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

Analysis of radioactive iron kinetics was performed using a multi-compartment model on a series of 300 patients having either a quantitative (aplasia, haemolysis, iron deficiency) or qualitative (dyserythropoiesis, agnogenic myeloid metaplasia) anomaly of iron metabolism. Calculations were performed using a mammillary model of iron metabolism. The study demonstrated that the flux of iron from the plasma to the exchangeable compartment was a constant fraction of the global iron flux, equal to 15%, in those cases without dyserythropoiesis. This suggested that a constant correction for calculations of iron flux from the slope of the initial portion of the radioactive iron elimination curve may be applied to calculations of haemoglobin production and to the movements of iron to its exchangeable pools. Contrary to previously published information, the exchange of iron between the plasma and the exchangeable pools was not related to circulating iron levels when the other parameters were held constant. In the patients with aplastic anaemia the iron flux was diminished, but never eliminated, demonstrating that the exchangeable compartment was not solely erythroblastic, but included non-erythroid transferrin receptors. In dyserythropoietic states and myelofibrosis, the iron flux from the plasma was elevated, indicating that an important fraction of radio-iron leaves the plasma and then returns, without participating in effective erythropoiesis as determined by the appearance in the circulation of labelled viable red blood cells. The determination of this movement permitted the measurement of ineffective erythropoiesis.
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PMID:Radio-iron kinetic studies in anaemia and the measurement of dyserythropoiesis. 341 96

A patient presented with acute erythromyelosis (DiGuglielmo) which was developed after 3 yr of aplastic anemia. Aplastic anemia differed from the classical form, since erythroid cells and megakaryocytes were relatively preserved in the bone marrow. Treatment with androgens induced the increase of hematocrit and reticulocyte as well as general improvement. The sudden appearance of hemorrhagic syndrome due to thrombocytopenia was associated with aggravation of anemia and granulocytopenia. In the bone marrow, giant multinuclear proerythroblasts with bizarre nuclear morphology and PAS positivity with coarse granules was found. Serum erythropoietin (Ep) level was high. Bone marrow cells culture in vitro revealed two types of erythroid colonies: typical and giant multinuclear cells, both benzidine-positive. The number of colonies was irrespective to the Ep dose. "Autonomous" Ep independent growth of these colonies was also demonstrated. The number of colonies was more than 3 times higher per number of cells seeded when compared to normals, which indicated malignant proliferation and Ep independent growth. Treatment with 6-mercaptopurine and transfusions was without effect and the patient died after 15 days with signs of cerebral bleeding.
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PMID:Acute erythremic myelosis (DiGuglielmo) following atypical aplastic anemia. 345 25

T cell-mediated inhibition of autologous erythroid colony formation was found in two patients with aplastic anaemia. Each patient was treated separately with ALG and methylprednisolone. Peripheral blood T cells were cryopreserved serially during the course of the disease. The inhibitory activity of T cells was assayed after remission using autologous bone marrow. The inhibitory activity of T cells was lost following the treatment and preceded haematopoietic recovery.
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PMID:T cell-mediated inhibition of haematopoiesis in aplastic anaemia: serial assay of inhibitory activities of T cells to autologous CFU-E during immunosuppressive therapy. 348 72

Colony formation by megakaryocytic progenitors (CFU-M) from the blood or bone marrow of 12 patients with essential thrombocythaemia was studied in vitro with the methyl cellulose assay. When the cultures were stimulated with plasma from a patient with aplastic anaemia and with phytohaemagglutinin stimulated conditioned medium (PHA-LCM), the patients showed a significant trend towards higher circulating CFU-M numbers when compared with the controls; three of the patients exceeded our normal range. In the bone marrow cultures there were no differences in the number or morphology of megakaryocytic colonies between the patients and the controls. When normal human plasma was the only source of colony stimulating activity, 11 out of 12 patients, but none of the controls, showed megakaryocytic colony formation. The same patients also had 'spontaneous' erythroid colony growth without the addition of exogenous erythropoietin into the cultures. Only one of the patients with essential thrombocythaemia (ET) had normal megakaryocytic and erythroid colony formation. The present study shows that, in most patients with ET 'spontaneous' CFU-M colony formation occurs in suboptimal culture conditions, a phenomenon obviously analogous to the spontaneous erythroid colony formation seen in the myeloproliferative disorders.
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PMID:Colony formation by megakaryocytic progenitors in essential thrombocythaemia. 360 55

Bone marrow failure encompasses a broad spectrum of disorders including aplastic, dysmyelopoietic and myelophtisic anemias. In the present study, these anemias were characterized according to the degree of erythroid proliferation and efficiency of erythropoiesis. Total erythropoietic activity was evaluated in 43 patients by measuring the erythron transferrin uptake (ETU). It averaged 20% of basal (range 3-43%) in 13 patients with severe aplastic anemia, 75% of basal (range 60-103%) in 3 patients with extensive bone marrow infiltration by neoplastic cells, 131% of basal (range 50-217%) in 16 patients with refractory anemia, and 452% of basal (range 63-720) in 11 patients with idiopathic refractory siderobastic anemia. Respective efficiencies of erythropoiesis were 74% in aplastic anemia, 70% with bone marrow infiltration, 46% in refractory anemia, and 14% in sideroblastic anemia. Based on the ETU, patients could be categorized into absolute marrow failure, relative marrow failure, and adequate erythropoietic response to anemia. This simple determination of proliferating activity of the erythroid marrow can provide useful information on the pathophysiology of marrow failure and a basis for the selection of therapeutic approaches.
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PMID:Pathophysiological classification of acquired bone marrow failure based on quantitative assessment of erythroid function. 365 64

