Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (anemia)
52,094 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intravenous (IV) gamma globulin has been successfully used as replacement therapy for antibody-deficient patients and, more recently, in the treatment of autoimmune diseases such as idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, myasthenia gravis, and Kawasaki disease. In view of the successful treatment of these diseases, we initiated a pilot study of the effect of IV gamma globulin in systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). Eight patients with active systemic JRA that was unresponsive to first-line agents, second-line agents, and/or corticosteroids received this therapy monthly for 6 months. Outcome measures included changes in articular and extraarticular features, steroid dosage, and laboratory parameters. Following IV gamma globulin therapy, there was significant improvement in arthritis and/or morning stiffness in 5 of 8 patients, while extraarticular features significantly improved in 7 of 8 patients. At study entry, 6 of 8 patients were receiving prednisone; at study end, prednisone was discontinued in 3 patients and decreased by more than 50% in the other 3. Overall, there was an 80% reduction in the prednisone dosage. Initially, all patients had anemia, low levels of serum albumin, and an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, while a thrombocytosis was seen in 7 of 8 patients. Serum IgG was initially elevated in 6 patients. IV gamma globulin therapy resulted in a significant increase in hemoglobin and albumin levels and a significant decrease in the mean serum IgG level, platelet count, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. In only 1 patient did IV gamma globulin fail to significantly improve the clinical or laboratory features of the disease. We suggest that this therapy may be beneficial in the treatment of systemic JRA.
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PMID:Intravenous gamma globulin therapy in systemic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. 169 98

To investigate whether the clinical history and basic laboratory test results can differentiate between an organic or functional cause of chronic diarrhea and thus avoid unnecessary hospital admissions and invasive procedures, we reviewed the charts of 58 adult patients admitted during 6 years because of chronic diarrhea who had normal stool and colonic examinations. The final diagnoses were irritable bowel syndrome in 34 patients, organic diarrhea in 21, and unknown cause in three. The following clinical data did not help in the differential diagnosis: age, sex, duration of diarrhea, presence of continuous diarrhea, abdominal pain, stool frequency or volume, and presence of stool mucus. Significant weight loss, nocturnal diarrhea, and the absence of tenesmus were associated with an organic cause. One or more laboratory alterations (increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate, anemia, hypokalemia, and low serum albumin level) were found in 62% of patients with organic diarrhea but in only 3% of those with functional disease; p less than 0.001. In 20 of 21 patients with organic diarrhea, an syndromic diagnosis (fat malabsorption, n = 13; inflammatory bowel disease, n = 4; and secretory diarrhea, n = 3) could be obtained with three simple tests (stool fat, rectal biopsy, and fecal water osmolality and electrolyte determination, respectively). Our study confirms that a detailed history and a few simple laboratory data can help to distinguish between functional and organic diarrhea and so avoid extensive investigation. The syndromic diagnosis of organic diarrhea can also be approximated with relatively easy tests.
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PMID:Chronic diarrhea with normal stool and colonic examinations: organic or functional? 174 88

In the context of the Euronut SENECA study of nutrition and the elderly, performed in 19 towns situated in 12 European countries, blood haemoglobin and haematocrit, and serum albumin were measured in a large sample of 70-75-year-old subjects. The mean haemoglobin (Hb) values for the different towns ranged from 144 g l-1 to 157 g l-1 for men and from 131 g l-1 to 150 g l-1 for women. The town haematocrit (Hct) means ranged from 43.0% to 48.9% for men and from 39.7% to 46.4% for women. No clear geographical pattern emerged for either Hb or Hct. The 95% ranges (2.5-97.5 percentile intervals) for Hb and Hct for all towns combined (without any claim of being representative of Europe) were very similar to those reported in the NHANES II study of the USA. Prevalences of anaemia, using the WHO definition (Hb less than 130 g l-1 for men and Hb less than 120 g l-1 for women) were 5.2% for men and 5.7% for women. The town mean serum albumins ranged from 40.3 g l-1 to 44.3 g l-1 for men and from 40.3 g l-1 to 43.2 g l-1 for women. No clear geographical pattern emerged. Mean values were somewhat lower than for younger adults and comparable to other published data. Most albumin values were in the normal range, with only 2.0% of both men and women having levels below 35 g l-1 and only 0.4% of men and no women having levels below 30 g l-1. These results show that these 70-75-year-old subjects who chose to participate in the study were in relatively good health as judged from their haemoglobin, haematocrit and serum albumin levels.
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PMID:Nutritional status: haematology and albumin. Euronut SENECA investigators. 180 68

