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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (ATM)
13,001 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alpha1-fetoprotein (AFP) is an alpha1-glycoprotein which can be found in high concentration during fetal development in many mammals, birds, sharks and, also, man. The alpha-fetoproteins of various species have similar physico-chemical properties and often common antigenic determinants. Differences of microheterogeneity depend on a different content of sialin-acid. During human fetal development the serum AFP concentration falls with increasing gestational age. 4-5 weeks after birth AFP can be detected usually in low serum concentrations. Using more sensitive immunulogic techniques e.g. radioimmunoassay there was shown that AFP is present in sera of normal adults in concentrations of 10-20 ng/ml. AFP serum concentrations rise physiologically during pregnancy up to 500-550 ng/ml. During fetal development liver, yolk sac and gastrointestinal tract are the major sites of synthesis. In primary liver cell carcinoma, hepatoblastoma and in teratoblastoma containing yolk sac tissue AFP synthesis rises in tumor cells; the AFP serum concentration increases above 2 microgram/ml. In patients with benign liver diseases e.g. virus hepatitis, a transient rise of AFP serum concentrations was seen. Moreover, increased levels of AFP were found in hereditary diseases e.g. congenital tyrosinemia, ataxia-telangiectasia and in the amniotic fluid in congenital nephrosis of Finnish type. AFP assay in serum is clinically important for the control of course and treatment of primary liver cell carcinoma and teratoblastoma. AFP assay in amniotic fluid is a method for the prenatal detection of neural tube defects and the fetal distress syndrome, especially.
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PMID:[Alpha1-fetoprotein: physiology, pathology and diagnosis especially in childhood (author's transl)]. 7 May 46

Ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) is a multi-system disease involving the cerebellum, cutaneous blood vessels and the immune system including both cellular and humoral components. It also involves hematological, endocrine and peripheral nervous systems. This disease is often associated with abnormal liver function tests, such as, raised alkaline phosphatase and various nonspecific histological changes in the liver. High incidence of various malignancies involving lymphoreticular, gastrointestinal and mesenchymal organs have reported in ataxia-telangiectasia. Elevated levels of alpha fetoprotein have been noted commonly in this disorder. In spite of the hepatic histological and biochemical changes associated with elevated alpha fetoprotein, to our knowledge, development of hepatocellular carcinoma has not been reported in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia. A case of a young white female with AT who developed hepatocellular carcinoma along with significantly elevated levels of alpha fetoprotein is presented.
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PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia and hepatocellular carcinoma. 9 92

13 children with ataxia-telangiectasia were followed for 6 years. Unlike previously reported cases, these patients had progressive, debilitating neurological disease and slight pulmonary or infectious symptoms. Immunological dysfunction was variable and endocrinological defects were absent. Oculomotor findings, alpha-fetoprotein levels, and the incidence of chromosomal breakage were the most consistent parameters in the diagnosis of the condition. This disease should be considered in any patient with chronic ataxia, regardless of immunological findings or whether he has a history of infections.
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PMID:Diagnostic considerations in ataxia-telangiectasia. 9 14

There appear to be four primary areas of interest in the application of cytogenetic techniques to the study of malignant lymphomas: (1) the role of cytogenetics in the diagnosis of lymphoma in problem cases, (2) as an aid to the classification of malignant lymphomas, (3) whether specific chromosomal patterns will have prognostic significance for response to therapy or survival, and (4) the role of cytogenetics in staging of malignant lymphomas. A case of reactive lymphoid hyperplasia is reported in which cytogenetic studies demonstrated an aneuploid clone suggesting that cytogenetic abnormalities of lymphoma may precede the diagnostic histopathologic picture. The occurrence of 14q+ marker chromosomes in plasmacytic myeloma, plasma cell leukemia, malignant lymphomas, Burkitt's lymphoma, and ataxia-telangiectasia suggest that a common etiologic or pathogenetic mechanism may be present in some of these disorders. A preliminary pilot study of spleens removed at staging laparotomy for Hdgkin's disease suggests that cytogenetic studies may be able to detect Hodgkin's disease that is not apparent histologically. Further studies are required to provide answers to these areas of interest in cytogenetics in malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Cytogenetics in malignant lymphoma. 10 1

Serum IgA concentrations were found to be normal in a boy with ataxia-telangiectasia and selective IgA deficiency several months after an infusion of bone marrow cells from an HL-A and MLR compatible normal sib. In addition, transient improvements were noted in both his in vivo and in vitro cellular immune responsiveness through the third month posttransplant. Despite this, no evidence of chimerism could be detected in karyotypic studies of his peripheral blood lymphocytes and bone marrow cells. No clinical or significant immunologic improvement was noted in his affected female sib following implantation of a fetal thymus or injection of transfer factor.
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PMID:Bone marrow and thymus transplantation in ataxia-telangiectasia. 12 17

