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)

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is increasingly used to treat patients with cancers refractory to conventional treatment. Flu-like syndromes are extremely frequent but usually mild. A variety of skin complications (mostly erythema and mucositis) have been reported. Life-threatening skin reactions have also been described. Acute reactivation of psoriasis can also occur. Immediate hypersensitivity reactions have so far not been described, but IL-2 treatment has been shown to predispose to acute hypersensitivity reactions to iodine-containing contrast media. Hypothyroidism is the major endocrine complication and antithyroid antibodies have been detected in approximately 50% of patients. Neurological and psychiatric disturbances with moderate or severe mental status changes are common and sometimes treatment-limiting. The occurrence of peritumoural oedema in patients with brain metastases can also be a major practical problem. Musculoskeletal disorders are transient and resolve spontaneously. The vascular leak syndrome is the most frequent and severe complication of IL-2 of which weight gain, generalised oedema, hypotension and impaired renal function are the main features. Even though a damaging effect on vascular endothelium cells by various cytokines released by activated lymphoid cells or mediated by non-lymphocyte-dependent factors has been proposed to be involved, the mechanism remains unclear. Other cardiovascular injuries, possibly life-threatening, including myocarditis, angina pectoris and myocardial infarction, can occur during the first days of treatment. Supraventricular arrhythmias are the most common rhythmic disorder. Decreases in myocardial contractility and haemodynamic pattern similar to those of septic shock have been encountered in most cases. Acute renal dysfunction is common but resolves with symptomatic management. Intrahepatic cholestasis with hyperbilirubinaemia is observed in most patients but permanent liver damage has not been described. Several cases of pancreatitis have been reported. Anaemia, thrombocytopenia, lymphocytopenia and eosinophilia are frequent and occur in most if not all patients. Some data suggest a high incidence of infectious complications, particularly in patients with surgically tunnelled catheters, but marked flu-like syndromes may be confounding. Finally, death directly related to IL-2 treatment has been noted in less than 1% of all patients. Investigations are under way to minimise IL-2 toxicity with varying dose regimens and combined treatments.
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PMID:Clinical toxicity of interleukin-2. 141 98

1. Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of levofloxacin (LVFX, DR-3355), ofloxacin (OFLX), tosufloxacin (TFLX), norfloxacin (NFLX) were determined, with an inoculum size of 10(6) cfu/ml, against 122 strains of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from lesions of skin infections. LVFX showed most frequent MIC values of 0.20 micrograms/ml. OFLX, TFLX, and NFLX showed most frequent MIC values of 0.39 micrograms/ml, less than or equal to 0.05 micrograms/ml and 0.78 micrograms/ml, respectively. 2. Serum and skin levels of LVFX after oral administration (10 mg/kg, fasting) were determined in rats. Serum levels were 1.79, 1.29, 0.60, 0.43 and 0.18 micrograms/ml, and corresponding skin levels were 1.63, 1.77, 1.04, 0.87 and 0.64 micrograms/g (wet weight) at 0.5, 1, 2, 4 and 8 hours after administration (n = 5), respectively. 3. LVFX was used clinically in 43 cases at doses of 200-300 mg divided into 2 or 3 doses, and evaluated for final overall clinical efficacy in 41 cases. Cure was observed in 21 cases, remarkable improvement in 13 cases, improvement in 4 cases, unchanged in 1 case, aggravation in 1 case, and remarkable aggravation in 1 case. Diarrhea was observed in 2 cases, diffuse erythema with feverishness in 1 case and slight dyspnea in 1 case. Transient slight eosinophilia, elevation of Al-P, anemia and leukopenia were observed.
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PMID:[Levofloxacin in the field of dermatology]. 151 44

A 46-year-old man diagnosed as refractory anemia was hospitalized because of high fever and extensive erythema with ulceration in the femoral region. His peripheral blood examination showed marked leukocytosis (WBC 31,500/microliter:neutrophilic 90%) and anemia (Hb 8.6 g/dl. In spite of administration of antibiotics, the cutaneous ulcer rapidly extended to the right thigh and became necrotic. The bacterial culture of the cutaneous lesion showed no growth and a skin biopsy showed infiltration of neutrophils in the dermis. He became afebrile and his cutaneous lesion improved after administration of corticosteroid. When the dose of corticosteroid was decreased, cutaneous erythema and nodules appeared at other sites repeatedly, and disappeared after the dose of corticosteroid was increased. The cutaneous lesions had characteristics of both Sweet's syndrome and pyoderma gangrenosum. Moreover, the patient had immunological abnormalities and decreased neutrophilic functions (chemotaxis and O2- generation). Thus, it was suggested that the cutaneous lesions of this patient could be diagnosed as "neutrophilic dermatosis of MDS", and corticosteroid was recognized to be very effective in treating these skin lesions.
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PMID:[Neutrophilic dermatosis in a patient with refractory anemia]. 163 24