In order to assess the status of their immunologic system, a study was carried out in 38 adults with sickle-cell anaemia. Fifty healthy blood donors were used as control group. Significant decrease of serum albumin (p less than 0.02) and increase of alpha-globulins (p less than 0.01) and gamma-globulins (p less than 0.001) were present in the patients. They showed also significantly decreased percentage of spontaneous rosette-forming lymphocytes (p less than 0.01) and of lymphocytes responding to anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (p less than 0.05) with respect to the control group. Such relative T-cell decrease in peripheral blood seemingly took place by means of decreasing CD4-positive subpopulations, whose percentage was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) in the patients than in the control subjects. Functional studies showed a significant decrease (p less than 0.001) of the activity of natural cytotoxic cells. None of the patients had antibodies against human immunodeficiency viruses type 1 and type 2, and 60% of them were positive to cytomegalovirus test. No statistical correlation was found between the immunological findings and the presence of antibodies against such virus, neither such alterations correlated with the number of blood units received by the patients.
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PMID:[Immunologic changes in sickle-cell anemia]. 185 69

Nutritional status was assessed in 25 anemic hemodialysis patients before and during erythropoietin treatment. Nutritional assessment included regular blood chemistry determinations, anthropometric measurements, analysis of protein content in skeletal muscle, and estimation of daily protein intake from protein catabolic rate determinations (using urea kinetic modelling) and dialysis efficiency for urea. These measurements were done immediately prior to erythropoietin treatment, after anemia correction and after one year of maintenance erythropoietin treatment. Both relative body weights and subcutaneous fat stores were low at the start, but increased significantly (p less than 0.05) during the study. Sixteen of the 25 patients gained weight and eight patients lost weight. The patients with weight gain had at the start of the study low weight indices (body weight 89.9 +/- 7.6% of ideal body weight, body mass index 20.6 +/- 1.6), significantly (p less than 0.005) lower than the patients with weight loss. Although protein malnutrition was not obvious from arm anthropometrics, alkali soluble protein/DNA ratio or from serum albumin determinations, ASP/DNA ratio, increased in three of five patients investigated after one year on erythropoietin treatment. Neither protein catabolic rate nor dialysis efficiency changed significantly during the study. We conclude that anemia correction with erythropoietin has a positive effect on malnutrition in hemodialysis patients. In patients with underweight, an adjustment of fat stores was initially observed, followed possibly by an improvement in muscle protein content.
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PMID:Nutritional assessment in anemic hemodialysis patients treated with recombinant human erythropoietin. 187 41

A thrombocytopoiesis-stimulating factor (TSF or thrombopoietin) derived from human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells is known to increase platelet production and to increase the number of morphologically unrecognizable early megakaryocytes, ie, small acetylcholinesterase-positive (SAChE+) cells in mice. Other recent studies have concluded that interleukin-6 (IL-6) also stimulates murine megakaryocytopoiesis both in vitro and in vivo. Some workers have suggested that IL-6 is thrombopoietin. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare the effects of TSF and IL-6 on percent 35S incorporation into platelets, platelet sizes, and the percentages of SAChE+ cells in C3H mice, and to determine if they produce the same or different responses. The results showed that two or four injections of a partially purified TSF (total dose of 2 or 4 units (U) over a 1- or 2-day period) increased percent 35S incorporation into platelets (P less than .005) and platelet sizes (P less than .005) of both normal and rebound-thrombocytotic mice when compared with values from other mice treated with human serum albumin, the carrier protein for both TSF and IL-6. In eight separate experiments, it was shown that IL-6 (40,000 U, 4 micrograms), when given to rebound-thrombocytotic mice in four injections over a 2-day period, produced a small but significant (P less than .005) increase in percent 35S incorporation into platelets. Additional studies showed that negative results were obtained when similar high doses of IL-6 were administered in two doses over a 1-day period. TSF, but not IL-6, stimulated an increase in platelet sizes of normal mice (P less than .005 to 0.0005); however, IL-6 increased platelet sizes of rebound-thrombocytotic mice when given in two of four injections (P less than .05 to .0005). Also, IL-6, but not TSF, caused anemia in normal mice (P less than .0005) that were given two injections and tested 3 days later. TSF stimulated an increase (P less than .005) in the percentage of SA-ChE+ cells; whereas IL-6, even at high doses, did not. Because of the observed differences in biologic responses of these two cytokines, we conclude that TSF and IL-6 are separate entities.
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PMID:Comparative effects of thrombopoietin and interleukin-6 on murine megakaryocytopoiesis and platelet production. 199 16

