Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Necrotizing lesions of the colon occur in patients with malignancy. We identified 26 patients with cancer (23 with acute leukemia and three with solid tumors) who died from necrotizing colitis. Autopsies revealed three pathologic categories: pseudomembranous colitis in 69 per cent, agranulocytic colitis in 19 per cent and ischemic colitis in 12 per cent. Most died from sepsis. A comparison of characteristics was made with a control population matched for diagnosis, age, cause of death and duration of neoplasia. Nearly all patients in both groups had fever and were granulocytopenic secondary to chemotherapy. Most received antineoplastic and antimicrobial regimens during the month prior to their terminal illness. Abdominal pain and distention, stomatitis and necrotizing pharyngitis were frequently associated with colitis. Hyperbilirubinemia was a frequent late complication in those with colitis and the control group. Single and multiorganism septicemia were found more frequently in patients with colitis. As antemortem diagnosis was unusual, aggressive attempts at diagnosis are necessary to assess the true incidence of this disorder and the best therapy.
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PMID:Necrotizing colitis in patients with cancer. 49 35

Fourteen children (ages 2-15 years) with acute leukemia in relapse were treated with daily recombinant interferon gamma for 14 days by subcutaneous injections at fixed dose levels of 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, or 0.75 mg/m2 (1.0, 2.5, 5.0, or 7.5 x 10(6) units/m2) without intrapatient escalation. Patients received a second 14-day course of therapy followed by thrice weekly administration unless there were signs of progressive disease or grade 3 or 4 toxicity. Side effects in the 13 evaluable patients included fever (n = 10), fatigue (9), decreased Karnofsky performance score (8), hypertriglyceridemia (8), myalgia (5), weight loss > 5% (4), elevated liver transaminases (4), and abdominal pain (3). There was only one grade 4 toxicity: one of the six patients at the 0.5 mg/m2 dose level developed reversible acute renal failure. One patient died of gastrointestinal hemorrhage due to disease-related refractory thrombocytopenia. One child had an oncolytic response and two others stable disease for 138 and 148 days. An appropriate dose level for phase II studies in children is 0.5 mg/m2 per day.
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PMID:Phase I study of recombinant human interferon gamma in children with relapsed acute leukemia. 143 1

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.
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PMID:Chronic systemic candidiasis in acute leukemia. 162 59

The clinical features of 26 patients of PNH in Sheffield Blood Centre, UK and 50 cases in our hospital, observed in the same period, were compared. Each case was analysed according to the same criteria, and then comparison was made between the two groups. Results showed that in our group: male patients were more common; patients usually had mild or moderate bleeding tendency; the appearance of hemoglobinuria was delayed; abdominal pain was mostly related to hemoglobinuria but not thrombosis; pancytopenia was encountered more frequently and leucopenia as well as thrombocytopenia more remarkable; the incidence of thrombosis was not rare, but occurred rather late: thrombosis was mainly seen in superficial veins, but not veins of viscera; the major cause of death was not thromboembolism but infection. About 25% of the patients achieved long term clinical remission in both groups. None of the patients in these two series transformed to myeloproliferative disorders including acute leukemia. PNH can be considered a benign and chronic hematologic disease.
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PMID:[Clinical features of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) in China as compared with those in United Kingdom]. 187 40

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.
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PMID:Hepatosplenic candidiasis in children with cancer. Three cases in leukemic children and a literature review. 220 7

Neutropenic enterocolitis is a symptom complex of fever, abdominal pain, distention, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and bloody stools occurring in a patient with a low neutrophil count and is most often seen in patients with acute leukemia after a course of chemotherapy. In most cases, neutropenic enterocolitis is a self-limited condition, but complications of transmural intestinal necrosis and bowel perforation may occur in a small number of patients. Surgical management should be reserved for those patients with bowel wall necrosis or perforation; however, early identification of these patients is difficult. We report our experience with the use of diagnostic peritoneal lavage in three patients with the symptoms and signs of neutropenic enterocolitis. In each case, Gram's stain of lavage fluid revealed no evidence of polymicrobial contamination of the peritoneal cavity. All three patients were managed medically, with resolution of their abdominal symptoms. Peritoneal lavage is helpful in excluding bowel perforation and avoiding unnecessary surgical intervention in patients with neutropenic enterocolitis.
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PMID:Selective management of patients with neutropenic enterocolitis using peritoneal lavage. 238 Dec 15

