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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (
anemia
)
52,094
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe a case of a patient with CD34+, TdT+, CD13-, CD33-, MPO- undifferentiated acute leukemia who refused chemotherapy and who achieved complete hematological remission 14 months after the diagnosis, during a short course of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) for neutropenia and life threatening infection. Relapse occurred approximately one year later and G-
CSF
was reintroduced, being maintained for 4 months, at a dose and frequency adapted to maintain normal blood counts, a complete hematological remission being achieved again. Five months after withdrawing the G-
CSF
therapy a second relapse was observed; G-
CSF
was tried again with success, resulting in a very good hematological response that was sustained by G-
CSF
maintenance therapy. One year latter there was the need of increasing the doses of G-
CSF
in order to obtain the same hematological effect, at same time blast cells acquired a more mature CD34+, TdT-, CD13+, CD33-, MPO+ myeloid phenotype. Finally, the patient developed progressive neutropenia,
anemia
, thrombocytopenia and acute leukemia in spite of G-
CSF
therapy, dying 64 months after initial diagnosis (50 months after starting G-CSF therapy) with overt G-
CSF
resistant acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML), after failure of conventional induction chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Hematological remission and long term hematological control of acute myeloblastic leukemia induced and maintained by granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) therapy. 1495 60
Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) is a rare thrombotic microangiopathy. Besides
anemia
and thrombocytopenia, neurological impairment is common in TTP. A 42-year-old woman was admitted to a department of obstetrics/gynecology because of severe vaginal bleeding due to thrombocytopenia. After platelet transfusion, the patient developed a reduced level of consciousness, confusion, headache, and fever. CT scan did not show pathological changes. Transcranial Doppler sonography revealed increased blood flow velocities of all basal cerebral arteries. Because encephalitis was suspected the patient was transferred to the neurological department.
CSF
and cerebral magnetic resonance imaging studies were normal. Finally, the detection of schistocytes in the peripheral blood smear and the strong elevation of LDH led to the diagnosis of TTP. After plasma exchange over 3 consecutive days the patient achieved complete remission. The diagnosis was confirmed by laboratory tests (activity of ADAMTS13 <5%, IgG antibodies against ADAMTS13). Platelet transfusion may adversely affect the outcome of patients with suspected TTP. Severely deficient activity of the von Willebrand factor cleaving protease (ADAMTS13) is specific for thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.
...
PMID:[Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Reduced activity of von Willebrand factor cleaving protease]. 1503 57
In myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS),
anemia
responds to recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) alone and in combination with recombinant human granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor (rHuGCSF) in 10% to 20% and in 35% to 40% of patients, respectively. We randomly divided 60 patients with low-grade anemic MDS and serum EPO levels lower than 500 IU/L (500 mU/mL) into 2 groups: rHuEPO + rHuG-
CSF
(arm A) and supportive care (arm B). After 12 weeks, those who had erythroid responses were given rHuEPO alone for 40 additional weeks. They were also given rHuG-
CSF
if they had relapses. A response was considered major if the hemoglobin (Hb) level was 115 g/L (11.5 g/dL) or higher and minor Hb increase was 15 g/L (1.5 g/dL) or more or if it remained stable without transfusion. Ten of 24 patients responded in arm A, and 0 of 26 responded in arm B (P =.01). Eight patients in arm A continued rHuEPO therapy alone, and 6 had relapses. Responses were always restored when rHuG-
CSF
was reintroduced. Mean direct costs per patient were 26,723 euros (arm A) and 8,746 euros (arm B). Quality of life was assessed with a Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-
Anemia
(FACT-An) scale. Similar percentages of patients from both arms showed significant clinical improvement. rHuEPO plus rHuG-
CSF
led to responses in 41.7% of MDS patients. This treatment was expensive. No effect on quality of life was demonstrated.
...
PMID:Health, economic, and quality-of-life effects of erythropoietin and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor for the treatment of myelodysplastic syndromes: a randomized, controlled trial. 1537 75
The patient was a 55 year-old-woman with chronic renal failure due to idiopathic mesngial deposition of Ig A. She received a second allograft of a kidney from a cadaver. Results of a preoperative serologic Ig G tests for EBV and CMV were positive. She was given triple-drug immunosuppressive therapy, consisting of cyclosporine,azathioprine, and steroids. Seven years later, azathioprine was changed to mycophenolate mofetil. One year later, she was admitted to the hospital with a three to four week history of vertigo (which did not improve after sulpiride was administrated) and an influenza-like syndrome. A CT scan of the brain appeared normal, so paroxysmal positional vertigo was the diagnosis. Two weeks after admission to the hospital, the patient reported visual hallucinations and impairment of consciousness. Results of laboratory tests were leukocyte increase (polymorphonuclear leukocytes),
anemia
, hyponatremia and renal failure. Chest radiography, brain CT, and electroencephalography revealed no pathologic signs. The
CSF
examination revealed 300 cells/ml (79% PMNL), glucose 63 mg/dl, protein 45 mg/dl. Six hours later the treatment was initiated with ampicillin, ceftriaxone and ganciclovir iv, she experienced seizures that affected the left side of her body, but without interictal recovery. The patient required intubation and mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit. An MRI of the brain images, revealed high signal-intensity regions indicating lesions on the bulb, protuberance, mesencephalon, left thalamus and parenchyma adjacent to the corpus callosum (fig. 1). Six days later, the patient partially recovered consciousness, and she had not neurologic sequelae. Intubation was terminated. As soon as PCR revealed EBV DNA in
CSF
samples, the treatment with ceftriaxone and ampicillin was discontinued. Treatment with ganciclovir was maintained for 8 weeks (4 weeks with iv and another 4 weeks with oral treatment). On day 35, the examination of a specimen of
CSF
revealed: glucose 46, protein 78, 15 cells/ml (100% lymphocytes). The patient went home on day 55 after admission to our hospital. She regained her normal neurologic function. Three weeks later MRI, showed reduction of the size of the lesions and the lesions on the brain stem had disappeared.
