Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cell-mediated immunity has been studied in patients with 1) megaloblastic anemia of folic acid deficiency, 2)megaloblastic anemia of pregnancy, or 3) iron-deficiency anemia. Using dinitrochlorobenzene skin tests, phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocyte transformation, and rosette inhibition by antilymphocyte globulin, we have shown that cell-mediated immunity is depressed in megaloblastic anemia due to folate deficiency; this depression was reversed by folate treatment. Cell-mediated immunity was not impaired by iron-deficiency anemia. Suggested interactions between iron deficiency and folate metabolism were not clarified by these studies.
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PMID:Depressed cell-mediated immunity in megaloblastic anemia due to folic acid deficiency. 111 20

A summary of the effects of contraceptive pills on vitamins in the b lood is presented. The significant increase of Vitamin-A in the plasma of contraceptive users is believed to be a result of the increase of bet alipoprotein, which binds chiefly to Vitamin-A. Although high concentrations of Vitamin-A have caused teratogenicity in test animals, the increase found in humans using contraceptive pills is not high enough to cause risk. A lowering of Vitamin-B6 (pyridoxin) levels has occurred with the use of contraceptive pills. This can cause alteration in the metabolism of tryptophan, which could cause depression in pill users. The lack of pyridoxine can also increase the production of xanthuric acid which binds with insulin, resulting in a decreased glucose tolerance. A decrease in folic acid in pill users has also been observed, caused by some effect of the pill on the folate deconjugate. The Vitamin-B12 level is also lowered for unascertainable reasons related to the decrease in folic acid. No anemia occurs in spite of the lowered Vitamin-B complex levels in the blood. A lack in Vitamin-C in users of pills containing estrogens is possibly effected by a corresponding increase between estrogens and ceruloplasmin, a protein active in the oxidation of ascorbic acid. This lack of Vitamin-C has had no clinical significance thus far.
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PMID:[P-pills and vitamins]. 114 66

Fifty patients with lymphocytic lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia underwent splenectomy for various combinations of anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia. All of these patients had advanced lymphoproliferative disease, and most had infiltration of bone marrow by neoplastic cells. Good response in all hematologic parameters was obtained in 27 of 48 evaluable patients. An additional 13 patients responded in one or two parameters; there were only 8 complete failures. The over-all surgical mortality was 8%. The median duration of response was 4 months, and the mean, 7 months. Increased tolerance to further antitumor therapy and a decreased transfusion requirement were seen among responding patients. Those patients with anemia who had evidence of shortened erythrocyte survival and splenic sequestration of 51Cr-labelled erythrocytes uniformly responded with rises in hemoglobin. However, half of the patients with negative splenic sequestration also showed improvement of anemia. Preoperative diagnostic studies failed to predict favorable responses of patients with thrombocytopenia or leukopenia. The classical criteria for the diagnosis of hypersplenism are not applicable in many cases of neoplastic lymphoproliferative disease; splenectomy could have been considered "contraindicated" in most of the patients in this series. We conclude that splenectomy is worth undertaking in patients with lymphoproliferative disease complicated by hematologic depression regardless of marrow findings or the results of other diagnostic studies.
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PMID:Splenectomy for hematologic depression in lymphocytic lymphoma and leukemia. 117 72

Apart from the usual hazards of local anesthesia (toxic reaction due to overdose or intravasal administration, allergic reaction, reaction to the vasoconstrictor), a further risk which should be borne in mind in local anesthesia of the neck region is inadvertent epidural or intrathecal administration of the local anesthetic agent. Depression of respiration or total respiratory failure may occur due to blockade of the superficially located medullary chemoreceptors in the form of a high or total spinal block. The pathogenesis of these incidents is investigated. Respiratory failure is usually reversible and requires immediate and effective therapy (artificial respiration, oxygen administration). The indications for neck anesthesia and their relativity within the entire therapeutic program should be given careful consideration. If (radicular) pain occurs during the injection, or if cerebrospinal fluid is aspirated, the procedure should be interrupted immediately and some time allowed to elapse. In fatal cases the injection channel must be dissected layer-wise in local anemia down to the dural sac. The possible pathway of toxic administration (epidural, subdural, intravasal) must be demonstrated chemically.
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PMID:[Clinical and experimental contribution concerning the pathogenesis of acute life-threatening complications during neck anaesthesia]. 117 98

