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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (anemia)
52,094 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Feline leukemia virus (FeLV) infection is common among cats where contact is high. The virus can be transmitted readily between cats. It causes a variety of haemopoietic and lymphoid neoplasms; the most common types are alimentary, multicentric and thymic lymphosarcoma and lymphatic leukaemia. The virus is involved in the aetiology of certain other diseases including anaemia, glomerulonephritis and an immunosuppressive syndrome which predisposes cats to intercurrent infections. Many infected cats mount an immune response and do not suffer from any of these. The immune status is shown by serum antibody levels to feline leukaemia virus associated cell membrane antigens. Cats with a titre of 32 or more are most unlikely to suffer any ill effects and may eliminate the virus infection. The outcome of infection in an individual cat depends on the immunological competence of the cat, the dose of virus received and its ability to induce immunosuppression. FeLV infection can be detected by examination of tissues by electron microscopy, and by culture of virus from plasma and other tissues. In the United States, a method is now in use for the detection of leukaemia virus antigen in peripheral blood leukocytes; this is carried out on ordinary blood films. Successful prototype vaccines have been developed against FeLV. This paper describes the natural history of the virus, the diseases in which it is implicated and discusses recently developed diagnostic methods.
Vet Rec 1975 Jan 04
PMID:Feline leukaemia virus and its clinical effects in cats. 16 15

Intravenous administration of lead acetate to rabbits for 10 weeks at 2 week intervals resulted in significantly elevated blood lead levels, slight anemia with marked microspherocytosis and moderate basophilic stippling, and marked depression of red cell delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) dehydratase activity. However the decrease in red cell pyrimidine 5'-nucleotidase (P5N) activity was slight when compared to the red cell P5N activity of comparable reticulocyte-rich blood, and intracellular accumulation of pyrimidine nucleotides could not be demonstrated. In the in vitro inhibition test the same degree of inhibition of red cell P5N activity seen in hereditary red cell P5N deficiency was obtained by using a lead concentration 200--400 times higher than the lead levels detected in human plumbism. Most importantly, there were no differences in the lead-induced inhibition of human and rabbit red cell P5N. From the results of the in vitro inhibition test, lead-induced red cell P5N deficiency appears to be one of several pathogenic mechanisms in chronic lead exposure associated with the accumulation of lead in bone marrow. A decrease in rec cell P5N activity could not be demonstrated despite the marked depression in red cell ALA dehydratase activity, and slight anemia with marked microspherocytosis and moderate basophilic stippling in this experiment. These results suggest that lead affects red cells at multiple metabolic loci.
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PMID:A role of red cell pyrimidine 5'-nucleotidase in experimental lead poisoning. 23 20

Twelve-day-old hypertransfused neonatal rats nursed for four days by a twice-bled mother exhibited higher 48-hour RBC-59Fe incorporation than control neonates nursed by a normal mother. Erythroprotein (Ep) in plasma of 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates suckled for four days to twice-bled mothers was initially equivalent to approximately 0.5 IU/day. This calculation was based on the observation that reticulocytosis induced in these animals was similar to that produced in neonates of the same age injected intraperitoneally with 0.5 IU Ep for four days while nursing from normal mothers. The reticulocyte maturation curve was shifted to the left in 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates suckled by anemic mothers, and in 12-day-old normal neonates rendered anemic by bleeding, while nursing from normal mothers. This left-shift of the reticulocyte maturation curve was also evident in 12-day-old hypertransfused neonates injected with Ep. Decreases in relative percentages of nucleated RBC was evident in spleens of 12-day-old neonates nursed by anemia mothers and spleens of 12-day-olds injected with Ep. Significant reduction in nucleated RBC were noted in both spleen and marrow of 12-day-old anemic neonates. These results suggest: (1) Ep, present in increased amounts in the anemic mother, is transmitted through milk to nursing neonates thereby stimulating erythropoiesis in these animals; (2) Ep may not stimulate stem cell differentiation towards the e4ythroid compartment but rather acts on already differentiated erythroid cells by influencing their rate of maturation.
Anat Rec 1978 Jun
PMID:Erythropoietic response of hypertransfused neonatal rats suckled by anemic mothers. 56 21

A six-months-old heifer died within two days of showing signs of anaemia and dyspnoea. The death was attributed to autoimmune haemolytic anaemia (AHA) because of auto-agglutination which increased on Coomb's testing and the presence of antibovine IgG on the erythrocyte surfaces.
Vet Rec 1978 Aug 19
PMID:Bovine auto-immune haemolytic anaemia. 69 64

