| Literature DB >> 1964694 |
D Buchwald1, A S Freedman, D V Ablashi, J L Sullivan, M Caligiuri, D S Weinberg, C G Hall, R L Ashley, C Saxinger, N Balachandran.
Abstract
A 17-year-old, previously healthy woman developed an acute "mononucleosis-like" illness with an associated "atypical" pneumonitis, followed by years of debilitating chronic fatigue, fevers, a 10-kg weight loss, night sweats, and neurocognitive symptoms. Thereafter, her sister developed a similar but less severe illness. The patient developed marked, chronic lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, with associated persistent relative lymphocytosis and atypical lymphocytosis and with thrombocytopenia. After 3 years of illness, a splenectomy was performed, which resulted in some symptomatic improvement, prompt weight gain, and resolution of all hematologic abnormalities. Serial immunologic studies revealed a strikingly elevated number of activated B lymphocytes and a T lymphopenia, which improved but did not return to normal postsplenectomy. No causal association was found with any of several infectious agents that could produce such a lymphoproliferative illness. However, both the patient and her sister had evidence of active infection with the recently discovered human herpesvirus-6. Seven years after the onset of the illness, the patient and her sister remain chronically ill.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 1964694 DOI: 10.1007/bf00917479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317