The effect of certain disease parameters on remission and survial time was evaluated in 482 patients with multiple myeloma treated with intermittent courses of melphalan-prednisone combinations. Increasing degrees of anemia, hypercalcemia, azotemia, and high serum myeloma protein levels were associated with progressive lifespan shortening. The short survival of patients with anemia and hypercalcemia was associated with short remissions in responding patients with these abnormalities. The extent of tumor mass was defined from specific laboratory parameters reported by Durie to be associated with large numbers of plasma cells. More advanced stages of myeloma were associated with higher frequencies and degrees of normal immunoglobulin depression. The response rate was not affected by the tumor mass grade, but increasing tumor mass was associated with a shorter lifespan. Greater degrees of tumor reduction were associated with longer remission and survival times. Patients in whom a marked tumor reduction was rapid had shorter survival and remission times than patients who responded more slowly.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in multiple myeloma. 117 23

1. Six unanaesthetized goats were used to evaluate the effect of liver failure on the hypoxic responsiveness of cerebral blood flow. The animals breathed air and several different hypoxic gas mixtures enriched with sufficient CO2 to maintain an isocapnic state. The cerebral metabolic rate for O2 (CMRo2) was also measured in four of these goats. 2. In baseline studies there was a linear relationship between cerebral blood flow and arterial O2 saturation (Sa,o2) measured at different levels of isocapnic hypoxia. The slopes of the cerebral blood flow/Sa,o2 response lines were used to quantify the response of cerebral blood flow to hypoxia. In the healthy goat, CMRo2 was not depressed by hypoxia until the O2 tension (Po2) in arterial and cerebral venous blood had fallen below critical threshold values of approximately 3-2 and 2-2 kPa (24 and 16 mmHg) respectively. 3. Liver failure was accompanied by a fall in cerebral blood flow and CMRo2. There was also a depression in the response of cerebral blood flow to hypoxia and a disproportionate reduction of cerebral O2 delivery in hypoxia. CMRo2 was further reduced at arterial and cerebral venous Po2 values, which were much higher than the critical threshold values for producing hypoxic CMRo2 depression in health. 4. It is concluded that the brain becomes more vulnerable to the adverse effects of hypoxia during liver failure. This may be of practical importance in the management of patients with arterial hypoxaemia or other complications (e.g. anaemia or shock), which may reduce cerebral oxygen delivery.
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PMID:Effect of liver failure on the cerebral circulatory and metabolic responses to hypoxia in the goat. 124

The potential effect of chicken anemia agent (CAA) alone or in combination with infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) on the immune system of young chickens was determined by measuring alterations in hematocrit values, lymphoid organ-to-body weight ratios and lymphoid cell concentrations at 4, 7, 10, 14, 17, 21, 28 and 42 days post-inoculation (PI). Lymphocyte subpopulations were identified and counted by flow cytometry using cell suspensions stained with monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) for panlymphocytes (K55), cytotoxic T-cells (CTLA3), T-helper cells (CT3), Ia-expressing cells (P2M11) and macrophages (P7). Chicken anemia agent induced a substantial but transient decrease in hematocrit value, thymus-to-body weight ratio and bursa-to-body weight ratio between 7 and 21 days PI corresponding to a generalized lymphocytopenia in the thymus, bursa and spleen. However, cytotoxic T-cell, T-helper cell and Ia-expressing cell concentrations increased in the bone marrow of birds inoculated with CAA alone or in combination with IBDV during the same time period. T-helper-to-cytotoxic T-cell ratios increased in the thymus and spleen during severe lymphocytopenia, indicating a selective decrease in cytotoxic T-cells. T-helper-to-cytotoxic T-cells ratios increased in the bone marrow, indicating a selective increase in T-helper cell concentrations. The increase in Ia-expressing cells in the bone marrow may be a reflection of increased number of activated T-cells which express Ia antigen. Infectious bursal disease virus alone induced a persistent depression of Ia-expressing cells in the bursa and the spleen and no measurable change in the bone marrow lymphocyte subpopulations. Chickens inoculated simultaneously with CAA and IBDV experienced clinical signs observed in chickens inoculated with each virus separately with a prolonged acute phase prior to recovery or mortality.
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PMID:Immune dysfunction following infection with chicken anemia agent and infectious bursal disease virus. I. Kinetic alterations of avian lymphocyte subpopulations. 133 76

