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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An expression vector for
G-CSF
, pASLB3-3, was constructed and introduced into Namalwa KJM-1 cells (Hosoi et al., 1988), and cells resistant to 100 nM of methotrexate (MTX) were obtained. Among them, the highest producer, clone SC57, was selected and the productivity of this clone was further characterized. The maximal production of
G-CSF
was at the most 1.8 micrograms/ml/day using a 25 cm2 tissue culture flask, even though the cell number was above 7 x 10(5) cells/ml. The limiting factors at high density were analyzed as the deficiency of nutrients, such as glucose, cysteine and serine, and pH control. The
depression
of specific
G-CSF
productivity per cell under the batch culture conditions was overcome by using a perfusion culture system, Biofermenter (Sato, 1983) with modifications of nutrients supplementation by a dialysis membrane and/or dissolved oxygen (DO) supplementation by microsilicone fibers. ITPSGF medium was modified to elevate concentrations of amino acids and glucose by 2.0- and 2.5-times, respectively. Under the control of pH at 7.4 and DO at 4 ppm, the specific
G-CSF
productivity was not depressed even at high cell density (above 1 x 10(7) cells/ml), and the amount of
G-CSF
reached 41 micrograms/ml. These results indicated the possibility of finding the optimum culture conditions for the production of recombinant proteins by Namalwa KJM-1 cells.
...
PMID:Optimization of cell culture conditions for G-CSF (granulocyte-colony stimulating factor) production by genetically engineered Namalwa KJM-1 cells. 137 59
Feline parvovirus (FPV) causes leukopenia in naturally infected cats. We investigated the mechanism of hematopoietic
depression
by this virus in feline bone marrow cultured in vitro. In suspension cultures we demonstrated FPV propagation and replication using DNA molecular hybridization. Viral RNA and DNA were observed by in situ hybridization in about 10% of marrow cells at day 3. Granulocytes and their precursors were virtually absent from infected cultures after six days. Infected cells showed viral capsid protein predominantly in nuclei by immunofluorescence. In clonal assays, FPV most efficiently inhibited hematopoietic colony formation by myeloid progenitor cells (CFU-GM), but erythroid colony formation (BFU-E and CFU-E-derived) was also depressed in the presence of virus. Inhibition of colony formation could be abrogated by physical inactivation of the virus or preincubation with specific neutralizing antibodies. Recombinant human colony stimulating factors GM-CSF and
G-CSF
supported feline myelopoiesis in progenitor assays, and FPV completely inhibited factor dependent colony formation.
...
PMID:Feline parvovirus propagates in cat bone marrow cultures and inhibits hematopoietic colony formation in vitro. 254 25
The hematologic effects of recombinant human interleukin-6 (rhIL-6) were studied in dogs exposed to a total-body irradiation (TBI) of 2.4 Gy. IL-6 was administered over a period of 14 days at a daily dose of 18 micrograms/kg by single subcutaneous injection. Treatment was started 1 day after TBI. The data obtained for the different hematologic parameters of the irradiated IL-6-treated dogs were compared with the data obtained from dogs who received TBI of 2.4 Gy and were treated with the carrier (control). No clear influence of IL-6 treatment on the pattern of recovery of lymphocytes could be detected in comparison to the irradiated control animals. The thrombocyte counts in the period from day 1 to 16 after TBI were similar for both groups of dogs, showing a sharp decrease in counts between days 6 and 12 with a stabilization thereafter at approximately 30 x 10(3)/microL. In three of the four IL-6-treated dogs, however, thrombocyte counts increased at day 18 after the beginning of treatment. This increase occurred 7 days earlier than in the controls. In two of the three dogs showing an accelerated recovery of platelet counts, however, treatment with IL-6 caused a strong decrease in the erythrocyte counts associated with a prolonged
depression
in reticulocyte concentration. There was no influence on the recovery of blood granulocytes. In one of the animals responding with an accelerated thrombocyte recovery, IL-6 had no adverse effect on erythropoiesis. However, IL-6 forced the recovery of blood granulocytes in the period beyond day 10 after TBI. Another animal showed no influence of IL-6 on thrombocyte recovery but a strong depressive effect on erythrocyte and reticulocyte counts. The results show that for standardized conditions of radiation-induced bone marrow damage, the pattern of response to IL-6 in different hematopoietic lineages may show considerable variations between individuals, in contrast to what has been observed in irradiated animals treated with granulocyte-macrophage or granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (GM- or
G-CSF
).