The study of induction of Friend erythroleukemic cell lines during the last decade has enriched our understanding of late erythroid differentiation. In comparison, little information is available on early erythroid differentiation. We describe here the isolation and characterization of a highly inducible clone from a murine erythroid cell line, which is capable of forming colonies that possess properties of the early erythroid burst progenitor. We found that a combination of erythropoietin (Epo), spleen conditioned medium (SCM), and plasma from a patient with aplastic anemia (Apa) induces over 95% of cells from this clone (clone 12) to form colonies with the properties of burst or mixed burst blast-like colonies. Examination of the culture conditions of these cells indicated that alpha medium was more efficient for colony induction than Iscove's medium, and that the addition of two-mercaptoethanol did not improve the induction process. These factors (EPo, SCM, and Apa) must be present for 4 days in order for induction to take place. It is hoped that the isolation of this highly inducible cell clone will enrich our understanding of early erythroid differentiation.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of an erythroid cell line highly inducible to form erythroid burst-like colonies. 372 72

Serum erythropoietic activity was determined in 32 patients with beta thalassemia major and intermedia. Quantitation was performed by an in vitro bioassay using rabbit erythroid precursor cells (CFU-E) either by colony assay or by 3H-thymidine uptake. 20 polytransfused beta-thalassemic major patients had erythropoietic activity (mean 89.3 +/- 36 milliunits/ml) which was not significantly different (p greater than 0.2) from normal individuals (51.3 +/- 32 milliunits/ml). 12 untransfused patients with beta thalassemia intermedia were found to have comparable serum erythropoietic activity (p greater than 0.01). These levels were much lower than those found in patients with aplastic anemia who had a comparable degree of anemia. We have shown that the low EPO activity in thalassemic patients was not due to experimental conditions (excess of ferritin, low transferrin) nor to specific inhibitors appearing in this disease. No correlation was found between the erythropoietic activity and sex or other clinical parameters of the patients such as severity of the anemia, splenectomy, iron chelation or transfusion therapy. 4 young thalassemic children (1-2 yr of age) studied had high erythropoietic activity ranging from 661 to 5793 milliunits/ml--significantly different from normal children of the same age. It is suggested, therefore, that a decrease in serum erythropoietin levels develops during the course of the disease.
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PMID:Erythropoietin activity in the serum of beta thalassemic patients. 378 74

We used flow microfluorometry to analyze peripheral-blood mononuclear cells from 50 patients with aplastic anemia, to determine whether patients who would recover after immunosuppressive therapy could be distinguished before treatment from those who would not recover. Cells were labeled with murine monoclonal antibodies that are relatively specific for B cells, T cells, T-cell subsets, and monocytes. The data suggested that the number of lymphocytes and the ratios of various subclasses of T cells were not useful in identifying patients who were likely to recover. The complete absence of monocytes was found to identify patients who would not recover, but the presence of monocytes was also sometimes associated with lack of recovery. An unexpected finding was the significant (P less than 0.0001) association between clinical recovery and the presence of a population of small cells (4 to 8 micron) that were phenotypically associated with the erythroid lineage. If this association is confirmed, flow microfluorometry may be useful in selecting the optimal treatment for individual patients with aplastic anemia.
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PMID:Subsets of patients with aplastic anemia identified by flow microfluorometry. 387 13

Normal human peripheral blood T cells and T-cell subsets defined by monoclonal antibodies of the OKT series were pretreated with pokeweed mitogen (PWM). Their effects on the haematopoietic precursors, erythroid (BFU-E, CFU-E), granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and megakaryocyte (CFU-M) colony forming cells were evaluated by coculture. While unstimulated T cells and T-cell subsets enhanced growth of autologous blood BFU-E, PWM-stimulated T and OKT4+ cells suppressed it, also inhibiting proliferation of both autologous and allogeneic bone marrow BFU-E, CFU-E, CFU-GM and CFU-M. PWM-stimulated OKT8+ cells had little effect on the growth of any of the precursors at the cell concentration at which growth was completely inhibited by PWM-stimulated OKT4+ cells. Irradiation of T or OKT4+ cells with 3000 rad before PWM stimulation completely abrogated the inhibition. These observations might be related to the mechanism of pancytopenia in some cases of immune-mediated aplastic anaemia.
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PMID:Inhibitory effect of PWM-stimulated OKT4+ subsets on erythro-, granulo- and megakaryocytopoiesis in vitro. 387 21

We performed hemopoietic colony culture assays in 15 patients with aplastic anemia (AA) in order to test the effect of hydrocortisone (HC) on late erythroid colony (CFU-e) formation of the patients' marrow and to correlate the in vitro culture results with the clinical response to corticosteroid therapy. HC enhanced CFU-e growth in four patients. All four patients failed to respond to corticosteroid, but three improved with with androgens. The addition of HC did not increase CFU-e colony formation in 11 patients. However, two of them responded to corticosteroid therapy. Among the nine patients showing no HC effect in vitro, two subsequently improved with androgens and one each with anti-thymocyte globulin and anti-lymphocyte globulin. The results suggest that the in vitro corticosteroid effect may not necessarily correlate with responsiveness to corticosteroid therapy.
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PMID:Lack of correlation between in vitro corticosteroid effect on hemopoietic colony formation and response to corticosteroid therapy in aplastic anemia. 395 13


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