Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.1.1.69 (BMT)
2,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 15-year-old boy with non-T ALL in early 2nd remission was autografted using a regimen with busulphan 4 mg/kg/day, po, from day -9 to -6, and cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg/day, iv, from day -5 to -2. During busulphan administration he experienced a few generalized seizures, and starting on day 25 post ABMT he developed a progressively severe neurological symptomatology characterized by nystagmus, right VIth cranial nerve palsy, truncal ataxia and, finally, confusion and coma. MRI showed lesions in the periaqueductal gray matter, thalamus, mammillary bodies and putamen. Within 24 hours of treatment with thiamine he improved dramatically, but during the following weeks permanent neurologic damage with memory deficit, truncal ataxia and nystagmus became evident. To our knowledge this is the first case of Wernicke's encephalopathy reported after BMT. We suspect in this case a contribution of busulphan to the development of the syndrome.
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PMID:Wernicke-like encephalopathy after autologous bone marrow transplantation. 222 27

As an alternative to costly MRI systems with superconductive magnets, first experiences with an iron-shielded resistive system (Tomikon BMT 1100, Bruker Medizintechnik--Rheinstetten) are reported. The magnetic field strength is 0.235 T, corresponding to a proton resonance frequency of 10 MHz. Our system is used mainly for research, the image quality being comparable with that of superconducting systems. Especially favourable is the low magnetic stray field of the self-shielding system. It allows unproblematic handling of patients in a clinical environment. Economic aspects are not discussed.
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PMID:[Low-field magnetic resonance tomography with an iron-shielded resistive magnet]. 393 8

We evaluated the long-term side-effects of allogeneic BMT performed early in the course of childhood acute leukaemia (first complete remission and interval between diagnosis and BMT not exceeding 6 months). Thirteen patients fulfilled these criteria. Conditioning regimens included TBI in eight cases. Evaluation of growth and pubertal development, ophthalmological examination, assessment of thyroid, cardiac and pulmonary functions were performed. Neuropsychological evaluation included IQ score, memory tests and cranial MRI. Median follow-up after BMT was 5 years (range 2-10 years). Growth was normal in seven patients. Six patients experienced a decrease in SD score for height (range -0.1 to -1.9). Four children were evaluable for puberty: pubertal development was normal in three children and delayed in one case. Thyroid and left ventricular function were normal in all cases. Three patients had mild abnormalities of pulmonary function. In two patients cataracts were noted 7 and 10 years after fTBI. Mean full-scale IQ score was 102. Memory tests, performed in 12 cases, were in the normal range for 11 patients. In our study, frequency and severity of long-term side-effects following BMT for leukemia appeared lower than usually reported. A possible explanation is that children were transplanted very early in the course of their disease with neither cranial irradiation nor long exposure to chemotherapy prior to transplant.
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PMID:Long-term side-effects in children receiving allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in first complete remission of acute leukaemia. 759 56

Four children with metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation between 1988 and 1993. No effect on the natural course of the disease was observed in two children with late infantile and juvenile MLD. They had moderate neurological symptoms at the time of BMT and were followed for 7 and 6 years, respectively. The third child with the juvenile form of MLD was mildly to moderately affected when transplanted. She had lost some gross motor functions as well as speech and mental abilities at follow-up 3 years later. The fourth case, diagnosed biochemically and presymptomatically as late infantile MLD, had a subtle gait disturbance when grafted at 18 months of age. Demyelination, not observed before BMT, was visualized 1 year later on MRI. This boy's condition has continued to deteriorate 2 years after transplantation. We have adopted recent recommendations that BMT should be considered only in presymptomatic children with late infantile MLD or early in the course of juvenile MLD. In such children, still longer follow-up periods are necessary to evaluate the benefit of BMT.
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PMID:Clinical outcome in four children with metachromatic leukodystrophy treated by bone marrow transplantation. 880 6

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system in which immune mechanisms appear to be an important component of the pathophysiology. Although the clinical manifestations are variable, a subset of patients develops a progressive clinical course associated with marked neurologic impairment and significant morbidity. BMT has been proposed as treatment for such patients based on preclinical data as well as clinical observations in other autoimmune diseases. We report clinical and MRI findings in an MS patient, later diagnosed with CML, and treated with an allogeneic BMT.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplant for chronic myelogenous leukemia in a patient with multiple sclerosis. 905 Dec 53