...
PMID:[Encephalitis in a renal transplantation patient]. 1521 63
An 11-year-old Hanoverian-cross gelding was evaluated because of acute onset of ataxia, recumbency, and fever. At the stable, this and other horses had recently been infested with ticks. Results of analysis of a sample of
CSF
were within reference limits, but hematologic abnormalities included lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, mild
anemia
, and intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies in neutrophils that were consistent with Anaplasma phagocytophilum (previously Ehrlichia equi). Results of serum biochemical analyses were characteristic of infection and included high, unconjugated bilirubin concentration. Other common causes of recumbency in horses, such as equine protozoal myeloencephalitis, infection with eastern or western equine encephalitis viruses and equine herpesvirus-1, West Nile viral encephalitis, trauma, and metabolic disease, were ruled out. The horse responded quickly to i.v. administration of oxytetracycline and recovered fully within 6 days.
...
PMID:Acute recumbency associated with Anaplasma phagocytophilum infection in a horse. 1523 Apr 52
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and tolerance of combined treatment with docetaxel-cisplatin as first-line chemotherapy in patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Consecutive eligible chemonaive patients received docetaxel 75 mg/m(2) on day 1 and cisplatin 75 mg/m(2) on day 2 every 3 weeks for 6 cycles, with prophylactic recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rHuG-CSF) on days 4-11. Thirty-two patients (64%) had received prior adjuvant chemotherapy; these included 16 (32%) who had received anthracyclines. In 50 evaluable patients with a median age (range) of 56 (31-72) years, the overall response rate was 68% (95% CI, 55-81%), with 7 (14%) complete and 27 (54%) partial responses. Stable and progressive disease was observed in 10 (20%), and 6 (12%) patients, respectively. The median duration of response was 10 months, and the median time to progression was 39 weeks. Grade 3/4 hematological toxicity included--neutropenia in 9 patients (18%),
anemia
in 2 (4%) and thrombocytopenia in 1 (2%). One patient (2%) with febrile neutropenia required hospitalization. Grade 3/4 nonhematological toxicities included nausea/vomiting in 18%, nephrotoxicity in 14%, asthenia (4%), and neurotoxicity (2%). Toxicity was common in older patients (>56 years). There were no treatment-related deaths. A combination of docetaxel-cisplatin with rHuG-
CSF
support is well tolerated and effective as first-line chemotherapy in MBC.
...
PMID:First-line chemotherapy with docetaxel and cisplatin in metastatic breast cancer. 1576 83
Haemopoietic growth factors (HGF), i.e. erythropoietin [recombinant human erythropoietin (rHEPO)] or granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF), alone or in combination, have largely been used to treat
anemia
in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), but whether combined rHEPO and G-CSF is really superior to rHEPO alone is still under debate. In particular, randomized studies comparing front-line rHEPO vs rHEPO+G-
CSF
are still lacking. The aim of this study was to compare the effects of "standard" doses of rHEPO with the combination of rHEPO and G-CSF in the treatment of anemic patients with low-risk MDS in a prospective randomized trial. Anemic patients with low-risk MDS were randomly assigned to receive either rHEPO (10,000 IU s.c. three times a week) or the same dosage of rHEPO+G-
CSF
(300 mug s.c. twice a week) for a minimum of 8 weeks. Patients who were unresponsive to rHEPO were offered the combination therapy for another 8 weeks, whereas non-responders to rHEPO+G-
CSF
were considered "off study". Responders continued the treatment indefinitely. Both haematological response and changes in quality-of-life (QoL) scores (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-
Anemia
) were recorded and evaluated. Thirty consecutive patients [10 refractory anemia (RA), 5 RA with ringed sideroblasts, 7 refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia, 5 RA with less than 10% blasts and 3 5q-syndrome] were enrolled in the study. All of them (15 in the rHEPO arm and 15 in the rHEPO+G-CSF arm) were valuable after the first 8 weeks of treatment. Erythroid response was observed in 6/15 (40%) patients in the rHEPO arm and in 11/15 (73.3%) patients in the rHEPO+G-
CSF
arm. In 4/9 (44.4%) patients who were unresponsive to rHEPO, the addition of G-CSF induced erythroid response at 16 weeks. No relevant adverse effects were recorded for either treatment in any of the study patients. Erythroid response to HGF was associated with a relevant improvement in QoL. Twenty responders continued the treatment. Afterwards, 8/20 (40%) discontinued therapy because of the following: losing response (2), progression to high-risk MDS (3) and death due to other causes (3). The remaining 12 are still responding and continuing treatment, with a median follow-up of 28 months. Progression to acute leukemia was cumulatively observed in 4/30 (13.3%) patients (2 in each arm). Although our data were obtained from a relatively small cohort of patients, they indicate that the rHEPO+G-
CSF
treatment is more effective than rHEPO alone for correcting
anemia
in low-risk MDS patients and for making a relevant improvement in their QoL.