The human parvovirus B19 provokes erythema infectiosum ("e.i."); moreover there is a wide range of diseases due to parvovirus B19 without exanthema/rash. The erythropoietic blast cells of the bone marrow seems to be the main target cells for this virus. Therefore in cases of prenatal infection the consequences are extremely similar to fetal erythroblastosis ("non-immunological" fetal hydrops). In postnatal life the parvovirus B19 infection causes hyporegenerative phases of the erythropoiesis with anaemia after 3-4 weeks. We studied the white blood cell count (WBC), erythrocytes and thrombocytes in children suffering from (serologically well documented) parvovirus B19 infection with exanthem/"e.i." (group 1; n = 23), without exanthem (group 2; n = 46) and with unknown febrile exanthematous rashes (group 3; n = 76). We did not find any characteristic data in the WBC for a diagnosis of parvovirus B19 infection. However we have for the first time documented a significant thrombocytopenia in "e.i." (group 1) not found in group 2. The thrombocytopenia appears earlier than the anaemia, because the lifespan of thrombocytes is considerably shorter than that of erythrocytes. These data suggest that parvovirus B19 attacks not only "erythropoietic" blast cells but also immature bone marrow cells, which are later responsible for the thrombocytopoiesis.
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PMID:[Blood picture findings in children with Parvovirus B19 infections (fifth disease/erythema infectiosum)]. 166 May 51

The glucagonoma syndrome is characterized by elevated serum glucagon, a pancreatic alpha-cell tumor, anemia, hypoaminoacidemia, and necrolytic migratory erythema. Necrolytic migratory erythema may cause marked morbidity and is frequently misdiagnosed. A 42-year-old white woman with a 1 1/2-year history of refractory dermatitis (most severe on the lower extremities) had the glucagonoma syndrome. Her severe morbidity was markedly relieved with the administration of intravenous amino acids. This therapy was successful in controlling the necrolytic migratory erythema through recurrences after somatostatin (SMS 201-995), surgical debulking, and chemotherapy proved inadequate.
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PMID:Treatment of necrolytic migratory erythema in glucagonoma syndrome. 176 71

The human parvovirus B19 agent causes infectious erythema (fifth disease). However, a wide range of other pathological manifestations may also be seen: atypical exanthema, ARD (also obstructive forms, e.g. bronchiolitis), acute gastroenteritis, chronic anemia or aplastic crises (in constitutional or malignant hematological diseases or immunological deficiency), arthralgia/arthritis (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, jcA), diseases of the central nervous systems (e.g. febrile convulsions in young children), lymphadenopathies (e.g. lymphadenitis mesenterialis or pseudoappendicitis); prenatal infection can lead to fetal death (not malformations!). Infection occurring concomitantly with vaccination may suggest complications of the latter. To clarify the true etiological situation, modern laboratory investigations are then required. Vaccination against parvovirus B19 (initially indicated in the case of non-immune girls and women wanting children) is a desirable future development.
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PMID:[Human Parvovirus B19--really only fifth disease? Unusual disease course in children and adolescents]. 177 31

A phase I trial of Roussel-Uclaf recombinant human interleukin 2 (IL 2) was performed on 31 cancer bearing patients of the Institut Gustave-Roussy, Villejuif, and the Institut Curie, Paris. This study allowed to define a schedule for administration of IL 2 in continuous infusion over 5 day cycles. This schedule is manageable in patients without major visceral failure. It is reproducibly feasible in conventional medical oncology units, without specialized intensive care facilities. Toxicities, although numerous, are acceptable for IL 2 doses below 24,000,000 IU/m2/day. There is a close relationship between secondary effect severity and IL 2 doses received. Main toxicities were: fever with chills, fatigue and general discomfort in 23 patients, nauseas and vomiting in 12, diarrhea in 10 and cutaneous rashes with erythema and dermal vascularitis in 13. One peculiar feature of this study was the minimal occurrence of manifestation related to leaky capillary syndrome prominant in other studies. Oliguria, functional renal failure and edema were observed in only 4 patients with functionally unique kidney. Five patients had severe anemia, 2 grade III thrombocytopenia, 1 grade IV hepatic cytolysis, 4 severe confusion episodes and 2 hypothyroidism with anti-thyroid microsome auto-antibodies. All these toxicities were reversible after withdrawal of IL 2 treatment. During this phase I trial, 3 therapeutic objective responses were observed, all 3 occurring in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with IL 2 doses equal to, or above 16,000,00 IU/m2/d. Recombinant IL 2 Roussel-Uclaf thus can be administered through a simple, manageable and efficient regimen.
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PMID:[Phase I trial of a recombinant human interleukin 2. Results in patients with disseminated solid tumors]. 182 63

