Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A spontaneous complete remission was observed in a 47-year-old female with acute monocytic leukemia. Resolution of all abnormalities, including systemic papule, thrombocytopenia, increased numbers of immature monocytoid cells in the peripheral blood and bone marrow, elevation of serum lysozyme and LDH, and trisomy 8 on chromosome analysis, occurred without any treatment. Moreover, the remission was not associated with any infection or blood transfusion, and is persistent for 12-month duration.
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PMID:[Spontaneous complete remission in a patient with acute monocytic leukemia]. 228 75

Two cases of Ph1-negative chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) are described, they were 66-year-old female and 73-year-old male. Both patients shared all of the following features: presence of anemia, thrombocytopenia and leukocytosis with every stage of neutrophilic differentiation, hypercellular bone marrow with hyperplasia of the degranulated neutrophilic series, diminished neutrophilic alkaline phosphatase, elevated serum lysozyme and vitamin B12 level, mosaic pattern of trisomy 8 and normal karyotypes in chromosome analysis, and markedly increased number of CFU-GM. In addition, bcr rearrangement by Southern blot hybridization was not demonstrated in these patients. The diagnosis of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia was not verified, however, because of the absence of monocytosis in peripheral blood. The existence of so-called Ph1-negative CML like these two cases as a diagnostic entity must be further studied.
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PMID:[So-called Ph1-negative chronic myelogenous leukemia with a mosaic pattern of trisomy 8 and normal karyotypes--report of 2 cases]. 276 71

We report a case of primary acute myelomonocytic leukemia involving the bone marrow that resembled sarcomatoid carcinoma. The neoplastic cells in bone marrow biopsy specimens formed cohesive-appearing clusters and cords separated by an immature fibroblastic proliferation and myxoid stroma. Blasts in the bone marrow aspirate smears formed clusters and sheets, and a subset of blasts exhibited erythrophagocytosis. Dysgranulopoiesis was also present. Lineage was confirmed by immunohistochemical analysis of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. The tumor cells showed strong reactivity for lysozyme, myeloperoxidase, CD45, and CD68 and were negative for keratin, S100, CD20, and CD3. The serum lysozyme concentration (110 microgram/mL) was 13 times greater than the normal value (8 microgram/mL). Cytogenetic studies performed on bone marrow aspirate material revealed a complex karyotype, including trisomy 8 and abnormalities of chromosome 11q. We report this case of acute myelomonocytic leukemia because the neoplastic cells appeared cohesive and spindled, resembling sarcomatoid carcinoma, and therefore caused diagnostic difficulty. Other monocytic neoplasms with similar resemblance to carcinoma or sarcoma have been reported in the literature, suggesting that the tendency to appear cohesive may be an inherent characteristic of neoplastic cells with monocytic differentiation.
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PMID:Acute myelomonocytic leukemia with histologic features resembling sarcomatoid carcinoma in bone marrow. 1065 48

An 87-year-old woman not known to have either a lymphoma or leukemia developed a left multinodular, fish-flesh superior epibulbar and forniceal mass. A biopsy disclosed a blastic tumor with scattered multinucleated immature megakaryoblasts. Immunophenotyping of bone marrow cells revealed strong positivity for CD7, CD31, CD43, CD45, CD61, and CD117; CD71, myeloperoxidase, and lysozyme were also positive in scattered cells. Forty percent of the neoplastic cells were Ki-67 positive. Cytogenetic studies indicated a trisomy 8 (associated with worse prognosis) and a t(12; 17) translocation. Desmin, smooth muscle actin, pancytokeratin, CAM 5.2, adipophilin, tryptase, S100, SOX10, MART1, and E-cadherin were negative, ruling out a nonhematopoietic tumor. The conjunctival lesion was diagnosed as a myeloid sarcoma with megakaryoblastic differentiation, a rare variant. It probably arose from a myelodysplastic syndrome. This is the first case of its type to develop in the conjunctiva.
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PMID:Myeloid Sarcoma with Megakaryoblastic Differentiation Arising in the Conjunctiva. 3067 74

Hematological malignancies can manifest as extramedullary soft tissue masses in relatively rare cases. The rarity of it causes a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. One of the rarest manifestations is myeloid sarcoma (MS). MS develops as part of acute myeloid leukemia, myeloproliferative neoplasm, or myelodysplastic syndrome or at relapse, especially following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant. The tumor displays high myeloperoxidase expression, hence the color green, and is called chloroma. It most commonly appears in lymph nodes, skin and soft tissues, bone, testes, gastrointestinal tract, and peritoneum. Immunohistochemistry shows CD68-KP1 as the most commonly expressed marker, then myeloperoxidase, CD117, CD99, CD68/PG-M1, lysozyme, CD34, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, CD56, CD61, CD30, glycophorin A, and CD4. Different chromosomal abnormalities including MLL rearrangement, t(8; 21), monosomy 7, trisomy 8, trisomy 11, trisomy 4, inversion (16), monosomy 16,16q deletion, 5q deletion, and 20q deletion were reported. Most of the literature about MS are case reports and small retrospective studies, thus there is limited clinical knowledge of the cases and their presentation and management plans. Here, we provide a review of what has been reported in the literature about MS in the light of our experiences.
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PMID:Myeloid Sarcoma. 3084 Sep 60