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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To see whether urine enzyme activities could be used as an index in evaluating the disease status of leukemia patients, we examined the activities of four enzymes: arylsulfatases A(AS-A) and B(AS-B),
alkaline phosphatase
(AP), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). AP and LDH showed no consistent patterns. The activities of AS-A and AS-B correlated well with the patient's clinical status, increasing during progression of disease and decreasing toward normal activities during responses to therapy, as judged from bone marrow cellularity and differential. Among 23 untreated patients with a histologic diagnosis of
acute leukemia
we found increased activities of the urine enzymes in these proportions: AS-A in 23 patients (100%), AS-B in 22 (95.7%), AP in 7 (30.4%), and LDH in 10 (43.5%). Five patients in remission from
acute leukemia
had normal activities for all four enzymes. In one patient in remission for more than one year, a rise in urinary arylsulfatase activity preceded observable bone marrow relapse by 4 months. Unlike that of serum of urine lysozyme and serum copper, the determination of urine arylsulfatase activities appears to be a consistent, useful indicator of response to antileukemic therapy. In contrast to the determination of polyamines, the quantitation of arylsulfatase activity is achieved with greater ease and with instrumentation available in most clinical laboratories.
...
PMID:A noninvasive technique for monitoring response to chemotherapy in human acute leukemia. 3
We report on two patients with
acute leukemia
and prolonged granulocytopenia after cytotoxic therapy in whom the diagnosis hepatosplenic candidiasis was made. Both patients developed upper abdominal discomfort with elevated
alkaline phosphatase
after resolution of granulocytopenia. The diagnosis was established by demonstration of multiple abscesses in liver and spleen on ultrasound and computed tomography. Both patients were initially treated with amphotericin B i.v., one of them received liposomal amphotericin B (cumulative dose of 2,530 mg and 570 mg, respectively). Thereafter, therapy was continued for months with oral fluconazole. The treatment of hepatosplenic candidiasis was successful, however, the patients died from relapse and progression of leukemia.
...
PMID:Hepatosplenic candidiasis, a fatal disease? 129 53
Four children with the
acute leukemia
are presented. Their blasts shown the presence of 2 cellular lines markers. Coexistence of markers in the blasts was detected with the technique of double staining the blasts from the bone marrow with:
alkaline phosphatase
-anti-
alkaline phosphatase
, and peroxidase with the use of monoclonal antibodies series. Analysis of blasts phenotype with monoclonal antibodies confirm the occurrence of leukemias different from the normally programmed cellular line. Deviations of leukemic cells phenotype may be explained with the fact that leukemogenesis is not an absolute block of cells differentiation but combines maturation disorders and proliferation enabling expression normally absent antigens. It confirms the concept of line preservation and presentation of "earlier frozen" phenotype, and explains the occurrence of leukemias in which blasts present phenotype of one line which does not comply with cell differentiation pattern. Further genotypic studies are necessary to clarify pathogenesis and origin of such blasts. Consequently examination of the larger group of patients with hybrid leukemias will enable conclusions concerning prognostic value of such findings and necessity of introduction of the special therapies.
...
PMID:[Hybrid leukemia among acute childhood leukemias]. 143 51
Polycythemia vera (PV) is one of the myeloproliferative diseases, and, as such, is an example of clonal hematopoiesis. The progeny of a single, abnormal, hematopoietic stem cell gain a growth advantage over their normal counterparts resulting in overproduction of red cells generally accompanied by overproduction of granulocytes and platelets as well. There are a variety of nonspecific symptoms at onset related to the increased red cell mass and hematocrit accompanied by the more specific manifestations of pruritus, erythromelalgia, and hepatic, portal, and mesenteric vein thrombosis. Splenomegaly and hypertension are common. The laboratory hallmark is an increased red cell mass. There is also often an increase in white cell count, platelet count, and leukocyte
alkaline phosphatase
along with other findings reflecting the increased rate of turnover of hematopoietic cells. The bone marrow biopsy generally displays hypercellularity involving all three cell lines and absent iron stores. The diagnosis of PV depends on excluding spurious polycythemia in which there is a high hematocrit but a normal red cell mass and secondary polycythemia in which there is an increased red cell mass in response to tissue hypoxia or the inappropriate production of erythropoietin, generally by a tumor. In addition, one should try to establish the diagnosis in a positive fashion by a combination of studies of the blood and bone marrow. Phlebotomy and occasionally plateletpheresis should be used as acute therapy. Chronic therapy is guided by the knowledge that patients treated with phlebotomy alone have an increased rate of thrombotic complications particularly in older patients and those with previous thrombotic disease. Myelosuppressive therapy can reduce the incidence of these complications, but is commonly associated with an increased incidence of second malignancies, particularly
acute leukemia
. At present, hydroxyurea is the myelosuppressive agent of choice. Antiplatelet agents have a limited role except in the palliation of the syndrome of erythromelalgia. Median survival is approximately 10 years. As implied above, the causes of morbidity and mortality vary with the mode of chronic therapy which has been employed, leukemia being more common after myelosuppressive therapy and thrombotic complications being more common after therapy with phlebotomy alone. Ten percent to 50% of patients move into a spent phase followed by postpolycythemic myeloid metaplasia, irrespective of previous therapy employed. Eventually, the major problems may be cytopenias and massive splenomegaly.
