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)

An 11-year-old girl presented with a refractory hypochromic microcytic anemia, hypoferremia, normoblastic hyperplastic bone marrow, hypergammaglobulinemia, and growth retardation. Many varied treatments failed to produce any improvement. Ferrokinetic studies revealed rapid plasma clearance and increased plasma iron turnover, but impaired incorporation of 59Fe. Excretion of 57Co after an oral dose indicated an increased iron absorption. A (99M)Tc-sulfur colloid scintigram of the abdomen failed to demonstrate abnormal uptake. A nodal mass showing the plasma-cell variant of angiofollicular hyperplasia was removed from the gastrolienal ligament. Follow-up studies at 3 and 6 months revealed complete correction of the anemia, a 4.8-cm increase in height, and normal serum gamma-globulin levels. Serum obtained before operation inhibited the incorporation of 59Fe that was induced by a standard dose of erthyropoietin in the exhypoxic mouse system, and this inhibition persisted in serum obtained 3 days after surgery but disappeared by 6 days. The data suggest that the hyperplastic angiofollicular lymph node (plasma-cell variant) secreted a substance the inhibited erythropoiesis.
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PMID:Intra-abdominal, angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (plasma-cell variant) with an antierythropoietic factor. 5 Nov 37

A 63 year old man underwent lymphography because of anemia, splenomegaly, and fever. Nodes in the high para-aortic region had the appearance of involvement with malignant lymphoma. Subsequent biopsy showed that these changes were due to the partial replacement of nodal tissue with extramedullary hematopoiesis.
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PMID:Lymphographic appearance of nodal extramedullary hematopoiesis simulating lymphoma. 60 78

A renal-cell carcinoma was discovered and resected in a 38-year-old female patient who had microcytic normochromic anemia. During treatment with ferrous gluconate, the anemia regressed temporarily but reappeared with the onset of metastases to the abdominal lymph nodes. Heavy deposits of hemosiderin were observed in tumor cells in the resected kidney and lymph nodal metastases. It is postulated that the anemia resulted from metabolic diversion and storage of iron by the tumor cells.
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PMID:Microcytic normochromic anemia associated with iron storage by hypernephroma. 72 79

During the ten year period of this retrospective study, 66 of 1,451 patients with carcinoma of the colon and rectum had carcinoma of the cecum. The most frequent symptoms were nonspecific and caused by anemia which, in some instances, were treated without adequate investigation. The standard and most appropriate treatment for carcinoma of the cecum is a right hemicolectomy with ileotranversostomy and, when necessary and feasible, en bloc resection of involved parts of the abdominal wall. In the absence of nodal disease or distant metastases, extension to the abdominal wall does not adversely influence the prognosis. The surgeon must remain aware of the possibility of coexisting carcinoma of the cecum and appendicitis. Any patient with a mass or a persistent draining sinus after an appendectomy or drainage of an appendical abscess should be suspected of having carcinoma of the cecum. The over-all five year survival rate in this series is 33%, and if curative resections alone are considered, it is 44%, with an operative mortality of 3%. More recent evidence indicates that there has been a shortening of the delay in treatment, and we believe future studies will show an improvement in these figures.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the cecum. 84 3

An example of Kaposi's sarcoma with primary involvement of lymph nodes is reported. The patient, a woman, was admitted because of generalized lymphadenopathy and anemia. She was also known to have congestive heart failure of rheumatic origin. SMA-12 screening disclosed hypercalcemia on several occasions during her hospitalization. Levels of circulating parathormone and prostaglandins E2 and F were markedly increased. Total bone scan was negative for involvement by tumor. Electronmicroscopic examination of an involved lymph node disclosed secretory bodies in the cytoplasm of malignant cells and other cells, with clear indication of endothelial origin. The rarity of Kaposi's sarcoma with primary lymph nodal involvement in the United States is discussed. So far as is known by the authors, no example of Kaposi's sarcoma has been associated with hypercalcemia due to ectopic endocrine production.
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PMID:Primary Kaposi's sarcoma of lymph nods. 99 71

A case of desseminated alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma in an 18-year-old male with leuco-erythroblastic anaemia is described. Numerous bizarre malignant cells, including frequent multinucleated giant cells, were seen in bone marrow aspirates, and osteolytic lesions appeared late in the clinical course. The primary site of the neoplasm remained undertermined during life and also at necropsy, which revealed minute pulmonary metastases and extensive lymph nodal, pleural and skeletal deposits. The diagnosis was confirmed on necropsy tissue by ultrastructural examination which demonstrated numerous thin (5 nm) and thick (15 nm) intracytoplasmic filaments in tumour cells, sometimes organized in bundles; scattered dense Z-band-like bodies, and rod-shaped structures were also seen. The fine structure of the rhabdomyosarcoma in the present case is compared with previous ultrastructural studies. Elongated, thick intracytoplasmic filaments whose diameter corresponds to that of myosin myofilaments are strong evidence for rhabdomyoblastic differentiation and are considered to be the sine qua non of a positive electron microscopic diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma. Orgaized bundles of filaments and Z-band-like dense bodies are usually present, and rod-shaped structures are found infrequently, but none of these are necessary for the ultrastructural diagnosis.
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PMID:Bone marrow metastases in disseminated alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma: case report with ultrastructural study and review. 101 51

