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)

A 21-year old woman underwent surgery in December 1996 for the removal of a presumed tuberculum sellae meningioma. However, some radio-clinical findings were proved somewhat intriguing:the patient's age, the presence of inflammatory and febrile syndromes together with the diagnosis of aseptic meningitis associated with perilesional edema intensity (an unusual feature in such cases) made us challenge the initial neuroradiological diagnosis evoked in connection with the tumoral location and dural attachment pattern. A right sub-fronto-temporal approach allowed complete tumor resection (confirmed with a postoperative MRI) and clinical recovery of the patient. But while pathological examination suggested a chordoma, the study of immunohistochemical stains revealed a meningioma. The final diagnosis was chordoid meningioma. Our review of the literature has shown that chordoid meningiomas display several areas of physaliferous cells which give the tumor a chordoma-like aspect. However, the results of immunohistochemical studies along with the location of the tumor were not consistent with the diagnosis of chordoma. Eight cases of chordoid meningiomas are reviewed in the literature. They are described as inducing systemic symptoms, particularly anemia. They could also be linked to Castleman's syndrome according to Kepes et al. After careful evaluation, we retained the hypothesis of a cause and effect relationship between the local and generalised inflammatory syndrome and chordoid meningioma.
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PMID:[Chordoid meningiomas. Clinical, neuroradiological and anatomopathological aspects. Apropos of a new case and review of the literature]. 968 36

Since 1988, 34 pediatric patients with severe sickle cell disease have received bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from HLA-identical siblings in France. After 1992, documentation of the favorable effect of hydroxyurea therapy on the frequency of vasoocclusive crisis (VOC) left a history of stroke (n = 16) as the main indication for BMT. Among patients treated by genoidentical BMT, 85% were cured and 9% died. All deaths were due to severe graft-versus-host disease. The rejection rate fell from 25% to 5% after addition of ATG to the conditioning regimen. BMT reversed some sickle cell disease-related abnormalities: splenic function improved and some cases of osteonecrosis showed a favorable course. Fifteen of 16 patients with a history of stroke showed no stroke recurrence after BMT, and arterial stenoses improved. BMT should be offered to sickle cell anemia patients with a history of stroke if a genoidentical donor is available. To prevent stroke-related residual impairment and transfusion-related complications, BMT should be considered early in patients with Doppler or MRI evidence of silent stroke associated with cognitive function impairment, failure to respond to hydroxyurea therapy (frequent VOCs, severe anemia and thrombocytosis, multifocal osteonecrosis), or polyerythroalloimmunization. Storage of frozen of cord blood samples from siblings should be considered.
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PMID:[Results and current indications of bone marrow allograft in sickle cell disease]. 1008 81

We report an autopsy case of multiple system atrophy (MSA) presenting with rapid progression of autonomic disturbance. He was admitted to our hospital because of gait disturbance and dysarthria. The patient was a Japanese man, who first noticed gait disturbance and dysarthria at age 58, followed by syncope 3 months later. He developed urinary incontinence and frequency of urination 8 months after the disease onset. His gait disturbance, dysarthria, syncope, and urinary symptoms progressed, and he was admitted to the department of neurology 1 year after the onset of the disease. He was clinically diagnosed as having MSA and was followed in the outpatient office. He deteriorated rapidly and was readmitted to the department of neurology 19 months after the onset of the disease. Physical examination showed orthostatic hypotension. Neurological examination revealed nystagmus, dysarthria of cerebellar type, increased deep tendon reflexes, bilateral positive Babinski signs, ataxic and spastic gait, mild right hypesthesia and hypalgesia, impotence, constipation, and urinary incontinence. Routine blood examination showed slight anemia, elevated BUN, GOT, and blood sugar. Electrocardiography revealed sinus tachycardia and chest rentogenogram showed cardiac enlargement. Brain MRI showed atrophy of cerebellum and pons, and lacunae in basal ganglia. Autonomic function tests revealed abnormal in head-up tilt test, and CVR-R in May and November 1995. However 123I-MIBG myocardial scintigraphy showed normal uptake of MIBG in May 1995 and decreased uptake in November 1995. He deteriorated rapidly and died in May 1996. Autopsy findings revealed not only prominent olivopontocerebellar and slight striatonigral lesions, but also autonomic lesions with massive appearance of glial cytoplasmic inclusions. He was pathologically verified as having MSA. In the present patient, autonomic nervous system, especially cardiac sympathetic nerve, deteriorated rapidly, which might result in short duration of the illness.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of multiple system atrophy presenting with rapid progression of autonomic disturbance]. 1022 92