A review of pediatric autopsy results at the Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine from 1970 through 1987 was conducted. Thirty-three cases of typhlitis were identified in patients with acute leukemia and two cases each in patients with lymphoblastic lymphoma and aplastic anemia. Patients ranged in age from 10 months to 17 years. Fifty-seven percent were male and 43% were female. All were myelosuppressed. A postmortem incidence rate of 24% was determined for patients with acute leukemia. Common symptoms included abdominal pain and distention in 78% of patients and acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding in 35%. Abdominal radiographs varied in spectrum from a nonspecific bowel gas pattern to frank right colonic pneumatosis intestinalis. Thirty-three patients received chemotherapy within 30 days before onset of abdominal symptoms. All patients were febrile (greater than 38.5 degrees C), and 33 received broad-spectrum antibiotics. Three patients received amphotericin B. Premortem, 84% of organisms cultured from blood were bacterial whereas 16% were fungal. Fungal pathogens accounted for 53% of new microorganisms seen at autopsy. Postmortem examination showed typhlitis in the following anatomic distributions: (1) confined to the cecum; (2) involving the cecum and ileum; (3) involving the cecum, ileum, and ascending colon; or (4) involving the cecum, with sporadic ulcers throughout the intestine. This review includes clinical and postmortem features of typhlitis and current strategies for diagnosis and management.
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PMID:Typhlitis. An 18-year experience and postmortem review. 240 62

We experienced 57 episodes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in 55 patients with hematologic disorders in a 16-year period. Ninety-five percent of the patients had hematologic malignancies such as acute leukemia. All but one patient received cytotoxic or immunosuppressive therapy at or prior to the onset of bacteremia. Seventy-seven percent of the episodes occurred during profound granulocytopenia of below 100/mm3. All the patients acquired their infection in the hospital, and 96% had received antibiotic therapy during the preceding two weeks. Periodontal, anorectal, lower respiratory tract, and urogenital infections were the sources of bacteremia in about three-quarters of the episodes. Periodontal infection tended to progress to cellulitis of the face or the floor of the mouth, often resulting in bacteremia of the unimicrobial type, while anorectal infection predisposed to abscess formation, frequently leading to bacteremia of the polymicrobial type. Cellulitis at onset was seen in 35% of the episodes. Most sites of infection did not become apparent until one to three days after the onset of fever, probably because of depressed inflammatory response associated with severe granulocytopenia. The majority of patients complained of gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea and vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and abdominal fullness at the onset of bacteremia. Major complications included bacteremic shock (63%), impaired consciousness (25%), ecthyma gangrenosum or hemorrhagic gangrenous cellulitis (18%), and jaundice (12%). Furthermore, there were one case each of endocarditis and disseminated intravascular coagulation. It was thus suggested that the clinical picture of P. aeruginosa bacteremia complicating hematologic disorders is influenced by the predisposing conditions associated with the underlying diseases and their treatment.
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PMID:[Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia associated with hematologic disorders [I]. Predisposing factors and clinical manifestations]. 250 86

Three cases of fatal clostridial septicemia in patients with acute leukemia are described. Predisposing factors and treatment are discussed. Clostridium septicemia should always be suspected when a patient with neutropenia suddenly develops diffuse abdominal pain, fever, and tachycardia over 120/min. The importance of early treatment with penicillin or another adequate antibiotic is discussed.
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PMID:Clostridium perfringens septicemia and acute leukemia. 286 67

Fifteen children with acute leukemia in relapse, refractory to conventional therapy, were treated with idarubicin administered orally for 3 consecutive days in dosages ranging from 30 to 50 mg/m2 per day at 19- to 21-day intervals. Gastrointestinal complications, including nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea and stomatitis, were the major forms of dose-limiting toxicity, affecting the majority of patients at all levels of idarubicin dosage. Two patients who had received total-body irradiation for bone marrow transplantation developed life-threatening gastrointestinal toxicity suggestive of a radiation "recall" phenomenon. Echocardiographic evidence of depressed cardiac function, without clinical symptoms or signs, was noted in six of 11 patients, although the changes were judged to be significant in only one child. The maximal tolerated oral dose of idarubicin was 40 mg/m2 per day. The medium terminal plasma half-life of idarubicin was 9.2 h (range, 6.4-25.5 h). Both idarubicin and its metabolite, idarubicinol, accumulated during the 3 days of therapy. Among the five patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia whose cells were tested for drug sensitivity in vitro, the idarubicin concentration resulting in 50% inhibition (IC50) of cluster and colony formation ranged from 1.6 x 10(-10) M to 5 x 10(-7) M. There was no obvious relationship between the IC50 for idarubicin and that for epirubicin or daunorubicin. Oral idarubicin produced definite antileukemic effects, clearing blast cells from the circulation in 13 of the 14 evaluable patients. Future studies should define an optimal dose schedule to circumvent the limiting gastrointestinal complications associated with this agent.
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PMID:Phase I clinical trial of orally administered 4-demethoxydaunorubicin (idarubicin) with pharmacokinetic and in vitro drug sensitivity testing in children with refractory leukemia. 316 8


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