...
PMID:Hematologic effects of recombinant human interleukin-6 in dogs exposed to a total-body radiation dose of 2.4 Gy. 801 70
More effective and safer regimens are needed for patients who have advanced multiple myeloma resistant to or relapsing despite prior treatment with alkylating agents and VAD. We treated 58 such patients using the combination of twice daily cyclophosphamide (total dose 1.8 g/m2) and VAD (hyperCVAD). Treatment was given to outpatients followed by
G-CSF
at 5 microgram/kg/d until granulocyte recovery. Twenty-three patients responded (40%), with a median duration of granulocyte
depression
to less than 500/microliter of 4 days and a mortality rate of 2%. The median survival time for all patients was 15 months, and the median remission time of responding patients was 8 months. Patients who had low LDH, low B2M, or primary resistant disease lived significantly longer than patients without these features. The combination of fractionated cyclophosphamide and VAD provided an effective and safe rescue treatment for many patients who had advanced myeloma resistant to standard therapies.
...
PMID:HyperCVAD for VAD-resistant multiple myeloma. 863 45
A patient under Taxol and granulocyte colony stimulating factor (
G-CSF
, Neupogen) treatment for metastatic breast carcinoma of the liver experienced repeated suicidal
depression
on days 10 and 11 of therapy. MRI and MRS were performed during the fifth and sixth cycles of chemotherapy on days 1 and 10. The MRI was normal in all four examinations. The MRS showed normal levels of metabolites on days 1 of therapy, with remarkable reproducible declines in neurobiochemicals myo-inositol (23-27%), choline (20-24%), creatine (10-14%) and glutamate/glutamine (22-39%) on day 10 of therapy. The neurobiochemical declines coincided with the patient's experience of suicidal
depression
. Patients reporting
depression
during standard cancer therapy may be experiencing previously undocumented chemotherapeutic neurobiochemical imbalances or neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:Neurobiochemical changes from Taxol/Neupogen chemotherapy for metastatic breast carcinoma corresponds with suicidal depression. 901 96
Deferiprone, also known as L1, is an orally active iron chelator that has been studied extensively in clinical trials. The sporadic occurrence of agranulocytosis in association with deferiprone and the highly variable frequency of other possible side effects such as arthralgia have created uncertainty about the true incidence of deferiprone-related complications. A multi-center, 1-year trial was initiated to determine the safety profile of deferiprone. Using the Apotex formulation of deferiprone, 187 patients with thalassemia who were unable or unwilling to use deferoxamine were enrolled in four centers; 162 patients completed one year of therapy. Agranulocytosis (ANC < 500/mm3) occurred in one patient after 15 weeks of treatment, was not accompanied by infection and resolved following treatment with
G-CSF
. Nine other subjects developed less severe neutropenia (ANC 500-1500/mm3) with the lowest absolute neutrophil count reaching 500-1250/mm3. The neutropenia in these patients developed after 1-50 weeks of therapy, frequently accompanied febrile illnesses, and occurred predominantly in non-splenectomized patients. Reasons other than neutropenia for discontinuing use of deferiprone included nausea (4), voluntary withdrawal (3), high ALT (2), platelet count < 100,000/mm3 (2), low but unconfirmed ANC (1), protocol violation (1) fatigue (1), and
depression
(1). Mean ALT levels rose within three months of therapy and stabilized thereafter. Arthralgia and nausea and/or vomiting occurred in 6% and 24% of subjects, respectively. In this multi-center trial with weekly monitoring of blood counts, the incidence of agranulocytosis was 0.58 per 100 patient-years, and the frequency of agranulocytosis after one year was 0.5%. These findings support the safety of this formulation of deferiprone, using the careful monitoring system employed in this trial.