Calves have been raised for veal on liquid diets containing different amounts of iron. A concentration of 25-30 mg soluble iron/kg dietary dry matter provided sufficient haemaglobin for normal appetite, growth and oxygen transport, and also produced carcases light coloured enough for the veal trade. When anaemia was induced in calves or sheep the first measurable response from the animals was a fall in appetite which provided a more sensitive indicator than more complicated physiological or biochemical measurements.
Vet Rec 1976 Sep 11
PMID:Anaemia and veal calf production. 78 21

An outbreak of disease characterised by haemorrhages, anaemia, leucopenia, thrombocytopenia, skin lesions, degenerative and inflammatory tissue changes and death was investigated in herd of dairy cows. A tentative diagnosis based on circumstantial evidence was of mycotoxicosis arising from the feeding of mouldy barley.
Vet Rec 1977 May 07
PMID:Haemorrhagic syndrome of cattle of suspected mycotoxic origin. 86 78

Tick borne fever is considered to have played a major role in a complex disease syndrome involving mucosal disease and cobalt deficiency in a group of young calves reared on an upland farm in South West Scotland. Anaemia, illthrift, coat colour changes and scour were the main clinical signs.
Vet Rec 1977 Jun 25
PMID:Tick borne fever in association with mucosal disease and cobalt deficiency in calves. 88 11

The effect of varying the H-2 complex on the survival of parabiosed mice was investigated using a strain combination known to lead to about 50% long-term survival. While 45.6% of DBA/2J (H-2d) with (DBA/2J x C3H/HeJ)F1 (H-2d/H-2k) parabionts survive to 100 days or more, 69% of DBA/2J with (DBA/2J x C3H.NBSn)F1s (H-2d/H-2p) survive that long; only 16% of DBA/2J with (DBA/2Jx C3H.SWSn)F1s (H-2d/H-2b) survive to 100 days. The plot of hematocrits as a function of time after parabiosis differs significantly between the 45.6% surviving strain combination (which shows the classical pattern of parental polycythemia and F1 hybrid anemia) and the 69% surviving strain combination (which shows no divergence in parental and F1 hematocrit values). Furthermore, the 69% surviving strain combination often (5/14) persists in a chimeric state as judgec by starch gel electrophoresis of rec blood cell lysates; the other two strain combinations show no demonstrable red cell chimerism. The conclusion is suggested that the mechann these two generally successful strain combinations tested, and appears to be a function of the H-2types of the partners.
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PMID:The genetics of tolerance induction in histoincompatible parabiosed mice. 98 44

Three cases of monocytic leukaemia in dogs are reported. Clinically, they all showed dullness, lymph node enlargement and hepato-spenomegaly and the overt illness was of short duration. Haematologically, the white blood cell count was raised to different degrees in each case. The great majority of white cells were monocytes and monoblasts; their cytological, cytochemical and electron microscopic features are described. Only a mild degree of anaemia was present in all cases. Pathological examinations, carried out in two of the dogs, showed widespread leukaemic infiltration of bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, liver and other organs. Differentiation of this syndrome from other forms of haemopoietic neoplasia is discussed.
Vet Rec 1975 Jan 11
PMID:Monocytic leukaemia in the dog. 105 99

The effect of phenylhydrazine (PHZ) on the hematopoietic events in the embryonic spleen of C57Bl/6J mice was examined by light and electron microscopy. Following PHZ in injections to the mothers, the embryonic spleen revealed a marked increase in erythroid precursors, with a shift to mature cells. This phenomenon was part of a more generalized stimulation of erythorpoiesis, expressed by a shift to mature red cell precursors in the embryonic livers and an increase in the percentage of non-nucleated cells in the embryonic peripheral blood. Concomitantly stimulation of phagocytosis in the spleen of embryos in the early gestational days and increased vascularity were observed, and a later effect of granulocytopoietic stimulation. The effect on erythropoiesis in the embryonic spleen might be a sequence of erythropoietin stimulation, either in the mothers or the fetuses, due to anemia and hypoxia following PHZ injections.
Anat Rec 1975 May
PMID:Hematopoiesis in the embryonic mouse spleen. II. Alterations after phenylhydrazine administration to the mothers. 115 87


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