The authors evaluated in a group of 89 patients with monoclonal gammapathy (18 patients with monoclonal gammapathy of undermined significance, 34 patients examined at the time of diagnosis of multiple myeloma (MM) and in a group of 71 patients with MM examined in different stages of the disease) the serum beta 2-microglobulin. It was revealed that the mentioned indicator is of no differential diagnostic value, it is not related to sex nor to the immunochemical type of monoclonal immunoglobulin. A relationship of serum beta 2-microglobulin to age, serum urea and serum creatinine, to the severity of anaemia, serum albumin, sedimentation rate of red cells, degree of infiltration of bone marrow by myeloma plasmocytes and the stage of the disease, evaluated by the systems of Durie-Salmon and Medical Research Council, was found. The authors tested the importance of serum levels of this indicator for the prognosis of the disease.
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PMID:[Serum beta 2-microglobulin in multiple myeloma. I. Relation to selected indicators, clinical stage and disease prognosis]. 205 4

A total of 212 adult patients with infective diarrhoea and 27 with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), admitted consecutively to an infectious disease unit, were studied in order to determine whether clinical features and laboratory measurements performed on admission identified cases of IBD. Long-standing diarrhoea, blood in the faeces, anaemia, leucocytosis, thrombocytosis, raised ESR and a reduced concentration of serum albumin were more common in patients with IBD (P less than 0.05). The most striking difference was in the platelet count with 59% patients with IBD and 1.6% patients with infective diarrhoea having platelet counts greater than 450 x 10(9)/l. A raised platelet count in a patient admitted to hospital with 'acute gastro-enteritis' suggests IBD.
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PMID:The platelet count as a simple measure to distinguish inflammatory bowel disease from infective diarrhoea. 207 5

A 33-year-old woman suffering from anal erosions developed severe illness with fever, diarrhea, ischalgia, hypotension, acute abdominal pain, dyspnea, renal and hepatic impairment, myalgia, desquamation of the skin, leukocytosis, anemia, hypocalcemia, decreased serum albumin, and cholesterol levels. Exploratory laparotomy did not reveal pathologic findings. Hemolytic group A streptococci were grown from peritoneal swabs and pleural exudate in bacteriologic cultures. The patient slowly recovered after intense penicillin and tobramycin therapy.
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PMID:Toxic shock-like syndrome due to severe hemolytic group A streptococcal infection. 219 94

Four species of bacteria, Corynebacterium anaerobium 578, Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae G-4, Mycobacterium bovis BCG, and Bordetella bronchiseptica A-2, were injected intravenously into mice (5 weeks old, ICR-SPF). The clearance of carbon from the blood stream and the weights of the spleen and liver were determined as indicators of RES stimulation. Mouse footpad reaction was assessed as an indicator of delayed-type hypersensitivity to each species of bacteria. The immuno-stimulative activity of each species of bacteria against bovine serum albumin was monitored by passive hemagglutination assay and the macrophage migration-inhibition test in guinea pigs. Based on the results of the experiments described above, B. bronchiseptica was selected as an immunostimulator (Ims) for immunization trials of the hemo-protozoan parasite, Babesia gibsoni, with inactivated merozoites of B. gibsoni (BgK). Twelve dogs, pointers about 6 months old, were divided into four groups of three dogs each. Group 1 dogs were initially injected with Ims, and later injected with BgK and Ims (BgK+Ims) after a 3-week interval. Group 2 and Group 3 dogs were injected twice, at a 3-week interval, with BgK+Ims and BgK, respectively, and Group 4 served as a control. As the results, the serum antibody titres of Group 1 and 2 were several times higher than that of Group 3, and the cell-mediated immunity to parasites was noticeably stimulated by immunization with BgK+Ims. The peak level of parasitemia following the challenge were over 10% for Group 4 and 4.5% for Group 3, while levels for Group 1 and 2 were 2.5% and less than 1%, respectively. No such major clinical signs of babesiosis as jaundice and anemia were observed in Group 1 or 2.
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PMID:[Studies on immunity to Babesia gibsoni in dogs immunostimulation by Bordetella bronchiseptica]. 223 61


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