Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0002874 (aplastic anemia)
5,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Over the past 20 years allogeneic bone marrow transplantation has been increasingly utilized in the treatment of acute and chronic leukemias, aplastic anemia, severe forms of thalassemia, immunodeficiency syndromes and metabolic disorders due to a lack of specific enzymes in the monocyte-macrophage system. Despite the overall success of this approach and besides the so-called classic complications arising from the toxicity of the conditioning regimen, occurrence of GVH disease and interstitial pneumonitis, there are other less common complications which have been reported mainly by teams transplanting on a large number of patients. With only a limited experience, concerning 60 patients with transplants between May 1987 and May 1991, we have seen some unusual complications such as toxoplasma encephalitis, myasthenia gravis and aseptic bone necrosis, which may give rise to difficult diagnostic and therapeutic decisions.
...
PMID:[Unusual complications of bone marrow transplantation. Experience at the BMT Unit of the Francisco Gentil Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Lisbon Center]. 180 30

This report underlines the occurrence of multiple early and late complications after allogeneic BMT. Most of these are caused by the conditioning regimen, and especially by the use of total body irradiation. This should discourage the use of radiation for patients with non-malignant disorders such as aplastic anemia. We have shown that interstitial pneumonia is greatly reduced after fractionated TBI, and this should also be considered when designing transplant protocols. Prolonged immunodeficiency post-BMT is responsible for a high rate of infections: this suggests that long-term prophylactic antibiotic therapy should be considered. Great attention should be given to the quality of life of long-term survivors: to this respect a specific program for monitoring and treating gonadal complication can be extremely useful.
...
PMID:Late complications of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 182 Apr 92

Bone marrow transplantation makes it possible to treat patients with malignancies using doses of systemic chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy that otherwise would result in fatal hematologic toxicity. This approach has found its widest application in the treatment of hematologic malignancies, but it is also being used for aplastic anemia, severe immunodeficiency diseases, and selected solid tumors. The University of Mississippi will soon (October, 1991) be able to offer this treatment approach to Mississippians; therefore the indications, the general technique, and results of transplantation for a variety of diseases are reviewed herein.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation: a new treatment approach for Mississippians. 187 Jan 16

This case report describes the clinical use of recombinant human interleukin-3 as adjunct to immunosuppressive therapy with antilymphocyte globulin, cyclosporin A, and methylprednisolone for refractory severe aplastic anemia. Hematopoietic response to treatment was moderate and peripheral blood counts (neutrophils, eosinophils, monocytes, reticulocytes) increased only slightly. Unexpectedly, during the time of interleukin-3 administration a substantial bone marrow infiltration by macrophages became detectable, consistent with the diagnosis of medullary histiocytosis, that may have prevented recovery of normal hematopoiesis in this patient. This observation may indicate the need for careful use of interleukin-3 in patients with drug-induced immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:Medullary histiocytosis following treatment of severe aplastic anemia with recombinant human interleukin-3 in combination with antilymphocyte globulin, cyclosporin A, and methylprednisolone. 193 5

Over a 10-year period sera of 4000 pediatric patients were subjected to agar gel electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoresis. Retrospective examination of the electrophoresis patterns indicated that single or multiple homogeneous immunoglobulin components were present in sera of 155 children (3.9%). They were most frequently found in patients suffering from primary and secondary immunodeficiency diseases, hematological malignancies, autoimmune diseases, and severe aplastic anemia. Follow-up analysis revealed that most of these monoclonal gammopathies were transient. The monoclonal gammopathies in the serum of 79 patients were identified by immunoblotting for class and light-chain isotypes. A marked absence of IgA monoclonal gammopathies and a predominance of monoclonal gammopathies of the lambda light-chain isotype were found. Most of the B-cell mono- or oligoclonal proliferations in children can probably develop due to a disturbance in the regulatory T-cell function.
...
PMID:Monoclonal gammopathies in children. 250 63

Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has been used in recent years for the treatment of immunodeficiency diseases, aplastic anemia, and leukemia. However, there are a number of serious problems and limitations associated with autologous or allogeneic BMT. One of these is an increase in opportunistic infections, of which cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is one of the most important. Cytomegalovirus has been associated with more frequent deaths than any other single agent, with no reproducibly successful or therapy currently available. Recently usage of interleukin-2 or immunomodulation has been suggested as a powerful modality to combat infectious disease. In this study we showed that bone marrow activated in interleukin-2 for 2 days has the ability to lyse spleen cells infected for 3 days with murine CMV (acute infection model) or salivary gland cells infected for 7 days (chronic infection model), while nonactivated bone marrow or natural killer (NK) cells showed no such lysis. The majority of activated cells involved in lysis were antiasialo GM1-, Thy-1+/-, indicating a population of cells other than the natural killer-cell population involved.
...
PMID:The potential usefulness of interleukin-2 activated bone marrow cells as an active therapeutic tool against cytomegalovirus infection in a bone marrow transplantation setting. 254 85