...
PMID:Polycythemia vera. 158 7
Immunophenotypic analysis of acute leukemias is time consuming and often requires flow cytometric analysis. A 1-hour
alkaline phosphatase
-labeled streptavidin-biotin immunocytochemical procedure was evaluated as an alternative. Seventeen cases of
acute leukemia
, including 10 acute lymphocytic (ALL) and 7 acute nonlymphocytic, were phenotyped by the rapid immunocytochemical procedure and the results were compared with standard analyses. In all 17 cases, the diagnoses made using standard cytochemical and immunologic methods were the same as obtained in blinded reviews by rapid immunocytochemical analysis. Nine cases of precursor B-cell ALL were positive for CD19 and/or CD22. Five CD19 + cases of ALL reacted with anti-myeloperoxidase, with one case also positive for CD15. CD15 positivity was confirmed on repeated study as well as with plastic section immunoperoxidase staining. Nine cases of ALL were positive for CD10 and eight were positive for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. One case of ALL marked as T-cell ALL with CD1, CD2, CD3, and CD7. All cases of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia were positive for CD15, CD13, and/or CD33; anti-myeloperoxidase was positive in all but one case of monocytic leukemia. All cases of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia were negative for CD10 and one was positive for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase.
Acute leukemias
apparently may be phenotyped easily and accurately in 1 hour with this immunocytochemical technique, and slides may be stored permanently for review. There was in these 17 cases high correlation of the diagnoses with standard flow cytometric and cytochemical results. This rapid method allows a coordinated evaluation of morphologic features and immunophenotype; the latter features facilitated confirmation of unexpected reactivity of myeloid markers CD15 and MPO-7 in some cases of ALL.
...
PMID:Rapid immunocytochemical analysis of acute leukemias. 159 10
In the past few years a new syndrome of invasive Candida infection, the so-called hepatosplenic or chronic systemic candidiasis (CSC), has been recognized with increasing frequency in neutropenic patients. From January 1985 to December 1990, ten of 305
acute leukemia
(AL) patients treated at our institution were diagnosed as having CSC. In contrast, during the same period this type of Candida infection was not observed in any patient with hematological diseases other than AL treated in our center, including 277 patients who underwent bone marrow transplantation. All patients with CSC had fever and hepatomegaly, and five complained of abdominal pain. Seven patients had neutrophilic leukocytosis and six an increased serum
alkaline phosphatase
activity. Abdominal computed tomography and ultrasound study showed typical lesions in eight and seven patients, respectively. In four patients a laparoscopy-guided needle liver biopsy displayed yellowish nodules on the liver surface, and the histologic study revealed large granulomas with yeasts and pseudohyphae. All patients were given amphotericin B (mean: 4.6 g, range: 1-12.5 g) and 5-fluorocytosine, and five received fluconazole. No patient died as a direct consequence of CSC and in six the infection resolved. Finally, once controlled, the infectious complication did not preclude subsequent intensive antileukemic therapy, including bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Chronic systemic candidiasis in acute leukemia. 162 59
Forty-eight patients with refractory anemia (RA) were retrospectively analyzed for their prognosis and subclassified into three groups: 12 patients with hematological improvement (A), 23 patients with no changes (B), and 13 patients with progression to RAEB or
acute leukemia
(C). For all patients, the median survival were 49.2 months, and the rate of leukemic transformation was 16%. The median survivals were 60.6, 32.1, and 17.9 months, respectively, for groups A, B and C. The factors indicating poor prognosis were low reticulocyte counts, low neutrophil
alkaline phosphatase
