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Query: UMLS:C0002874 (
aplastic anemia
)
5,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report herein a 61-year-old man with chronic cold agglutinin disease which occurred after a diagnosis of
aplastic anemia
. The patient's pancytopenia was recognized upon visiting a local doctor because of high fever and cough on December 21, 1985. He was subsequently admitted to our hospital because of anasarca on January 31, 1986, and was diagnosed as having
aplastic anemia
. He was treated with prednisolone, and was discharged after his anemia improved. He was readmitted on October 23, 1988, because of icterus. Laboratory data on the patients second admission revealed increased reticulocyte count, hyperplastic bone marrow with a predominance of erythroblasts, increased serum indirect bilirubin, increased serum LDH1 value and decreased serum
haptoglobin
. Moreover, cold agglutinin titer was increased, anti-IF antibody was positive, and anti-IgM antibody was recognized with direct anti-globulin test. There was no precedent infection such as mycoplasma pneumonia or infectious mononucleosis. Hence, this patient was diagnosed as having chronic cold agglutinin disease.
...
PMID:[Chronic cold agglutinin disease occurring after a diagnosis of aplastic anemia]. 154 14
Haptoglobin was administered i.v. in 2 cases of ABO incompatible bone marrow transplantation for the prevention of hemoglobinuria due to acute hemolysis. The first case was a 25-year-old woman with severe
aplastic anemia
. The transplantation was both major and minor mismatch, where the donor was type A and the recipient was type B. The second case was a 31-year-old man with chronic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia. The transplantation was major mismatch, where the donor was type B and the recipient was type O. After the administrations of
haptoglobin
8,000 units we transfused bone marrow infusates from which incompatible erythrocytes were removed. Though prominent hemoglobinemia was observed in both cases, the serum
haptoglobin
values were not saturated and hemoglobinuria was not detectable. Haptoglobin appears to be useful for the prevention of acute renal failure associated with acute hemolysis in ABO incompatible bone marrow transplantation. Intravenous
haptoglobin
supplement therapy makes transplantation safer and may contribute to improve the recovery rate of total nucleated bone marrow cells after the erythrocyte depletion without worrying much about their contamination.
...
PMID:[Administration of haptoglobin in ABO incompatible bone marrow transplantation]. 225 63
A seven year-old boy with hereditary stomatocytosis complicated with
aplastic anemia
was reported. He was admitted to our hospital because of pale and general fatigue. On physical examination, he had severe anemia, petechiae, but no hepatosplenomegaly. Peripheral blood cell count revealed pancytopenia; RBC 103 X 10(4)/microliters, Hb 3.5 g/dl, Ret 21%, WBC 1,200/microliters, Pl 1.3 X 10(4)/microliters, and bone marrow revealed markedly hypocellular marrow. Red cell morphology demonstrated stomatocytosis. Red cell life span (51Cr T1/2) was 12 days, Coombs' test and Ham's test were negative. Indirect bilirubin was 1.1 mg/dl and marked decrease of
haptoglobin
was found. Family studies showed that his father and sister had stomatocytosis on peripheral blood examination, but no anemia. The patient had severe anemia because of complicated
aplastic anemia
. Congenital stomatocytosis with
aplastic anemia
is extremely rare. The authors are interested in a possible relationship between hereditary stomatocytosis and
aplastic anemia
although the precise mechanism remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:[Congenital stomatocytosis associated with aplastic anemia]. 279 85
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is characterized by complement-mediated hemolysis, venous thrombosis, and bone marrow failure. In May 2003, a 33-year-old man was admitted to a hospital with right hypochondralgia and fever. He had a history of
aplastic anemia
. The patient's diagnosis of diffuse microvessel thrombosis in the hepatic vein due to an unknown cause was derived from the findings of a contrast-enhanced computed tomography examination of the abdominal region, angiographic evaluation of abdominal vessels, and pathohistologic examination of a liver biopsy sample. The patient was subsequently treated with warfarin. The abdominal pain and fever continued, however, and anemia gradually appeared. In April 2004, the patient was referred to our hospital to examine the cause of the thrombosis. On admission, slight anemia and a low serum
haptoglobin
level were observed. A flow cytometry evaluation of CD55 and/or CD59, CD59, and CD48 expression in erythrocytes, granulocytes, and monocytes, respectively, showed that the respective proportions of negative populations were 5.6%, 97.1%, and 96.2%. The patient then received a diagnosis of
aplastic anemia
/PNH syndrome, which had caused the hemolytic anemia and thrombosis, although no hemoglobinuria had been observed during his clinical course. This patient is, to our knowledge, the first reported case of a PNH patient with thrombosis present only in hepatic microvessels and not in hepatic large vessels, in spite of the presence of few hemolytic events.
...
PMID:Microvascular thrombosis in the hepatic vein of a patient with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. 1798 86
To clarify whether measurement of serum
haptoglobin
(Hp) has impact on understanding pathophysiology in bone marrow failure (BMF) syndromes, we investigated concentrations of serum Hp by nephelometric procedure in 156 Japanese patients with BMF, including 54
aplastic anemia
(AA), 50 paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), and 52 myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) patients. The frequencies with low concentrations of serum Hp (<42 mg/dL) in PNH patients (98.0%) were significantly higher than those in AA (27.8%; P < 0.0001) and MDS (38.5%; P < 0.0001) patients. In AA patients, white blood cell (WBC), absolute neutrophil, and platelet counts were significantly decreased in the group (n = 15) with low concentrations of serum Hp than in that (n = 39) with normal concentrations of it, and WBC counts were positively correlated with concentrations of serum Hp, suggesting that WBC counts may affect the concentrations. In MDS patients, hemoglobin concentrations and serum iron were significantly decreased and increased, respectively, in the group (n = 20) with low concentrations of serum Hp than in that (n = 32) with normal concentrations of it, and the values of serum iron were inversely correlated with concentrations of serum Hp, suggesting that ineffective erythropoiesis may affect the concentrations. Several AA and MDS patients with low concentrations of serum Hp had Coombs-negative autoimmune hemolytic anemia determined by immunoradiometric assay. In conclusion, several factors in conjunction with pathophysiology contribute to decrease of serum Hp in BMF.
...
PMID:Low concentration of serum haptoglobin has impact on understanding complex pathophysiology in patients with acquired bone marrow failure syndromes. 2037 81