The reproducibility of a simplified, sensitive and rapid agarose-cell droplet assay for leucocyte migration inhibition factor (LIF) activity was studied. Removal of T cells with anti-T-cell serum eliminated LIF activity, indicating that in humans it is probably the T cell that produces LIF. Cord blood lymphocytes produce LIF, although spontaneous migration of leucocytes is less than in older children. The cause of this apparently does not reside in the PMN leucocytes. Studies of children with immunodeficiency suggest that the T-cell population in humans is heterogenous. B-cell deficiencies such as hypogammaglobulinaemia, have normal PPD and PHA induced LIF production, whilst some patients with ataxia-telangiectasia have defective PPD LIF activity, their PHA LIF activity being only minimally depressed. On the other hand, Down's syndrome patients with reduced blood T cells have remarkably deficient LIF activity to PHA and relatively good activity to PPD. Children receiving steroid therapy lose much of their ability to produce LIF to the specific antigen PPD, but not to the non-specific mitogen PHA.
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PMID:Leucocyte migration inhibition factor (LIF) production by lymphocytes of normal children, newborns, and children with immune deficiency. 13 10

We have studied three patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) and found two of them to have a normal mixed leucocyte culture stimulating and responding ability. However, all three patients and one parent had defective cell-mediated lympholysis (CML), even in the face of a potent proliferative response to allogeneic leucocytes. None of these patients showed significant proliferative responses to common microbial antigens (tetanus toxoid, Candida albicans, purified protein derivative (PPD), diphtheria toxoid, influenza). Our studies indicate tha the T cell defect in AT preferentially affects certain T cell functions associated with antigen recognition and the generation of allogeneic CML, while sparing the allogeneic proliferative response. The selective deficiency of specific lymphocyte functions in a thymic immunodeficiency with a known defect in DNA repair is consistent with the concept that DNA modulating enzymes are important for T cell function.
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PMID:Selective defects in T cell function in ataxia-telangiectasia. 15 50

The biologic peculiarities of tumors of early life are elucidated. The oncogenic grace period is emphasized, wherein infantile tumors tend to behave in a relatively benign fashion up until 3-6 months of age. A review of the types of congenital malformations associated with the development of neoplasms is presented. These associations appear to be of fundamental importance in developmental pathobiology. They are illustrated by the tendency for neoplasms to develop in anomalous or dysplastic tissues, such as developmental vestiges, undescended testes, dysgenic gonads and certain hamartoses. There is an increased incidence of tumor occurrence in: (1) specific teratologic disorders: aniridia, hemihypertrophy, Beckwith's syndrome, basal cell nevus syndromes and others; (2) cytogenetic abnormalities: Down's syndrome, 13q- syndrome (D-deletion), trisomy 18; (3) chromosomal instability syndromes: Fanconi's anemia, ataxia-telangiectasia, Bloom's syndrome. Finally, many agents, known to be carcinogenic when administered postnatally to animals, are teratogenic in the fetus. A few agents--urethan, alkylnitrosoureas, estrogens--are both teratogenic and carcinogenic when administered to the fetus transplacentally. It is suggested that the timing of intrauterine insult is important in determining whether the effect on the offspring is teratogenic, oncogenic or both. Teratogenesis appears to be the more primitive response. Other theories explaining the concurrence of tumors and anomalies are offered.
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PMID:Neoplasia of early life and its relationships to teratogenesis. 18 28

A case of mucinous adenocarcinoma of the stomach is described in a 20-month-old child with a large abdominal mass. The lesion arose from the lesser curvature of the stomach and invaded the submucosa and lymphatic channels. A partial response to chemotherapy, including vincristine, Cytoxan, actinomycin D, and adriamycin, was noted, but the patient died 3 1/2 months following diagnosis shortly after gastric perforation and peritonitis developed. Autopsy revealed a pattern of widespread visceral metastases, accompanied by pathologic findings suggestive of ataxia-telangiectasia. A diagnosis of mucinous adenocarcinoma, although it is rare, should be considered in the evaluation of primary neoplasms of the stomach in children.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the stomach in childhood. 18 74

Chromosome analyses are reported for 14 lines of fibro-blasts derived from 8 ataxia-telangiectasia (ATT) patients and for 14 lines of control cells. An elevated incidence of chromosome damage including gaps and breaks, rings, dicentrics and fragments, and chromosome figures has been found to occur in ATT cells. Similar abnormalities present in different cell lines suggest that common break points occur in ATT fibroblast chromosomes. The SV40 virus transformation rates found for ATT cells lie within the range found for normal cells, and there is no direct correlation between the degree of chromosome damage exhibited by any ATT cell line and its transformation rate with SV40.
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PMID:The chromosome analysis and susceptibility to transformation by Simian Virus 40 of fibroblasts from ataxia-telangiectasia. 19 Nov 84


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