Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fine needle aspiration biopsy cytology performed in three children with sarcoidosis expedited clinical investigation and diagnosis of their disease. Each patient had a different clinical presentation; in two of them lymphoma was part of the initial differential diagnosis. Aspiration cytology in all cases revealed collections of epithelioid histiocytes, and multinucleate foreign body-type giant cells, without accompanying necrosis or acute inflammation. A diagnosis of non-caseating granulomas consistent with sarcoidosis was made in all aspirates. Special stains for identification of organisms performed on the smears of one case, and culture of aspirate material from one case were negative. Subsequent serum angiotensin converting enzyme levels in all patients were elevated. Chest x-ray films in all patients showed mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy. One patient had an interstitial pulmonary infiltrate. All patients responded to steroid therapy. Fine needle aspiration biopsy can be a useful diagnostic tool in the evaluation of children with suspected sarcoidosis.
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PMID:Fine needle aspiration biopsy cytology as an adjunct in the diagnosis of childhood sarcoidosis. 137 10

A 26 year-old man, who was treated for meningitis in our hospital previously, was rehospitalized 1 year later because he developed disturbance of consciousness, gait disturbance and urinary incontinence. Blood examination revealed accelerated ESR, elevated GPT, slight elevation of serum Ca, strong positive CRP, and a decrease in PHA and Con A. ACE was within normal range and tuberculin reaction was negative. Lumbar puncture revealed that the initial pressure was 310 mmH2O, cells were 152/3, and protein was 343 mg/dl. Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy was absent in chest X ray film. Head CT revealed enlarged lateral ventricles and irregularly enhancing nodular lesions in the anterior half of the falx cerebri, and abnormally strong enhancement of the choroid plexus. Ventriculoperitoneal shunt was performed. As a diagnosis was difficult to obtain from the clinical data, biopsy of the nodular lesions was performed. The histopathologic diagnosis was sarcoidosis. Steroid hormone was administered thereafter, and the nodular lesions of the falx disappeared in the follow-up. In the literature, only 8 cases of sarcoidosis of the dura mater have been reported. Since intracranial sarcoidosis is a part of systemic sarcoidosis, its diagnosis is not difficult in most cases. However, in cases difficult to diagnose as in our case, biopsy may be necessary. When nodular lesion occurs in the dura mater, sarcoidosis must be included as a possibility in the differential diagnosis in addition to the usual meningioma, lymphoma, and metastatic brain tumor.
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PMID:[A case of dural sarcoidosis]. 160 81

Acute tumor lysis syndrome resulting from rapid neoplastic cell lysis after chemotherapy is an unusual event, generally seen in histological aggressive lymphatic tumors. The authors saw four patients who developed acute tumor lysis syndrome when treated for advanced-stage, refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with an initial cycle of cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) 2 g/m2 every 12 hours x 4, cisplatin 35 mg/m2 every 24 hours x 2, and etoposide 100 mg/m2 every 24 hours x 2 (ACE). With aggressive hydration, urine alkalinization, forced diuresis, and high-dose allopurinol, acute tumor lysis syndrome was not seen in three subsequent cases of CLL treated with ACE. Of a total of eight patients treated, seven patients had marked reductions in lymphocyte counts after the first course of ACE. Of the eight patients, three are alive: one in a complete remission greater than 2 years, one in partial remission after three cycles of ACE, and one in Richter's transformation to large cell lymphoma. The remaining patients died after one cycle of ACE chemotherapy, one as a direct complication of acute tumor lysis and pancytopenia, and four others from complications of severe pancytopenia and general debilitation. Therefore, ACE appears to cause a rapid dissolution of tumor cells in CLL, and with appropriate aggressive management of the tumor lysis and infectious complications may have a favorable impact on survival in advanced CLL.
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PMID:Acute tumor lysis syndrome and treatment response in patients treated for refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia with short-course, high-dose cytosine arabinoside, cisplatin, and etoposide. 236 9