activity, low% red cell utilization, high M/E ratio, high blast percentage in the bone marrow and cytological abnormalities in the granulocyte and megakaryocyte series. By using multiple discriminant analysis, we obtained a formula for the prognostic estimation with a discrimination probability of 62.5%. This formula could predict either the patients with good (Y greater than 0.85) or poor (Y less than 0.59) prognosis, and might be useful to select the treatment for this intractable anemia at the time of diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Multiple discriminant analysis for prognosis of refractory anemia]. 194 20
The aim of the present study was to compare the immunofluorescence technique (IF) with the immunoenzymatic (IE)
alkaline phosphatase
-antialkaline phosphatase method for the evaluation of the presence of lymphoid antigens (Ag) in 46 cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The first technique allows detection of Ag expressed on the cytoplasmic membrane of living cells, whilst the second shows the presence of intracytoplasmic Ag on fixed cells. In general, the percentages of lymphoid Ag expression on AML cells are relatively low with both IE (15.2%) and IF (17.4%). We found a good correlation between the two methods for CD2 (4/4), CD7 (4/5), CD20 (1/1) and CD4 (2/2). The Ag CD19, CD21 and CD8 were negative in all cases, both with IE and with IF. CD3 (2 cases) and CD22 (1 case) were only evident with IE. CD10 was seen in 1 case with IF, whilst it was found more frequently with IE. For this reason, demonstration of CD10 with IF is more specific for the classification of
acute leukemia
.
...
PMID:Incidence of lymphoid markers in acute myeloid leukemia. Alkaline phosphatase-antialkaline phosphatase versus immunofluorescence. 195 Mar 56
We report two cases of Philadelphia (Ph1) chromosome positive acute mixed lineage leukemia (AMLL) with breakpoint cluster region (bcr) (M-BCR-1) rearrangement. A 31 year-old-man (case 1) and a 42 year-old-woman (case 2) were admitted to our hospital for further evaluation of leucocytosis with atypical blasts. Each case was diagnosed as having bilineal type of AMLL because: (1) blasts in each case consisted of larger myeloid cells positive for myeloperoxidase and small lymphoid cells positive for PAS, and blasts in case 2 were positive for TdT; (2) blasts in case 1 expressed B lymphoid associated antigen; (3) Southern analysis in each case showed clonal rearrangements of both the immunoglobulin heavy chain and the T cell receptor beta gene. These two cases demonstrated the Ph1 chromosome and rearrangement of the bcr (M-BCR-1) gene, but none of splenomegaly, basophilia, and additional chromosome abnormalities were observed. In addition, after achieving remissions, they didn't revert to chronic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and showed normal neutrophil
alkaline phosphatase
scores, and the Ph1 chromosome disappeared completely in case 1 and coexisted with the normal chromosome in case 2. These findings suggest that diagnosis of both cases should not be CML blast crisis (BC) but Ph1 positive
acute leukemia
, and Ph1 positive AMLL may be a distinct clinical entity to be distinguished from CML-BC.
...
PMID:[Philadelphia chromosome positive acute mixed lineage leukemia with bcr (M-BCR-1) rearrangement]. 215 95
Three children with
acute leukemia
presented with prolonged fever and neutropenia after cytostatic therapy, which was followed by abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, and hepatic dysfunction with raised serum
alkaline phosphatase
. Abdominal CT scan and ultrasound demonstrated multiple small lesions compatible with the hepatosplenic candidiasis syndrome. Liver biopsies showed microabscesses with a granulomatous appearance, but evidence of yeasts and pseudohyphae was present in 1 case only. Cultures were negative. Treatment with amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine was successful in two children. At autopsy, one child had signs of active infection. We reviewed the literature on 27 children with hepatosplenic candidiasis. Abdominal symptomatology and prolonged fever, despite antibiotic therapy, in a patient with previous or present neutropenia after cytotoxic exposure, should lead to a careful evaluation, including noninvasive imaging studies, open liver biopsy, and prompt aggressive antifungal treatment, the response to which requires close follow-up.
...
PMID:Hepatosplenic candidiasis in children with cancer. Three cases in leukemic children and a literature review. 220 7
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