To determine the functional impact of alterations in lymphocyte concentrations and ratios following infection with chicken anemia agent (CAA) alone or in combination with infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) on the immune system of young chickens, in vitro lymphoproliferation assays and in vivo responses to vaccination with several common viral agents were assessed at various time intervals post-inoculation (PI). Concanavalin A (Con A), phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and pokeweed mitogen (PWM) stimulation of splenic lymphocytes (SPL) collected from control birds could not be detected until 10-14 days PI. Infection with CAA was characterized by significantly higher PWM stimulation of SPL at 17 days PI and significantly lower PWM stimulation of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) at 14 days PI, compared with uninfected controls. Concanavalin A and PWM stimulation of SPL was significantly increased in birds inoculated with IBDV alone. Lymphocytes harvested from birds inoculated simultaneously with CAA and IBDV had significantly lower responses. Effects on humoral and cell-mediated immunity following CAA and/or IBDV were determined by evaluating vaccination responses to Newcastle disease virus (NDV), fowl pox virus (FPV) and infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) during the acute phase of CAA infection (2 weeks PI). Vaccination of birds 2 weeks following CAA infection at 1 day of age resulted in decreased protection against NDV (85.7%) and ILTV (7.1%) challenge compared with protection rates in control birds (100% and 53.3% respectively). Infectious bursal disease virus infection was associated with decreased protection against NDV (60%) only. Concomitant infection at 1 day of age resulted in a greater reduction in NDV challenge protection (33.3%), slightly decreased FPV protection (87.5%), increased numbers of persistent FPV vaccination lesions and increased protection against ILTV challenge (71.4%). Vaccination of birds 2 weeks following CAA infection at 2 weeks of age resulted in slightly decreased NDV humoral antibody, development of persistent FPV vaccination lesions (17%) and increased immunity to ILTV challenge compared with control birds (83.3% vs. 66.7%). Chickens inoculated with IBDV alone displayed a more severe depression in NDV antibody titers and only a slight decrease in ILTV protection. Vaccination following concomitant infection at 2 weeks of age resulted in a higher percentage of FPV persistent vaccination lesions (39%) and greatly enhanced immunity to ILTV challenge (100%).
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PMID:Immune dysfunction following infection with chicken anemia agent and infectious bursal disease virus. II. Alterations of in vitro lymphoproliferation and in vivo immune responses. 133 77

From a total of 81 patients on maintenance hemodialysis who underwent coronary angiography, 8 patients fulfilled the criteria: significant coronary artery disease, hematocrit less than 27%, reproducible (ECG) positive treadmill test, no disturbance of repolarization in ECG at rest. Exercise stress testing was performed at a hematocrit of 25 +/- 2% and following erythropoietin therapy at a hematocrit of 34 +/- 0.5%. Symptom-limited exercise performance increased in all patients (1.10 +/- 0.3 W/kg b.w. vs. 1.44 +/- 0.31 W/kg b.w., p less than 0.01) as well as exercise duration (489 vs. 362 s, p +/- 0.01). ST segment depression during maximal exercise was reduced from a mean of 2.1 to 0.4 mm (p less than 0.01). It is concluded that amelioration of renal anemia by erythropoietin in dialysis patients with significant coronary artery disease reduces exercise-induced myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Effect of erythropoietin on ischemia tolerance in anemic hemodialysis patients with confirmed coronary artery disease. 143 8

Out of 473 patients operated radically for colon or rectal cancer different survival curves have been calculated according to whether they had received or not blood or plasma transfusions during their hospital stay. The non-transfused patients have a better 5-year survival rate and the difference is statistically significant both including and not including Duke's C stage cases. Anemia on hospital admission, on the contrary, does not seem to influence patients survival. Immune depression after blood or plasma transfusion is a very well known phenomenon in transplant surgery and actually depends on the infusion of leucocytes. Is not yet clearly demonstrated that in cancer surgery immune depression may lead to a poorer survival of transfused patients but several papers, including ours, suggest that this effect is very likely. At present in cancer patients it is preferable to limit transfusions to the minimum. If they are absolutely necessary leucocyte poor or, better still, leucocyte free preparations should be administered.
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PMID:Correlation between plasma or blood transfusion and survival after curative surgery for colorectal cancer. 147 7


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