...
PMID:A multi-center safety trial of the oral iron chelator deferiprone. 966 43
The pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) relationship of the granulopoietic effects of
Filgrastim
in healthy volunteers was characterized via a population approach. Healthy male volunteers were enrolled into a four-way crossover clinical trial. Subjects received four single doses of
Filgrastim
(375 and 750 micrograms i.v. and s.c.) with an intervening washout period of 7 days. Serum concentrations of
Filgrastim
were determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) was determined. Data analysis was performed using mixed-effects modeling as implemented in the NONMEM software package. The final PKPD model incorporates a two-compartment PK model with bisegmental absorption from the s.c. site, first-order and saturable elimination pathways, and an indirect PD model. A sigmoidal Emax model for the stimulation of ANC input rate (kin) was superior to the conventional Emax model (mean +/- SE: Emax = 12.7 +/- 1.7; EC50 = 4.72 +/- 0.72 ng/ml; Hill = 1.34 +/- 0.19). In addition, a time-variant scaling factor for ANC observations was introduced to account for the early transient
depression
of ANC after
Filgrastim
administration. The absolute bioavailability of subcutaneously administered
Filgrastim
was estimated to be 0.619 +/- 0.058 and 0.717 +/- 0.028 for 375 micrograms and 750 micrograms s.c. doses, respectively. The time profiles of concentration and ANC, as well as the concentration approximately ANC relationship of
Filgrastim
in healthy volunteers were well described by the developed population PK-PD model.
...
PMID:Population pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling of filgrastim (r-metHuG-CSF) in healthy volunteers. 1167 30
Aplastic anemia is a rare complication of liver transplantation (<1%). However, an increasing number of cases of aplastic anemia have been recently reported when liver transplantation is performed for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure. The aim of this study is to reevaluate the importance and the incidence of aplastic anemia after liver transplantation for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure, and to propose preventive measures, diagnostic and management guidelines to try to reduce the incidence, morbidity and mortality associated with this complication. In this report a case of aplastic anemia after liver transplantation for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure is described. In addition, the pertinent literature on aplastic anemia after liver transplantation, since the first description of that complication in 1987, is reviewed. A 20-year-old woman developed aplastic anemia 14 weeks after liver transplantation for fulminant non-A, non-B, non-C hepatitis. After failure of
G-CSF
treatment, she was treated with intensive immunosuppression (FK 506, ATG, high-dose steroids). She is well 1 year post-transplantation, with normal liver tests and with bone marrow recovery. Through a Medline literature search (1988-1999), we identified 30 additional cases of aplastic anemia following liver transplantation for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure. Of all liver transplantations performed for that indication at five participating centers, the mean incidence of aplastic anemia was 23.2%. Mean age was 10 years (1.2-29) and the male/female ratio was 4.6. For treating aplastic anemia, different modalities were used: ATG ( n=12), ALG ( n=1), OKT 3 ( n=1),
G-CSF
( n=6), a 6-HLA-compatible bone marrow transplantation ( n=3), and none ( n=12). The mortality rate remains high (39%), with infections and bleeding as the two most frequent causes of death. Based on this literature review, we conclude that aplastic anemia is a relatively common complication of liver transplantation for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure in children and young adults. An unknown viral agent operating through immune-mediated mechanisms is probably responsible. The myelotoxic environment inherent to transplantation (e.g. azathioprine, trimethoprim) probably has a cumulative effect. Preventive measures (e.g. not using myelotoxic drugs) should be adopted in high-risk children and young adults transplanted for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure. Early detection of bone marrow
depression
, a low threshold for performing a bone marrow biopsy, and prompt treatment are pivotal. Intensive standard supportive care with broad-spectrum antibiotics and anti-fungal agents is essential during phases of pancytopenia. Although spontaneous recovery has been described under maintenance immunosuppression, increased immunosuppression, in particular with ATG, may reverse the aplastic anemia and promote bone marrow recovery. In unresponsive patients, six-HLA-identical bone marrow transplantation has been successful.
