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)

The average concentration of orotic acid in the milk of 412 Black and White bred cows from four Polish provinces was 0.618 +/- 0.233 mmol/l. There was no correlation between milk yield and concentration of orotic acid. A higher concentration of this pyrimidine in younger cows, and its increase during development of lactation was noted. The yearly pattern of orotic acid in milk and urine of four low-, and four high-orotate cows was examined. In spite of high average differences in milk orotate (0.397 and 0.813 mmol/l) no significant differences in urinary orotate (20.96 and 21.90 mumol/mmol creatinine) were observed. In both groups the lowest milk orotate level occurred in early lactation. The orotic acid content (mmol/l) in commercial milk products was as follows: skim milk--0.783; evaporated milk--0.538; cream 12% fat--0.367; buttermilk--0.449; yogurt--0.331; kefir--0.341; sour milk 2% fat--0.360; dried skim milk--1.042; Bebiko I (infant formula)--0.650. Leukemia led to the elevation (0.845 mmol/l), whereas mastitis to the depression (0.124 mmol/l) of milk orotic acid level.
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PMID:Variability of orotic acid concentration in cow's milk. 195 38

This report has discussed the normal psychological responses associated with diagnosis and treatment of leukemia, specific psychological disorders that are encountered in the context of treatment, and psychological issues that develop after definitive treatment as patients become survivors from leukemia. Psychopharmacologic and psychotherapeutic strategies to treat the specific disorders of anxiety, depression, and delirium have been outlined. Similarly, survival issues have been considered as an ever-growing number of patients are cured of leukemia.
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PMID:Psychiatric aspects of adult leukemia. 196 84

We report the results of a year of regular psychiatric support in the Hematology Department (UTI-DH) at Santa Maria Hospital. During a six-month period, the total group of hospital inpatients suffering from leukemia, Hodgkin's disease or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, were assessed, using a semi-structured interview. A prevalence of 30% of adjustment disorders (depression and/or anxiety) and 2% of organic mental syndromes was found employing the DSM-III-R diagnostic system. In the second six-month period only patients referred by their doctor and/or nurse were observed. The two rates are discussed. A lower prevalence was found if compared with other studies in cancer patients in general. Possible causes will be focussed. General problems related to the nature of the cancer were identified. The consequences of the omission of cancer diagnosis to patients are analysed. The communication between physician and patient which is often neglected irrespectively of the culture or country, is stressed.
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PMID:[Psychiatric disorders in hospitalized patients with hematologic neoplasms]. 204 22

Infection with human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) is associated in vitro and in vivo with a remarkable depression of cell-mediated immune functions. In the present report it is shown that early events following virus-induced suppression of the cell-mediated immune response of freshly isolated cord blood mononuclear cells (CBL) infected with HTLV-I can be partially counteracted by treatment with interferons alpha, beta or gamma (IFN). All three types of IFN exerted a protective effect on CBL cultures exposed to the virus. This resulted in: (a) a reduced number of virus-positive cells until 4 weeks of culture; (b) delay in the clonal expansion of infected cells (IFN alpha and gamma); (c) increased natural killer cell activity of CBL, 1 week post-infection (p.i.), mediated by IFN gamma; (d) increase of allospecific recognition of infecting and priming HTLV-I donor MT-2 cells by CBL in a cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte-like response, mediated by IFN and particularly by IFN gamma; (e) phenotype distribution of CBL subpopulations, tested 4 days p.i., more similar to that of non-infected CBL cultures. In contrast, the overall CBL proliferation, that is profoundly depressed during the first week p.i., was not restored by IFN treatments, suggesting that boosting of the cell-mediated killing induced by IFN might involve the maturation of undifferentiated precursor cells rather than stimulation of their proliferation. The improvement of the efficiency of the antiviral immune response induced by treatment with IFN is likely to contribute to the clearance of virus-positive cells during the early phase of infection. This would provide experimental evidence to support an immunopharmacological approach contributing to the conversion of HTLV-I carriers from positive to negative.
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PMID:Modulation of the cell-mediated immune function by interferon alpha, beta or gamma can partially reverse the immunosuppression induced by human T-cell leukemia virus I in human cord blood cultures. 211 32

We established many immunoglobulin-null immature B cell lines transformed by tsOS-59, a temperature-sensitive mutant of Abelson murine leukemia virus. In different cell lines cell growth was depressed and cell differentiation (generation of intracytoplasmic mu-positive cells from Ig- cells) was induced by the shift of culture temperature from low (35 degrees C) to high (39 degrees C). Cell lines were categorized into four groups: (i) temperature sensitive (ts) to both cell growth and differentiation, (ii) ts to cell growth but not to cell differentiation, (iii) ts to cell differentiation but not to cell growth, and (iv) ts to neither cell growth nor differentiation. These results indicated that the depression of cell growth did not necessarily induce cell differentiation, and that cell differentiation was induced regardless of whether cell growth was depressed or not. Furthermore, the results showed that the depression of cell growth and the induction of cell differentiation occurred without the reduction of tyrosine kinase activity of P120gag-abl at high, nonpermissive temperature. Our cell growth and differentiation system described here should provide us with the interesting findings of the relation between B cell growth and differentiation.
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PMID:Unlinked regulation of cell growth and differentiation in immature B cell lines. 211 32