...
PMID:Erythropoietin plus granulocyte colony-stimulating factor is better than erythropoietin alone to treat anemia in low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes: results from a randomized single-centre study. 1640 6
A 44-day-old male infant with familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FHL) associated with the MUNC13-4 mutation is reported. He presented with fever and poor feeding, lymphocytosis with thrombocytopenia and
CSF
pleocytosis without virological explanation. On the basis of progressive hyperferritinemia (1323 ng/ml),
anemia
(hemoglobin: 5.2 g/dl), hypertriglyceridemia (547 mg/dl) and increased LDH (1063 IU/l) with hemophagocytosis in the bone marrow, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis was diagnosed. He showed a good response to corticosteroid therapy and the disease was stable for more than 5 months. Thereafter, he suffered from central nervous system complications, and successfully underwent unrelated cord blood stem cell transplantation. A remission was observed for more than 2 years, with mild mental retardation. Genetic analysis revealed that he had a compound heterozygous mutation of MUNC13-4; namely a novel 2163G>A mutation resulting in W721X, and 754-1G>C resulting in a premature stop codon in this gene. Western blot analysis showed the complete loss of the MUNC13-4 protein, whereas other molecules associated with the SNARE systems were detected at normal levels. Conclusion. FHL may have a broad clinical spectrum, and further analysis on its phenotype-genotype association is required to establish an appropriate treatment strategy, including immunochemotherapy and stem cell transplantation in the future.
...
PMID:Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis with the MUNC13-4 mutation: a case report. 1641 31
We observed a 42-year-old woman presenting with severe dysphagia secondary to paralysis of the lower cranial nerves and right phrenic nerve involvement, followed by respiratory failure. An EMG confirmed bilateral denervation of the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th cranial nerves and right phrenic nerve. Videolaryngoscopy showed bilateral vocal fold immobility.
Anemia
, elevated ESR, microhematuria and C-ANCA (PR-3) antibodies were detected. Brain MRI and
CSF
were normal. A chest CT showed bilateral, irregular pulmonary lesions. An 18F-FDG total body scan showed diffuse hypermetabolic regions in both pulmonary bases, in the mediastinic region and in the rhinopharynx, raising the suspicion of a neoplastic process. A transthoracic biopsy disclosed nodular granulomatous aggregates with multinucleated giant cells, supporting the diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosis. Immunosuppressive therapy achieved complete clinical resolution and cleared the pulmonary lesions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of Wegener's granulomatosis presenting with neurogenic dysphagia due to lower cranial nerve palsy.
...
PMID:Severe dysphagia in lower cranial nerve involvement as the initial symptom of Wegener's granulomatosis. 1765 54
Iron deficiency (ID)
anemia
during infancy results in long-term neurological consequences, yet the mediating mechanisms remain unclear. Infant monkeys often become naturally anemic during the first 6 months of life, presenting an opportunity to determine the effect of developmental iron deficiency. After weaning, animals were chosen randomly for supplementation with oral iron or, fed a standard commercial chow diet. The control group was never iron deficient. ID
anemia
was corrected by 12 months in both groups, as indicated by hematological parameters.
CSF
was collected for proteomic analysis at 12 months of age to assess the impact of developmental ID on the brain. The
CSF
proteome for both formerly iron deficient groups was similar and revealed 12 proteins with expression levels altered at least twofold. These proteins were identified by matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight spectrometry and included prostaglandin D synthase, olfactory receptors and glial fibrillary acidic protein. Thus the proteomic analysis reveals a persistent effect of ID and provides insights into reports of disturbed sleep, hypomyelination and other behavioral alterations associated with ID. Furthermore, alterations in the
CSF
proteome despite normal hematologic parameters indicate that there is a hierarchical system that prioritizes repletion of red cell mass at the expense of the brain.
...
PMID:CSF proteomic analysis reveals persistent iron deficiency-induced alterations in non-human primate infants. 1799 30
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