present in five of the patients. There was a high proportion of SS children who presented with fever, pallor, jaundice, generalized aches and pains and other clinical features of sickle cell disease and it is possible that such children are specially susceptible to typhoid fever. A clinical diagnosis of typhoid fever on admission was made in only 14 of the 64 children. Reasons are given for the low index of suspicion and it is suggested that any child with unremitting fever after adequate anti-malarial chemotherapy should be treated for enteric fever.
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PMID:Problems in the clinical diagnosis of typhoid fever in children in the tropics. 618 69

Budd Chiari Syndrome, characterized by massive ascites, hepatomegaly, abdominal pain, and tenderness, nausea, and vomiting, is caused by obstruction of the hepatic venous outflow. Of the known causes of polycythemia rubra vera, hypernephroma, and other tumors invading the inferior vena cava have been most often reported, while pregnancy and oral contraceptives (OCs) have also been held as causes. In this paper the case is presented of a young woman, previously on OCs for 4 months, who developed the syndrome 2 weeks after delivery; she was also found to have multiple hepatic adenomas on laparotomy. The longterm use of OCs has been estimated to be associated with an annual incidence of liver cell adenoma of 3-4/100,000. Evidence suggests that the estrogen components, rather than the progesterone, of OCs seem more likely to cause liver cell adenoma since estrogens are carcinogenic in other organs and promote liver cell regeneration in rats. By interference with the metabolism of oncogenic bile salt derivatives, estrogen may exert its oncogenic effect. The patient is this case was told never to use OCs again since there is also evidence that the tumor may regress on stopping OCs, and she was advised against further pregnancies.
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PMID:Budd-Chiari syndrome and hepatic adenomas associated with oral contraceptives. A case report. 627 27

Since 1973 there have been more than 20 reported cases of malignant and about 200 cases of benign hepatic adenomas associated with oral contraception (OC). This article reports on the case of a 45 year old woman on OC from 1967 to 1971. In 1979 she was admitted to the hospital in the 36th week of her 9th pregnancy for nausea, vomiting, and pain. Cesarean section delivered her of a healthy baby girl, and celiotomy exposed an enlarged liver with several tumors. Resection was not possible and the woman died after 3 days. Necropsy showed numerous tumors and metastases and primary hepatic carcinoma. Even though 8 years had elapsed between OC termination and the onset of cancer, the connection between exposure to OC and liver cancer must be suspected. The time lag might be attributed to delayed development of the neoplasm rather than to its slow growth.
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PMID:A case of hepatoma in pregnancy associated with earlier oral contraception. 627 30

The possible association of hepatocellular carcinoma with oral contraceptive (OC) use is supported by the case of a 33-year old black female, gravida 5, para 4. She presented in April 1978 with right upper quadrant pain, nausea, vomiting, and fatty food intolerance. The case had been taking norethindrone, 1 mg with mestranol 0.05, for 2 years. There was no history of liver disease, alcohol abuse, or exposure to chemical toxins. The preoperative diagnosis was subacute cholecystitis; however, an unresectable primary liver tumor of both lobes was detected on surgery. OC use was discontinued, and the case refused chemotherapy. On December 1, 1978, she presented with a 9-week pregnancy which was aborted. Physical examination revealed an enlarged liver and mass in the upper right quadrant. The patient was readmitted December 11 with intractable pain and discharged. She died December 28, 1978. At autopsy the liver tumor appeared as a moderate to poorly differentiated hepatoma with irregular hyperchromatic nuclei. There was no evidence of coexistent benign lesions. The rapid progression of the disease following pregnancy suggests that hepatic growth was stimulated by the high estrogen levels of pregnancy. Earlier diagnosis and improved management are required in such cases. Ultrasonography can be used to confirm the presence of a mass, and liver scan or hepatic angiogram may be useful. Liver biopsy is required for definitive diagnosis. Treatment involves discontinuation of OC use and complete excision of the tumor where possible. If tumors have progressed beyond the stage of resectability, as in this case, the prognosis is poor.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma associated with oral contraceptive use and pregnancy. 629 72

Muscle weakness, neuropathy, and transient rises in hepatic enzyme activity have been reported with the use of the antiarrhythmic agent amiodarone. A 68 year old teetotaller with normal liver function was given amiodarone for resistant supraventricular arrhythmias. He presented 19 months later with vomiting, muscle weakness and wasting, sensory neuropathy, and hepatomegaly. Liver biopsy showed fibrosis and the presence of hyaline. The amiodarone was withdrawn. Three months later he developed ascites. Oesophageal varices were found and he later died. The liver showed micronodular cirrhosis. The large volume of distribution and long half life of amiodarone may explain the persistence of toxicity, which may have been aggravated by simultaneously administered doxepin in this case. Amiodarone should be withdrawn if abnormal liver function or neuropathy develops.
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PMID:Neuropathy and fatal hepatitis in a patient receiving amiodarone. 632 31

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection was diagnosed in 12 children on the basis of recovery of the organism from stool cultures and a 4-fold or greater titer change in agglutinating antibody. Eight of the 12 Yersinia isolates were recovered from stool cultures only after cold enrichment. Clinical findings in 50% or more of patients were fever, rash, diarrhea, desquamation, strawberry tongue, vomiting, red and cracked lips, abdominal pain, arthralgias, hepatomegaly and conjunctivitis. The patients' clinical manifestations and courses of illness resembled those of Izumi fever, an illness that occurs epidemically in Japan. Additionally the finding in two children fulfilled the strict criteria for Kawasaki syndrome, and signs in the other 10 children were consistent with that diagnosis.
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PMID:Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection in children, resembling Izumi fever and Kawasaki syndrome. 634 44


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