Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Samples of rib bone were collected and preserved under various conditions. The effect of preserving a piece of bone on the yield of hematopoietic stem cells was analyzed. Bone marrow cells were collected by means of flushing the bone marrow cavity with medium. The initial number of nucleated bone marrow cells collected from the donor's excised rib ranged from 0.8 x 10(8) to 2.3 x 10(8) per 1 cm of rib with an average of 1.21 x 10(8) (n = 7). In addition, the initial number of mononuclear bone marrow cells ranged from 1.1 x 10(7) to 4.8 x 10(7) per 1 cm of rib with an average of 2.47 x 10(7) (n = 7). The percentage loss of mononuclear bone marrow cells from rib preserved in medium for 48 hours at 4 degrees C, was less than 30%. A colony-forming assay by the methylcellulose method, complemented with r-G-CSF, r-GM-CSF, r-IL3, r-IL6, and r-erythropoietin, was done serially using bone marrow buffy-coat cells. These cells were obtained from the pieces of rib that were stored under various conditions. The number of CFU-GM and BFU-E that proliferated in this culture was 41.1 +/- 5.5 and 15.2 +/- 2.7 per dish. If the bone was preserved at 4 degrees C for 48 hours following excision, the recovery of CFU-GM and BFU-E from the bone marrow cells was greater than 50%. The effect of cryopreserving bone marrow mononuclear cells on the yield of hematopoietic cells was also analyzed. The percentage loss of proliferated hematopoietic cells by cryopreservation was less than 30% for bone marrow cells. Bone marrow cells were collected from pieces of rib obtained from cadaveric donors by means of the same method. The average number of nucleated bone marrow cells and MNCs was 1.26 x 10(7) and 2.30 x 10(7) per 1 cm of rib, respectively. The average number of CFU-GM and BFU-E that was detected by the colony-forming assay was 33.4 +/- 5.35 and 11.7 +/- 1.75 per dish, respectively. The percentage loss of proliferated hematopoietic cells by cryopreservation was less than 40% for bone marrow cells from cadaveric donors. These data, which reveal that hematopoietic bone marrow stem cells could be collected from a piece of pipe bone that was without circulation, suggest that it is possible to use pipe bone from cadaveric donors as a source of hematopoietic stem cells for bone marrow transplants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Studies on the bone marrow cells from an excised pipe bone. 834 Feb 84

A large study of tumors of low malignant potential confirmed the favorable survival in this group of patients compared to invasive epithelial ovarian tumors. Only 8% of patients died with recurrent disease after surgery. Patients with stage IA borderline tumors with mucinous histology tended to recur later and carried a poorer prognosis than patients with serous histology and similar stage. The group at highest risk for relapse were age greater than 70, stage II or III tumors, and histology other than serous. Long-term survival in this group was less than 75%. This high-risk group of patients should be targeted for innovative adjuvant treatment strategies. This year several well-designed studies with large sample sizes showed DNA ploidy to be an important new independent prognostic factor in stage I ovarian carcinoma. In patients with well-differentiated early stage ovarian cancer, DNA flow cytometric analysis may indicate subgroups with less favorable prognostic characteristics. This method of analysis may be beneficial in determining the need for additional treatments after surgery for early stage ovarian carcinoma. Recommendations for the definitive management of early stage ovarian cancer awaits completion of current GOG and European randomized prospective studies. Paclitaxel given in combination with platinum-containing agents is an intense area of research for treatment of advanced stage disease. Early data from a prospective randomized trial of patients with advanced ovarian cancer showed a higher response rate and longer disease-free survival in patients treated with paclitaxel and cisplatin compared to a standard regimen of cyclophosphamide and cisplatin. The impact of this treatment on long-term survival awaits maturation of data. Preliminary results evaluating G-CSF in combination with paclitaxel and cisplatin for dose escalation was reported. Paclitaxel, 250 mg/m2, and cisplatin, 75 mg/m2, were the maximally tolerated doses, with peripheral neuropathy or myalgias the dose limiting toxicities. Further studies are now underway to test the effect of dose-response with escalation therapies and to determine the optimal dose and schedule for the management of patients with advanced ovarian cancer. IL-3 significantly ameliorated neutropenia but did not prevent cumulative platelet toxicity in a regimen utilizing high-dose carboplatin. This mild improvement in myelosuppression was obtained at the cost of significant toxicity. Nausea, vomiting, malaise, bone pain, headache, fever, chills and facial flushing were frequent. Intraperitoneal chemotherapy was tested as a means of consolidation treatment for patients after having a negative second-look laparotomy. These treatments were shown to be feasible; however, prospective randomized trials will be necessary to determine a benefit over operative therapy alone. Several studies addressed to problem of residual disease after primary surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. A large phase II study conducted by the GOG confirmed the activity of salvage cisplatin-based intraperitoneal chemotherapy in patients with small-volume residual ovarian cancer with favorable pretreatment characteristics. Whether intraperitoneal platinum-based therapy represents an advantage over systemic platinum therapy is being addressed in a prospective SWOG study. The use of six additional cycles of CAP for treatment of residual disease after primary treatment of surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy did not significantly improve complete pathological response and survival. Prolonged duration of chemotherapy above six cycles is not likely to impact treatment for residual disease. A regimen of high dose carboplatin was compared to whole abdominal radiotherapy for treatment of residual disease after initial chemotherapy. There was no difference in survival or disease-free survival between treatments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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PMID:Gynecological malignancies. 863 1