The records of 96 pediatric patients with aplastic anemia or a malignancy who underwent bone marrow transplantation between 1979 and 1986 at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia were reviewed for laboratory evidence of viral infections. The most common viral diseases identified were herpes simplex virus (HSV), cytomegalovirus and adenoviruses, which were found in 19 (20%), 17 (18) and 17 (18) patients, respectively. HSV was more common in patients with than without graft vs. host disease (GVHD) (9 of 30; 30% vs. 10 of 66; 15%), but the difference did not reach statistical significance. Late or prolonged isolation of HSV occurred in patients with chronic GVHD. Cytomegalovirus was significantly more common in patients with than without GVHD (10 of 30; 33% vs. 7 of 66; 11%). The presence of pretransplant antibody to cytomegalovirus or HSV was a good predictor of subsequent infection. Adenoviruses were isolated from all 3 patients with Burkitt's lymphoma. Adenovirus type 12, a serotype uncommon in man and known to be highly tumorigenic in young hamsters, was recovered from 4 patients. Adenoviruses were not notably more common in patients with GVHD (6 of 30; 20% vs. 11 of 66; 17%). Other viral infections demonstrated included 5 parainfluenza, 4 enteroviruses, 3 human immunodeficiency virus, 1 respiratory syncytial virus, 1 influenza B and 1 rhinovirus.
...
PMID:Viral infections in pediatric bone marrow transplant patients. 283 May 86

Bone marrow transplantation offers new hope for cure in a variety of leukemias, aplastic anemia, and other immunodeficiency and hematologic disorders. But the psychologic circumstances accompanying this procedure are often profoundly stressful. The evolution of consultation--liaison services on a bone marrow transplantation unit are described and illustrated with several clinical vignettes. The results of a survey of 52 other bone marrow transplantation centers report the percentage that provide such services and the extent to which they are performed by a psychiatrist, a nonphysician psychosocial counselor, or both.
...
PMID:Evolution of consultation-liaison services in bone marrow transplantation. 304 30

The "F1 hybrid transplantation law" states that F1 hybrids of two unrelated inbred strains of mice accept grafts from either parent strain while neither parent accept grafts from the F1 hybrid. However, there are two notable exceptions to this law. Indeed, parent grafts containing immunologically competent cells (spleen cells, bone marrow etc.) react against the F1 normal hosts in which they are placed. In the absence of a host-versus-graft reaction, the graft-versus-host reaction (GvH) may dominate the field and cause untoward reactions which not only negate any benefit derived from the graft, but also cause significant, and often fatal morbidity of the host, that is, a GvH Disease (GvHD). Furthermore, irradiated F1 mice are refractory to the grafting of parental bone marrow, lymphoma cells and normal lymphocytes because of a restriction by non-co-dominant, besides that of codominant MHC-H2 genes. These non-co-dominant genes have been designated Hh genes for Hybrid histocompatibility and the phenomenon itself, hybrid resistance. The cellular, humoral and genetic mechanisms involved in the GvH and hybrid resistance production are explained and discussed in the first, while in the second section of the present review, their equivalent in three human pathological situations are taken into consideration. We focus in detail on two principal immunologic aspects of human bone marrow transplantation: GvH and hematopoietic engraftment; each one of these immunologic aspects has considerable impact on the course and outcome of marrow transplantation in humans. The allograft implantation between HLA-genetically-identical siblings, HLA-aploidentical family members or HLA-phenotypically identical donor-recipient couples are herewith examined, while the autologous bone marrow rescue approach is not taken into consideration. The outcome of bone marrow transplantation depends not only on the degree of genetic disparity between the donor and the recipient, but also on the underlying disease. Bone marrow transplantation is the therapy of choice for patients with aplastic anemia, severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and other genetic and acquired immunodeficiency, some leukemias and a few other diseases, mainly if HLA-genetically-identical siblings are available. However, in many cases such siblings are not available. Therefore, the probability of acute or chronic GvHD or graft rejection increases significantly. The clinical and pathologic manifestations, the prognostic factors, and the treatment and prevention of acute and chronic GvHD are illustrated in detail.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Graft versus host reaction and hybrid resistance in experimental models and clinical practice]. 307 13

A young female patient with a long history of intravenous drug abuse died after a fulminant course of aplastic anemia. At postmortem examination, she was found to have multinucleate giant cells and immunocytochemical evidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection of the central nervous system. This case raises the possibility that HIV infection contributed to the patient's aplastic anemia, and suggests that HIV-associated giant cells might be found retrospectively or prospectively within the brains of patients who die of conditions other than those narrowly defined as acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS-related complex (ARC). It furthermore emphasizes that HIV infection of the nervous system is not necessarily accompanied by clinically apparent neurological disease.
...
PMID:Evidence for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection of the brain in a patient with aplastic anemia. 321 36


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>