...
PMID:Aplastic anemia after transplantation for non-A, non-B, non-C fulminant hepatic failure: case report and review of the literature. 1193 68
Chimerism and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) pose significant risks to liver transplant patients. The risk of chimerism and GVHD is higher among cases of living-related liver transplant (LRLT). Donors homozygous at all HLA loci carry a higher risk for GVHD. Herein we present a case of LRLT. The recipient suffered from end-stage liver disease and received a right lobe graft from his son. After 8 months posttransplant, the patient developed profound bone marrow
depression
. The patient was negative for CMV, Brucella, HHV6, HHV8, HBV, HCV, and parvovirus. No skin or GI signs of GVHD were noted. The patient and donor were HLA typed by SSP. The donor was homozygous for all HLA loci while the patient shared the class II homozygosity and was class I heterozygous. Chimerism studies were prompted after noting that the neutrophil compartment of the patient was homozygous for all HLA loci. This initiated further studies of the PMN and lymphocytes by microsatellite analysis. A total 15 microsatellites were analyzed. The results suggest that the majority (75%) of the PMNs and 45% of the lymphocytes were of donor origin. The patient was treated with
G-CSF
; his WBC counts returned to normal. At 2.5 years posttransplant the patient had not developed GVHD, despite the large number of donor lymphocytes circulating in his bloodstream. The only complaint he had was severe arthritis, which was treated with steroids. It must be investigated whether this was the result of GVHD.
...
PMID:Neutrophils and lymphoid chimerism after adult living-related liver transplantation from a homozygous donor. 1638 27
The goal of this study was to evaluate cytokine secretion capacity in a mouse model of prostate cancer, both with and without metalloporphyrin antioxidant and radiation treatment. C57BL/6 mice with subcutaneous RM-9 tumors were treated daily for 12 days with MnTE-2-PyP(5+) [Mn (III) tetrakis (N-ethylpyridinium-2-yl) porphyrin], beginning 1 day after injection of RM-9 cells; a 10-Gy tumor-localized dose of (60)Co gamma rays was administered in a single fraction on day 7. Spleen, tumors and plasma were collected on day 12. T cells in the spleen were activated with anti-CD3 antibody and supernatants were collected. Twenty-two cytokines were quantified in spleen supernatants, five in tumor homogenates, and three in plasma using multiplex bead array technology and ELISA. The presence of a tumor had significant effects on many of the cytokines quantified (P < 0.05). Tumor-induced
depression
was evident for eight spleen cytokines (TNF-alpha,
G-CSF
, GM-CSF, IFN-gamma, IL10, IP-10, MIP-1alpha and mKC), whereas only three were enhanced (IL1beta, IL6 and MCP-1). Radiotherapy resulted in enhanced splenocyte capacity to produce IL4 and IL13 and increased IL4, MCP-1 and VEGF in tumors (P < 0.05). Addition of MnTE-2-PyP(5+) to radiation decreased the concentrations of IL4, IL13 and TGF-beta1 in spleen supernatants and IL4 and VEGF in tumors (P < 0.05 compared to radiation alone). Some differences were also noted in plasma cytokines. Overall, the findings suggest that administration of MnTE-2-PyP(5+) together with radiotherapy may enhance anti-tumor immune responsiveness and decrease the risk for radiation-induced normal tissue toxicities.
...
PMID:A metalloporphyrin antioxidant alters cytokine responses after irradiation in a prostate tumor model. 2033 16
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