A special unit for immune-depressed patients was used in the treatment of acute leukemia in 33 patients. Results of therapy were compared to those in 30 historical controls treated in a general ward. Both groups were comparable regarding age, sex, type of leukemia and severity of bone marrow depression. The incidence of fever and the percentage of complete remission were higher in patients treated in the unit, including patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The remission rate in the subgroup of patients with acute myeloid leukemia was not improved. Mortality rates were also not different. We recommend the use of this unit for treatment of patients with acute leukemia, given the lower infection rate and the higher probability of remission.
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PMID:[Treatment of acute leukemia: usefulness of an immunodepressed unit]. 213 8

Neonatal exposure to Gross murine leukemia virus results in a profound inhibition of the virus-specific T and B cell responses of adult animals. Animals exposed to virus as neonates exhibit a marked depression in virus-specific T cell function as measured by the virtual absence of in vivo delayed type hypersensitivity responses and in vitro proliferative responses to virally infected stimulator cells. Further, serum obtained from neonatally treated mice failed to either immunoprecipitate viral proteins or neutralize virus in an in vitro plaque assay, suggesting the concurrent induction of a state of B cell hyporesponsiveness. The specificity of this effect at the levels of both T and B cells was demonstrated by the ability of neonatally treated mice to respond normally after adult challenge with either irrelevant reovirus or influenza virus. The replication of Gross virus within both stromal and lymphocytic compartments of the neonatal thymus suggests that thymic education plays a key role in the induction of immunologic nonresponsiveness to viruses.
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PMID:Neonatal exposure to thymotropic gross murine leukemia virus induces virus-specific immunologic nonresponsiveness. 214 51

Preexistent feline leukemia virus (FeLV) infection greatly potentiated the severity of the transient primary and chronic secondary stages of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection. Of 10 FeLV-FIV carrier cats, 5 died of experimentally induced FIV infection, compared with 2 deaths in 10 cats infected only with FeLV and 1 death in 7 cats infected only with FIV. FIV-infected cats with preexistent FeLV infections developed severe depression, anorexia, fever, diarrhea, dehydration, weight loss, and leukopenia 4 to 6 weeks after infection and were moribund within 2 weeks of the onset of signs, whereas cats infected only with FIV developed much milder self-limiting gross and hematologic abnormalities. Pathologic findings in dually infected cats that died were similar to those observed previously in cats dying from uncomplicated primary FIV infection but were much more widespread and severe. Coinfection of asymptomatic FeLV carrier cats with FIV did not increase the levels of FeLV p27 antigen present in their blood over that seen in cats infected with FeLV alone. The amount of proviral FIV DNA was much higher, however, in dually infected cats than in cats infected only with FIV; there was a greater expression of FIV DNA in lymphoid tissues, where the genome was normally detected, and in nonlymphoid tissues, where FIV DNA was not usually found. Dually infedted cats that recovered from the primary stage of FIV infection remained more leukopenic than cats infected with FIV or FeLV alone, and their CD4+/CD8+ T-lymphocyte ratios were inverted. One of these cats developed what was considered to be an opportunistic infection. It was concluded, therefore, that a preexistent FeLV infection in some way enhanced the expression and spread of FIV in the body and increased the severity of both the resulting transient primary and chronic secondary stages of FIV infection. This study also demonstrated the usefulness of the FIV model in studying the role of incidental infectious diseases as cofactors for immunodeficiency-causing lentiviruses.
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PMID:Feline leukemia virus infection as a potentiating cofactor for the primary and secondary stages of experimentally induced feline immunodeficiency virus infection. 215 26

In a clinical phase II study nine patients (five men and four women; mean age 48 [42-58] years) in an early stage of chronic lymphatic leukaemia (CLL) of the B-cell type were treated with recombinant alpha-2b interferon (IFN alpha-2b), initially at a dosage of 5 mega units subcutaneously three times weekly, but in some cases reduced to 2.5 or raised to 10 mega units. Duration of treatment has been 15-36 months. Through-flow cytometry in seven patients demonstrated a definite fall in circulating B1-positive lymphocytes. Lasting partial remission (duration of 106-134 weeks) was achieved in four patients, in a further four the condition remained stable. A recurrence was noted in the patient with the initially highest lymphocyte count (52,000/microliters) after 28 weeks, control being achieved only after 64 weeks of chemotherapy. Side effects were flu'-like symptoms and (in two instances) depression. In three patients there was a clear rise in serum immunoglobulin concentrations as sign of IFN alpha-2b-induced increased immune response, while in four HLA-DR expression on monocytes was doubled. It is concluded that early treatment of CLL with IFN alpha-2b may delay the onset of necessary chemotherapy, any antibody-deficiency may be improved and survival time may ultimately be lengthened.
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PMID:[Interferon alfa-2B in chronic lymphatic leukemia of the B-cell type]. 237 39

This retrospective analysis evaluates the effect of intravenously administered immunoglobulin against infections occurring during bone marrow depression after cancer chemotherapy in 85 children with leukemia and lymphoma. There was no statistical difference between patients with and without immunoglobulin administration neither when immunoglobulins were used prophylactically nor therapeutically in addition to antibodies during episodes of infection. Duration of fever, duration of antibiotic therapy, maximum of temperature, white blood cell counts, and kind of infections were comparable in 84 fever episodes in patients who had received immunoglobulin therapeutically and 69 fever episodes in patients who had not. This study supports the aspect that immunoglobulin administration does not have preventive or therapeutic efficacy on infections during cancer chemotherapy in children.
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PMID:[Effect of 7S immunoglobulin substitution on the incidence and course of infection in cytostatic drug treated patients]. 239 13


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