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)

Feline leukaemia viruses (FeLVs) have long been known to be associated with induction of proliferative and anti-proliferative diseases of domestic cats. Strains of FeLV have been recognized which specifically induce lymphosarcoma, aplastic anaemia, myelodysplastic anaemia, and, recently, feline AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome), a naturally occurring immunosuppressive syndrome strikingly similar to human AIDS which is lethal in 100% of inoculated and viraemic specific-pathogen-free (SPF) cats. Here, we have analysed FeLV DNA in tissues of 22 SPF cats that had been inoculated with the feline AIDS strain (FeLV-FAIDS) and we find two classes of viral DNA--a monotypic common form which is detectable in bone marrow regardless of disease state, and variant forms, recognizable by restriction site differences, whose appearance correlates with onset of disease symptoms and persists throughout the course of the disease. FeLV-FAIDS variant DNA is detected at high concentration (10-50 copies per cell) and principally as unintegrated viral DNA (UVD) in bone marrow of cats with feline AIDS. In marked contrast high levels of UVD were not present in cats in the terminal-stages of T-cell lymphosarcoma, aplastic anaemia, or myelodysplastic anaemia induced by other FeLV strains. These results parallel recent observations in humans, where high levels of UVD were sometimes found in cells derived from AIDS patients infected with human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III)/lymph-adenopathy-associated virus (LAV), and suggest that persistence of unintegrated variant viral DNA is a crucial indicator of retrovirus-induced cytopathic disease syndromes such as AIDS.
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PMID:Disease-specific and tissue-specific production of unintegrated feline leukaemia virus variant DNA in feline AIDS. 300 39

221 patients were treated by splenectomy for various hematologic disorders, including immunologic thrombocytopenia (80 cases), hereditary spherocytosis (15 cases), immune hemolytic anemia (25 cases), chronic lymphatic leukemia (27 cases), lymphosarcoma (27 cases), myelofibrosis (11 cases) and pancytopenia/aplastic anemia (14 cases). There were 8 postoperative deaths (3.6%), and 49 patients (22%) had postoperative complications, mainly infections and bleeding. Complications were more frequent in cases of massive splenomegaly (greater than or equal to 1 000 g) (65 cases), severe thrombocytopenia (less than 20 X 10(6)/1) (51 cases), and leukemia. Late postsplenectomy fulminant infection was seen in 8 patients (3.6%) for a mean follow up of 5.3 years. We conclude that splenectomy is sufficiently well tolerated even by severely ill patients to make it applicable as a therapeutic modality in the various hematologic disorders presently studied.
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PMID:Complications after therapeutic splenectomy for hematologic disease in adults. 722 97

Cell cycle stage distribution of bone marrow cells was studied at flow cytometry in 137 hematological patients. They had acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloblastic leukemia, lymphosarcoma with leukemization, blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia, iron deficiency anemia, pernicious anemia, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, aplastic anemia (31, 34, 18, 12, 17, 8, 9, 8 cases, respectively). It was found that in leukemia, and to a lesser degree in anemia, stability of the cell cycle was impaired. In leukemia onset, recurrence and remission, the proportion S/(G2+M) appeared increased evidencing defective DNA synthesis by myelokaryocytes and ineffective hemopoiesis. Similar changes were seen in pernicious and aplastic anemia.
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PMID:[Changes in the stability of the parameters of the bone marrow cell cycle in hematologic diseases]. 942 52