Severe chronic anemia, transitory aplastic crisis (TAC), and lethal hydrops fetalis may be due to an infection with parvovirus B19 i.e. the causative agent of erythema infectiosum. 80% of the patients infected with B19 develop clinical symptoms and typically show the picture of erythema infectiosum--as one of our case reports (daughter) is going to illustrate. Part of the cases, however, take a course without the characteristic slapped-face rash; here we frequently find acute arthritis and arthralgia, as well as fever and rubella-like or purpura-like rashes, predominantly on the smaller joints (mother). In immuno-compromised patients, those with hematologic disorders, as well as in pregnancy, the diseases may take a life-threatening course. In the cases without the characteristic rash, the diagnosis has to be proved by the detection of either antibodies against parvovirus B19 or the virus itself; however, the test kits required are not readily available. Since there is no generally accepted treatment of the infection, as yet, the most important measure on the medical side is the prevention of the infection by means of isolation and other procedures. The problem we face here, however, is the fact that the danger of infection is highest during the viremic phase of the disease, when the patient is still asymptomatic.
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PMID:[Infection with parvovirus B19: typical course of erythema infectiosum and its complications]. 196 20

Glucagonomas, considered among the rarest of the islet cell neoplasms, produce a well-defined clinical syndrome characterized by necrolytic migratory erythema, diabetes mellitus, glossitis, anemia, and weight loss. This report describes seven patients with glucagonoma treated at our institution. All seven had the characteristic dermatologic manifestations, present from 1 to 6 years prior to diagnosis. Five patients had extensive disease at the time of initial operation, three of whom underwent aggressive cytoreductive surgery, whereas the other two had biopsy only. The remaining two patients presented with a single nodule each, underwent distal pancreatectomy and splenectomy, and remain free of disease 2 and 6 years postoperatively. Earlier recognition of the distinctive physical findings peculiar to this syndrome should increase survival. Aggressive cytoreductive surgery results in prolonged remission.
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PMID:Glucagonoma syndrome is an underdiagnosed clinical entity. 225 25

The glucagon-producing pancreatic tumors or glucagonomas are among the rarest forms of islet cell tumors; most are malignant and usually produce a definite clinical syndrome. Mild diabetes mellitus, weight loss, and anemia usually accompany the syndrome. However, only the presence of a peculiar cutaneous rash (necrolytic migratory erythema) and the finding of hyperglucagonemia on assay are reliable diagnostic features of the syndrome. Selective, celiac axis arteriography is the most valuable preoperative technique for localizing these neoplasms and their common liver metastases. Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural examinations are particularly helpful in defining the tumor cell nature (alpha-2 islet cell) and the peptide content (glucagon). When the tumor is benign (less than 30%), complete operative removal results in lasting cure; for malignant forms, surgical therapy is mainly palliative, and adjunctive chemotherapy should be administered. In this report, the importance of clinical recognition and operative and chemotherapeutic responses is illustrated in two patients. In each case, the characteristic dermatitis, diabetes mellitus, weight loss, anemia, and elevated plasmatic glucagon were present. Both patients had their tumors localized by selective angiography and underwent operative removal of the primary pancreatic lesion. In the case of benign glucagonoma, surgical excision was curative. In the malignant one, cytoreductive surgery plus adjunctive chemotherapy (dimethyltriazenomidazole-carboxamide resulted in prolonged survival and significant clinical improvement. Follow-up with serum glucagon assay has been useful in monitoring recurrence.
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PMID:Response of glucagonomas to surgical excision and chemotherapy. Report of two cases and review of the literature. 254 27


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