The clinical and pathologic findings in 24 patients with "angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia" (AILD) are presented. The patients' ages ranged from 44 to 80 years, with a median age of 68 years. The disease has an acute onset. In many respects, the clinical presentation is suggestive of malignant lymphoma. Generalized lymphadenopathy was always present. Hepatomegaly was found in 20 patients, splenomegaly in 17, constitutional symptoms in 20 and skin rashes in nine. Twenty patients had anemia, with positive Coombs' test in eight of 14 tested. Polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia was found in 17 of 22 patients. Two patterns of evolution were recognizable: (1) long survival (24 to 67 months) without treatment or after the administration of intensive combination chemotherapy; and (2) rapid progression (one to 19 months) regardless of the treatment given. Sixteen patients died; postmortem examination in 10 cases showed the cause of death to be attributable to severe infection in eight patients, to renal disease in one and to cardiovascular disease in one. No evidence of malignant lymphoma was seen in any of these autopsies. Histologically, the disease is systemic, with specific lesions in the lymph nodes. The spleen, liver, bone marrow, skin and lung are also involved, but the changes are less characteristic than in the lymph nodes. In the patients in whom sequential biopsies were performed, a trend toward restoration of the nodal architecture was observed. AILD is a clinical-pathologic entity in a spectrum of yet to be defined immune reactions. The clinical, laboratory and pathologic manifestations of AILD are consistent with an autoimmune disorder, in which a deficiency of the T-cell regulatory functions probably predisposes to an abnormal proliferative and autoaggressive reaction of the B-cell system. Surgical staging procedures do not appear to be indicated. Intensive cytotoxic treatment may be hazardous in some patients, precipitating their death, but long survival after such therapy has been observed in others. Supportive therapy and small doses of steroids appear to be a safer therapeutic approach.
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PMID:Angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy. Diagnosis and clinical course. 119 Feb 54

Cisplatin/etoposide/bleomycin (DEB) was given as an outpatient regimen in a novel weekly schedule to 27 patients with recurrent and/or widely metastatic cancer of the head and neck region. Six of these patients also received mitomycin (DEB/M) when their disease failed to respond after at least three weekly DEB doses. All but three patients had been treated previously with radiotherapy directed to the primary site and regional nodal disease; four had also received chemotherapy with cisplatin or carboplatin. Before treatment with DEB, 19 patients had distant metastases. Of an intended 12 doses per patient, a mean of 8.2 was achieved. Myelosuppression was the major toxicity, with neutropenia in 45% of patients and significant anemia in 26%. The overall response rate to DEB in 27 patients was 59%, increasing to 70% after the addition of mitomycin. There were two complete and 17 partial responses. The median duration of response was 12 weeks and median survival was 6 months, with 20% of patients surviving 1 year. We conclude that the relatively short survival time together with the significant toxicity of the DEB/M regimen does not warrant its routine use in clinical practice. However, this regimen, or one patterned on it, should be evaluated in combination with radiotherapy as the initial treatment for selected patients with previously untreated head and neck cancer.
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PMID:Treatment of recurrent and metastatic head and neck cancer with cisplatin/etoposide/bleomycin. 138 40

A study of histopathological and clinical features of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 495 consecutive cases, diagnosed at AFIP during 1984-1989 is presented. Children below the age of 15 years were not included in this study. The relative frequency of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma was 4.29% in our material. Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma was more frequent than Hodgkin's disease, ratio being 2.44:1. Lymphadenopathy (78.78%), fever (33.08%), weight loss (31.62%) and anemia (30.14%) were the main presenting features. New working formulation was used for morphological characterisation. Follicular lymphoma constituted 8.08% of all cases. Follicular lymphoma was seen only in older age whereas diffuse lymphoma occurred in all age groups. Intermediate and high grade lymphoma represented 73.54% of all NHL. Small lymphocytic lymphoma was common in low grade tumours (13.13%). Extra nodal lymphoma was encountered in a significant proportion (21.22%), gastrointestinal tract being the most frequent site. This study outlines certain interesting features of NHL in Pakistan.
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PMID:Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma--clinicopathological pattern. 143 3

Localized plasma cell type Castleman's disease (CD) is an unusual pathologic entity. It is frequently associated with clinical and laboratory characteristics and rarely occurs in children. Total surgical excision results in cure in all aspects. To make early diagnosis of mesenteric CD is not easy, especially for children. An 11-year-old Taiwanese boy was recently evaluated for anemia and delayed growth. His clinical findings included a syndrome of severe hypochromic microcytic anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytosis, hypoferremia, hypergammaglobulinemia, and growth failure. Radiological examinations (abdominal ultrasound, small intestinal series, and computerized tomography) identified hepatosplenomegaly, nephromegaly, and huge masses in the middle abdomen with precaval, celiac, and paraaortic lymph nodal enlargement. However, detailed physical examination failed to detect a mass. At laparotomy a double-fist-sized confluent mass was found arising from the mesenteric root. Most masses were discrete and were excised individually. The pathologic diagnosis was plasma-cell type angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (Castleman's disease). Seven weeks after surgery, he had an episode of acute hepatitis B. Postoperatively, he exhibited a dramatic growth spurt; the hemoglobin, red blood cell indices, serum iron, and immunoglobulins returned to normal in 2 months. Neutropenia, which has not been previously related to mesenteric CD, was an unexpected finding in our case; however, it resolved spontaneously 3 months after the surgery, suggesting its causal relationship with the tumor.
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PMID:New observations in a child with angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (Castleman's disease) originated from the mesenteric root. 151 Jan 96


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