The optimal schedule for paclitaxel administration has not yet been determined. This phase I/II study was carried out to evaluate the safety of paclitaxel administration by 1-h infusion in the outpatient setting. A total of 43 patients with advanced pretreated malignancies (18 breast, 18 ovarian, and 7 non-small-cell lung cancers) received at least 2 cycles of paclitaxel given at 175 mg/ m2 in a single dose by 1-h i.v. infusion. This protocol was repeated every 21 days. All patients were premedicated as follows: promethazine given i.m. at 50 mg, dexamethasone given at 16 mg in 250 ml normal saline by i.v. infusion for 20 min and ranitidine given i.v. at 50 mg in 250 ml normal saline over 15 min, all premedication being carried out 1 h before the paclitaxel infusion. In a total of 156 cycles, only 1 patient presented with a hypersensitivity reaction (grade 2 urticaria in 1 cycle) and another patient developed transient facial flushing (in 1 cycle: this was resolved by slowing of the infusion rate) on this schedule of paclitaxel administration. Other adverse side effects were usually mild and well tolerated. Alopecia was universal; myelosuppression was uncommon because our patients were supported with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF, lenograstim) given at 34 IU/day in the presence of a neutrophil count of < 500 microliters; neutropenia was seen in 50/156 (32%) cycles and was mild. Neurotoxicity was the most serious adverse effect, and all patients experienced mild to severe neuro-muscular toxicity, mainly in the form of peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy and myalgias. In conclusion, 1-h paclitaxel administration is safe and reduces the duration of treatment, making its use more convenient and easy in the outpatient setting. A prospective comparison of 1-h versus 3-h paclitaxel infusion in terms of efficacy and toxicity is the subject of our current randomized study.
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PMID:A feasibility study of 1-h paclitaxel infusion in patients with solid tumors. 922 55

Administration of the myeloid growth factor G-CSF after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is usually well tolerated, and associated with rapid hematopoietic engraftment. We report a high incidence (50%) of side-effects associated with post-transplant G-CSF in patients with chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia undergoing allogeneic HLA-identical sibling peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. One or more of the following signs and symptoms were observed shortly after the subcutaneous injection of G-CSF: dyspnea, chest pain, nausea, hypoxemia, diaphoresis, anaphylaxis, syncope and flushing. These reactions led to discontinuation of G-CSF in the majority of patients. Predictive factors could not be identified, and the underlying mechanism leading to these reactions is unknown.
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PMID:Adverse side-effects associated with G-CSF in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia undergoing allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. 1084 33

This pilot project was designed to determine if normal kids could be produced after microinjection in pronuclear embryos and subsequent transfer to recipients in a transgenic goat program in Brazil. Twelve donors of the Saanen breed and 17 recipients of an undefined breed were used. The estrus of both donors and recipients was synchronized by a standard progestagen treatment and superovulation obtained by six pFSH injections. Donors in estrus were mated with fertile Saanen bucks. Zygotes were recovered surgically by flushing oviducts. The recovered zygotes with visible pronuclei were microinjected with 500 to 1000 copies of the human G-CSF gene. Two or four embryos were surgically transferred into the oviducts of recipients. One recipient became pregnant and two kids were born. No transgenic goat was identified after PCR analysis. Even though transgenic goats were not obtained, this experiment establishes the basis of a synchronization and superovulation regimen for use in goats raised in Brazil, for the purpose of collecting and manipulating the pronuclear embryos. This project also showed that microinjected one-cell goat embryos can survive to produce live young following surgical transfer.
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PMID:Birth of normal kids after microinjection of pronuclear embryos in a transgenic goat (Capra hircus) production program in Brazil. 1496 85