A case of peripheral T-cell lymphoma classified, according to the updated Kiel classification, as a large pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma with a high content of reactive histiocytes and blood hypereosinophilia is reported. Light microscopic examination revealed a diffuse effacement of the lymph node structure by large pleomorphic lymphoma cells mixed with eosinophils and many histiocytes, some of them presenting discrete features of hemophagocytosis. The neoplastic cells were CD3, CD5, CD8 and HLA-DR positive but failed to show CD30 antigen. DNA molecular analysis displayed simultaneous rearrangements of the genes coding for the delta chain of the T-cell receptor and for the Ig heavy chain. Increased serum levels of angiotensin converting enzyme and ferritin were found and probably induced by the reactive histiocytes. Immunoassays (ELISA) with antibodies directed against some cytokines and against the Tac peptide (sIL-2R) were performed. They demonstrated high serum levels of sIL-2R and a slight increase in GM-CSF, but neither IL-5 nor IL-3. The association of blood hypereosinophilia and histiocytic hyperplasia with a peripheral T-cell lymphoma is discussed.
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PMID:A case of pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma with a high content of reactive histiocytes presented with hypereosinophilia. 747 65

Elevation of the serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (sACE) level and hepatic granulomas were found during a clinical relapse in a 22 year old patient with acute viral hepatitis type A (AVH-A). The serum transaminase level and sACE level remained high for more than 6 months. In the biopsied specimen of the liver, fibrous rings of granulomas composed of collagen types I, III, and V were observed. Furthermore, the localization of ACE was visible in the rough endoplasmic reticulum of epithelioid cells of granulomas in the liver under electron microscopy using the indirect immunoperoxidase method. These results suggest that granuloma cells in the liver caused by hepatitis A may be involved in ACE production. In addition, other diseases associated with the presence of granulomas in the liver, such as lymphoma, cytomegalovirus infection, visceral leishmaniasis, and lupoid hepatitis, were ruled out. However, the hepatic granulomas disappeared with the healing of AVH-A. In this regard, the present case is considered to be one of the very few cases of hepatic sarcoidosis.
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PMID:A patient with hepatic granuloma formation and angiotensin-converting enzyme production by granuloma cells during clinical relapse of hepatitis A. 804 9

We describe a case of malignant lymphoma mimicking the rheumatic presentation of sarcoidosis in an adolescent with a 3-year history of febrile illness. Final diagnosis was established by tissue biopsy after multiple studies failed to provide histological evidence of granulomas consistent with sarcoidosis. We discuss the limited diagnostic specificity of serum angiotensin converting enzyme in sarcoidosis and emphasize the need for aggressive diagnostic evaluation of a patient whose clinical presentation is not fully explained by a known rheumatologic illness.
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PMID:Prolonged course of illness in a child with malignant lymphoma mimicking sarcoidosis. 816 20

We have encountered a 49-year-old female with persistent proteinuria and hematuria. Blood pressure, renal function, physical findings and chest X-p showed no abnormality, but blood tests disclosed mild thrombocytopenia, elevated serum ACE activity, serum lysozyme activity and serum IgA concentration. Abdominal echography and CT revealed multiple nodules in her spleen. In order to make a definite diagnosis and exclude the possibilities of malignant lymphoma or metastatic malignant tumor, splenectomy, and open renal biopsy were performed at the same time. On histological examinations, light microscopic appearance of the spleen was characterized by non-caseating granulomas compatible with sarcoidosis. Renal biopsy specimen showed diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis with positive staining of IgA predominantly located in the mesangial area, compatible with IgA nephropathy. The present case may provide suggestive evidence for a link between sarcoidosis and IgA nephropathy in the pathogenesis. IgA nephropathy complicated by sarcoidosis is rare, and thus is of particular interest because common immunological abnormalities might be considered in the disease process of both diseases. We feel that despite a low index of suspicion, physicians must be alert to the possibility of IgA nephritis associated with sarcoidosis. The literature is reviewed regarding the relationship between IgA nephropathy and sarcoidosis.
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PMID:[Sarcoidosis representing multiple splenic nodules in a patient with IgA nephropathy]. 885 36