Manganese intake can vary greatly with food choices, water composition, and supplement use. Thus, individuals consuming Western diets consume from < 1 to > 10 mg Mn/d. The levels of manganese intake associated with adverse effects (both deficient and toxic) are debatable. Moreover, many of the symptoms of manganese deficiency (growth retardation, changes in circulating HDL cholesterol and glucose levels, reproductive failure) and manganese toxicity (growth depression, anemia) are non-specific. The bone deformities observed in manganese-deficient animals and neurological symptoms of individuals who have inhaled excess manganese are permanent and illustrate the need to identify sensitive biomarkers of manganese status that appear before these symptoms. Manganese balance and excretion data are not useful biomarkers of manganese exposure but demonstrate that the body is protected against manganese toxicity primarily by low absorption and/or rapid presystemic elimination of manganese by the liver. Serum manganese concentrations in combination with lymphocyte manganese-dependent superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activity and perhaps blood arginase activity, appear to be the best ways to monitor ingestion of insufficient manganese. Serum manganese concentrations in combination with brain MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans, and perhaps a battery of neurofunctional tests, appear to be the best ways to monitor excessive exposure to manganese.
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PMID:Nutrition versus toxicology of manganese in humans: evaluation of potential biomarkers. 1038 84

We report a familial case of hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency (HCD) showing an A-G transition in intron 6 of the ceruloplasmin gene. Clinical features consisted of chorea, cerebellar ataxia, dementia, diabetes mellitus, retinal pigmentation and iron deposition in the liver and brain without copper overload in those organs. The patient's children and siblings had similar laboratory results, but did not show any neurological abnormalities. She was medicated for diabetes mellitus at 43 years of age, and neurological signs appeared when she was 52 years old. The laboratory findings were anemia, low concentrations of iron and copper in serum and of copper in urine. Ceruloplasmin was not detected in the serum. The iron and copper contents in the liver were 3,580 and 10 microg/g wet tissue, respectively. MRI of the brain showed iron deposition in the basal ganglia, dentate nucleus and thalamus. This case did not show any abnormal increase in copper in the blood and urine following CuSO(4)5H(2)O oral overloading test. Following the intravenous administration of commercially available fresh-frozen human plasma (FFP) containing ceruloplasmin, the serum iron content increased for several hours due to ferroxidase activity of ceruloplasmin. In the liver, the iron content decreased more with the combined intravenous administration of FFP and deferoxamine than with FFP administration alone. Her neurological symptoms improved following repetitive FFP treatment.
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PMID:A case of hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with iron deposition in the brain associated with chorea, dementia, diabetes mellitus and retinal pigmentation: administration of fresh-frozen human plasma. 1052 42

A 6 year-old boy with autoimmune hepatitis accompanied with cirrhosis was reported. He was admitted to our hospital because of abdominal distention, high fever, and diarrhea. Laboratory examination revealed abnormalities in hepatic function, cholestasis, anemia, thrombocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia, hypocomplementemia, and low concentration of coagulation factors. Abdominal MRI, and asialoglycoprotein receptor-mediated liver scintigraphy strongly indicated liver cirrhosis. Viral hepatitis, Wilson's disease, and antitrypsin deficiency were excluded serologically. Instead, hypergammaglobulinemia, and positive antinuclear antibody suggested autoimmune hepatitis, and the survey of anti-mitochondrial antibody, anti-smooth muscle antibody, and anti-LKM-1 antibody was negative, indicating type I autoimmune hepatitis. Finally, the histology of liver biopsy specimen indicating the destruction of hepatic lobular architecture, dense mononuclear cell infiltrates, and severe fibrosis confirmed the diagnosis. He was treated firstly with methylprednisolone pulses, and then prednisolone p.o. + azathioprine p.o. All of the abnormal laboratory parameters improved to normal levels, indicating that the immunosuppressive therapy will be effective for the severe AIH with cirrhosis.
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PMID:[An infant of autoimmune hepatitis (type I) with cirrhosis]. 1053 82