We present a case of death likely to be directly due to cyclosporine (CsA) neurotoxicity. To date, there have been no reports of deaths directly due to CsA neurotoxicity, nor has an associated histological lesion been described independent of confounding processes. A 54-year-old male received an HLA-matched-unrelated BMT for CML. He developed progressive encephalopathy and on day +79 had a generalized seizure. All CSF studies were negative for infectious causes. MRI revealed diffuse, symmetrical white matter abnormalities located in the occipital sub-cortex, thalamus, mid brain, pons, and cerebellum which were typical of CsA toxicity. The patient died of central respiratory failure within 72 h of discontinuing CsA. Autopsy revealed diffuse patchy white matter edema and astrocytic injury without evidence of axonopathy, demyelination, microvascular injury, or infectious/inflammatory process. This case demonstrates previously undescribed lethal CsA neurotoxicity and may reveal an associated primary pathological lesion.
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PMID:Fatal outcome due to cyclosporine neurotoxicity with associated pathological findings. 1019 8

We retrospectively identified opportunistic CNS infections in 655 patients who had undergone allogeneic, syngeneic or autologous BMT or PBSCT between 1990 and 1997. Twenty-seven patients (4%) developed CNS infections. All CNS infections occurred in allogeneic BMT or PBSCT patients. The most common CNS infections were toxoplasma encephalitis (74%) and cerebral aspergillosis (18%). Furthermore, we identified one patient with candida encephalitis and one patient with viral encephalitis. Overall mortality of patients with opportunistic CNS infection was 67%. There were two different groups of toxoplasma encephalitis with a different appearance on MR imaging. The first group showed edema, but no gadolinium enhancement, whereas the second group exhibited typical MRI appearances with the exception of frequent hemorrhagic transformation. The first group had a significant shorter latency between BMT and onset of CNS infection (mean 45 days vs 180 days, P = 0.02), a significant higher daily dose of corticosteroids as treatment for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) (P = 0.01), more severe GVHD and a higher mortality (71% vs 36%). This study shows that the most common CNS infections in our patient population are toxoplasma encephalitis and cerebral aspergillosis, that there are two distinct subgroups of toxoplasma encephalitis and that CNS infections occur after allogeneic BMT only.
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PMID:Opportunistic CNS infection after bone marrow transplantation. 1038 57

Toxoplasma encephalitis was confirmed by biopsy in three patients with bone marrow (BMT) or peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation (PBSCT). All had MRI before antimicrobial therapy. The intensity of contrast enhancement was very variable. One patient had one large, moderately enhancing cerebral lesion and several smaller almost nonenhancing lesions. The second had small nodular and haemorrhagic lesions without any enhancement. The third had late cerebral toxoplasmosis and showed multiple lesions with marked contrast enhancement. The moderate or absent contrast enhancement in the two patients in the early phase of cerebral toxoplasmosis may be related to a poor immunological response, with a low white blood cell count in at least one patient. Both received higher doses of prednisone than the patient with late infection, leading to a reduced inflammatory response. In patients with a low leukocyte count and/or high doses of immunosuppressive therapy, typical contrast enhancement may be absent.
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PMID:MRI of intracranial toxoplasmosis after bone marrow transplantation. 1066 63

This communication reviews the use of undersampling techniques to acquire NMR signals. Undersampling transforms bandpass free induction decay (FID) signals, centered at high frequencies, into lowpass signals or bandpass signals centered at much lower frequencies. Consequently, the analog electronic stages that perform the demodulation can be eliminated, gaining in stability and reducing the phase distortion while maintaining an equivalent or better signal to noise ratio when an adequate sampling rate is chosen. The technique has been tested on a BRUKER BIOSPEC BMT 47/40, and the results show that undersampling could be used to process NMR and MRI signals, extending the range of applications of the 'digital radio' techniques to NMR and MRI apparatus.
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PMID:Potential use of the undersampling technique in the acquisition of nuclear magnetic resonance signals. 1150 25

We describe here a patient who died of progressive CNS deterioration following allogeneic stem cell transplant with West Nile virus as the sole pathogen on the cerebrospinal fluid and brain tissue analysis. A 50-year-old male with Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) underwent allogeneic PBSCT from his HLA identical sister. After engraftment, the patient developed fever with progressive and ultimately fatal neurological deterioration. Imaging studies of the brain including CT and MRI scans were remarkable for mild low attenuation lesions of the white matter. CSF analysis was negative for neoplastic cells, bacteria, AFB, CMV, HSV, fungal infections and leukemic relapse. However, serological analysis of both the serum and CSF was positive for West Nile virus-specific IgM antibodies. At autopsy, West Nile virus PCR and cultures were positive in the mid-brain tissue. Electron micrographs showed evidence of viral particles. Given the recent increase in the spread of West Nile virus infections and the increased susceptibility of BMT patients to infectious complications, West Nile virus encephalitis should be considered in patients undergoing transplantation.
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PMID:West Nile virus encephalitis causing fatal CNS toxicity after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. 1456 28


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