The technique of comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) has until recently been used to screen for common genomic abnormalities in fresh tumour material; it has identified previously unrecognised regions of amplification associated with poor prognosis subtypes of breast cancer and lymphoma. Our group has applied this technique to resistant cell lines and their sensitive counterparts in order to define chromosomal abnormalities associated with acquired drug resistance. We have demonstrated the applicability of this technique to the study of drug resistance using cell lines with known mechanisms of resistance. The ability to detect novel genomic alterations in cell lines with novel mechanisms of resistance was also demonstrated. We subsequently examined the CGH profiles of seven different cell lines made resistant to three platinum analogues and showed the most consistent abnormalities to involve over-representation of regions 4q and 6q. More recently, we have applied the CGH technique to a series of testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) collected as formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens from patients, both pre- and post-therapy using a platinum-based regimen (POMB/ACE). Previous reports have shown over-representation of X, 7q, 8q and 12p and loss of 13q to occur in 25% of primary TGCTs. Over-representation of 12p was confirmed in the majority of these biopsy samples; deletion of 13q was noted in the initial biopsies of several patients. We also demonstrated alterations of 4p, 4q, 5q and 6q in this series of patients. Newly acquired deletions of 2q and 18q and amplifications of 8q were frequently observed in post-chemotherapy samples from resistant tumours. The CGH studies on these patients with TGCT will not only enable us to correlate our observations on clinical material with those from long-term cell lines, but should also identify sites of key genes involved in clinical platinum resistance.
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PMID:A molecular cytogenetic approach to studying platinum resistance. 1062 60

Sarcoidlike granulomas may occur in association with Hodgkin lymphoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The granulomas may be concomitant and so extensive that they obscure the malignant process. In addition, a sarcoidosis-lymphoma syndrome has been described in which there appears to be a relationship between sarcoidosis and the development of a lymphoproliferative disorder. We report a case of a low-grade B-cell lymphoma with concomitant extensive sarcoidlike granulomas. The patient had no diagnostic clinical evidence of sarcoidosis, although she had an elevated serum calcium level and increased serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity. Increased serum calcium and serum angiotensin-converting enzyme activity have been associated with clinical sarcoidosis but have also occasionally been described in association with Hodgkin lymphoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma without evidence of sarcoidosis. We describe our findings and illustrate the usefulness of immunoperoxidase immunophenotyping techniques in such a case.
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PMID:Low-grade B-cell lymphoma and concomitant extensive sarcoidlike granulomas: a case report and review of the literature. 1062 50

A 77-year-old man was admitted to a hospital because of a left cervical tumor. He was initially diagnosed as having non-Hodgkin lymphoma, diffuse large cell type, Ann Arbor stage IV, and transferred to our hospital for chemotherapy. Flow cytometric analysis of the left axillary lymph node cells derived from a biopsy specimen showed that in addition to lymphoid surface markers (CD5, 7, 21), myeloid surface markers (CD11b, 33, 34) were also positive. The diagnosis of malignant lymphoma was therefore confirmed. The patient, was treated with THP-COP therapy, which proved very effective. Thereafter, a biopsy specimen was found to be positive for MT1 (CD43) staining but negative for myeloperoxidase and chloroacetate esterase staining on immunohistochemistry. Furthermore, no rearrangement of the IgH JH, TCR C beta 1 or TCR J gamma gene was detected by Southern blot analysis. On basis of these findings and the previous results of flow cytometry, we changed the diagnosis from malignant lymphoma to granulocytic sarcoma. THP-COP therapy was continued, and complete remission was achieved. Two months later, however, the patient developed acute myelocytic leukemia (AML M1) and received DCP therapy, but he died of pneumonia.
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PMID:[Granulocytic sarcoma developing in lymph nodes]. 1209 91


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