A case of renal actinomycosis is reported. A 63-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for further examinations of a right renal mass, complaining of dull pain in his right loin and progressive weight loss. Laboratory findings showed an anemia with a grossly raised ESR, CT, MRI and ultrasonography revealed a solid mass of the right kidney. Chest CT films revealed several infiltrates in the bilateral lobes. A diagnosis of neoplasm or inflammatory mass of the right kidney was considered, and the right nephrectomy was performed. Microscopically, characteristic colonies of actinomyces were seen, and histological diagnosis was renal actinomycosis. The patient made good progress after operation and was subsequently treated with penicillin.
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PMID:[A case of renal actinomycosis]. 1056 64

Thalassemia is a kind of chronic, inherited, microcytic anemia characterized by defective hemoglobin synthesis and ineffective erythropoiesis. In all thalassemias clinical features that result from anemia, transfusional, and absorptive iron overload are similar but vary in severity. The radiographic features of beta-thalassemia are due in large part to marrow hyperplasia. Markedly expanded marrow space lead to various skeletal manifestations including spine, skull, facial bones, and ribs. Extramedullary hematopoiesis (ExmH), hemosiderosis, and cholelithiasis are among the non-skeletal manifestations of thalassemia. The skeletal X-ray findings show characteristics of chronic overactivity of the marrow. In this article both skeletal and non-skeletal manifestations of thalassemia are discussed with an overview of X-ray findings, including MRI and CT findings.
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PMID:Imaging features of thalassemia. 1060 54

The aim of this study was to evaluate the survival of 395 previously untreated cervical cancer patients with at least one high risk factor following concurrent chemoradiation and to assess the toxicities. Two different chemotherapy regimens were used for concurrent chemoradiation. In the patients with squamous cell carcinoma, 100 mg/m2 of cisplatin was infused intravenously, followed immediately by five consecutive daily administrations of 5-fluorouracil, 1,000 mg/m2/day, each infused intravenously over 24 hr. As for the patients with adenocarcinoma, 70 mg/m2 of cisplatin, 250 mg/m2 of cytoxan and 45 mg/m2 of adriamycin were administered intravenously on days 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The 5-year survival rate was 54.4% with stage III and IV, 62.6% with lymph node metastasis on computed tomogram or MRI, 77.9% with stage I-II disease with lesion size > or =4 cm, and 50.3% with small cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma. Side effects from concurrent chemoradiation such as nausea, vomiting, and alopecia were present in all 395 cases. Anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, hepatotoxicity, and nephrotoxicity were observed to varying degrees, but there was no toxic death. This study suggests that cisplatin-based concurrent chemoradiation in treating cervical cancer patients with high risk factors is effective and relatively well tolerated, with acceptable toxicity.
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PMID:Concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy in invasive cervical cancer patients with high risk factors. 1098 93

Patients with chronic anaemia need repeated blood transfusions, which eventually lead to iron overload. The excess iron from blood transfusions is deposited in the reticuloendothelial system and in the parenchymal cells of the liver, spleen and other organs. Cellular damage is likely to occur when iron overload in the liver is pronounced. Liver biopsy is still necessary to evaluate the degree of haemosiderosis or haemochromatosis. To avoid this invasive procedure, methods have been sought to determine the concentration of iron in liver tissue and to estimate the effect of the treatment of haemosiderosis or haemochromatosis. In this MRI study, the T2 relaxation time and the 1/T2 relaxation rate of liver were determined in 23 patients who had undergone repeated blood transfusions for chronic anaemia. The first 60 transfusions had the greatest influence on the measured T2 relaxation time, with T2 relaxation time decreasing as haemosiderosis progresses. The 1/T2 relaxation rate increases significantly in a linear fashion when the number of blood transfusions increases up to 60. After 60 transfusions the influence of additional blood transfusions on the T2 value was minimal; the same response, although in reverse, was seen in the 1/T2 relaxation rate curve. One possible explanation for this may be that the MR system could detect the effect of only a limited amount of iron excess and any concentration over this limit gives a very short T2 relaxation time and a very weak signal from the liver, which is overwhelmed by background noise. However, in mild and moderate haemosiderosis caused by blood transfusions, T2 relaxation time and 1/T2 relaxation rate reflect iron accumulation in liver tissue.
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PMID:The effect of haemosiderosis and blood transfusions on the T2 relaxation time and 1/T2 relaxation rate of liver tissue. 1180 54


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