Хуудас 1 -аас 32 үр дүн
A 72-year-old man was admitted because of general weakness. On physical examination, marked splenomegaly was found. Blood tests revealed anemia, thrombocytopenia and two-peak hypergammaglobulinemia composed of kappa type IgG and IgA monoclonal proteins. Peripheral blood and bone marrow (BM)
METHODS
A 27-year-old woman from Cameroon was admitted because of arthralgia, myalgia and severe thrombocytopenia (20,000/ micro l). She had been suffering from weakness, recurrent febrile episodes, generalized lymphadenopathy and pancytopenia for 2 years. Having a typical autoantibody constellation
A 13-year-old girl with mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) was described. She visited our hospital with recurrent parotid gland swelling, arthritis, and myositis. Sclerodactyly and Raynaud's phenomenon were also defined, and the laboratory findings of high titers of antinuclear antibody
We present here thirteen patients (5 men and 8 women, aged 31 to 73, mean 55 years) with spastic paraparesis who showed clinical features similar to those of HTLV-1 associated myelopathy without HTLV-1 antibody, but with positive antibody to hepatitis B virus (HBV). All of these patients showed
We presented a case of acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy associated with autoimmune chronic active hepatitis (AI-CAH). This is the third case report of neuropathy in AI-CAH. A 64-year-old male with chronic liver dysfunction was admitted to the hospital because of high fever, distal
A 47-year-old man presented with fever of unknown origin, generalized weakness, edema, and renal failure. He had left-sided pleural effusion, generalized lymphadenopathy, multiple nontender cutaneous nodules, hepatomegaly, renal failure, and hypergammaglobulinemia. Axillary lymph node biopsy showed
During a period of six years (1/1/89-12/31/94), seven children with trypanosomiasis were admitted to the Department of Pediatrics of Owendo Pediatric Hospital-Libreville, Gabon. They were 5 boys and 2 girls, aged 4-17 years, five of them under 15 years. The main reasons of hospitalization were
Castleman syndrome (giant lymph node hyperplasia) is a rare, heterogeneous lymphoproliferative disorder of unknown etiology and pathogenesis. Most cases occur as mediastinal masses, although extrathoracic involvement including nodal and extranodal locations have been reported. The localized variants
BACKGROUND
Castleman's disease is an atypical lymphoproliferative disorder characterized by angiofollicular hyperplasia of lymph nodes. Histologically, it can be classified into a hyaline-vascular type, plasma-cell type, and transitional (mixed-cell) type, while clinically localized type has been
Thirteen patients with peripheral neuropathy caused by necrotizing vasculitis were clinico-pathologically analyzed. These patients consisted of nine classical periarteritis nodosa (PN), four allergic granulomatous angitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome, AGA). All of them were proven to have a necrotizing
A patient, 50-year-old female, developed progressive weakness of lower extremities, and gait disturbance for 2 years. Neurological examination revealed hyperreflexia with pathological reflex, fasciculation in the limbs and tongue, muscle weakness and atrophy in distal limbs, but no sensory
A 51-year-old woman was admitted to a local hospital because of pneumonia, and received a diagnosis of cervical lymphadenopathy, anemia, and hyperimmunoglobulinemia with suspected multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD). At the age of 53 she was transferred to our hospital because of numbness and
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome can be encountered with hypereosinophilia and hyperimmunoglobulin E (hyper-IgE) values, though these levels are rarely so high to be compared with hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome. A 9-year-old boy presented with the complaint of fatigue, weakness, weight loss and
A 42-year-old female was admitted to our hospital on October 1, 1990 because of one week history of back pain, weakness of her right lower extremity and sensory disturbance of her left lower extremity. Physical examination revealed swollen hands, Raynaud's phenomenon, sclerodactyly and heliotrope
Eosinophilic fasciitis is a rare connective tissue disease in children characterized by hardening and thickening of the skin and soft tissues, peripheral eosinophilia, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and hypergammaglobulinemia. In this study, we report three pediatric patients with