Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (glioblastoma)
18,345 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vectors constructed from recombinant herpes simplex virus (HSV) have special utility for gene transfer to the nervous system. Nonreplicating vectors created by deletion of essential immediate early genes can be propagated to high titers on complementing cell lines that provide the missing gene product(s) in trans. Direct inoculation of these vectors into neural parenchyma is effective in rodent models of brain tumor, Parkinson disease, spinal cord injury, and spinal root trauma. Subcutaneous inoculation of the HSV vectors can be used to transduce neurons of the dorsal root ganglion to provide a therapeutic effect in models of polyneuropathy and chronic regional pain. In human trials, direct injection of replication-competent HSV into brain tumors has proven safe. Human trials of nonreplicating HSV gene transfer by direct inoculation for treatment of glioblastoma and HSV gene transfer by subcutaneous inoculation for the treatment of chronic intractable pain should commence soon.
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PMID:Herpes vector-mediated gene transfer in treatment of diseases of the nervous system. 1548 38

Crow-Fukase syndrome is diagnosed based on the presence of chronic sensori-motor polyneuropathy along with other characteristic generalized symptoms denoted by the acronym of POEMS which stands for polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M-protein, and skin changes. In this syndrome, the serum levels of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) are abnormally elevated, and this is a predictive factor for its diagnosis. Although the causes of CFS/POEMS remain unknown, VEGF is evidently correlated with its pathogenesis. Human glioblastoma cells are known to express VEGF. In models of CFS/POEMS, mice that are peritoneally transplanted with human glioblastomas exhibit high serum levels of VEGF, prominent edema with increased circulation volume, and pathological findings in the liver, spleen, and kidney. VEGF that is highly concentrated in platelets may be released in massive amounts due to coagulation in the peripheral tissue and may thus exert its maximal physiological effects and produce the abovementioned diffuse pathological findings. The correlation between polyneuropathy and elevated VEGF remains unclear. However, VEGF may affect the blood-nerve barrier by increased microvascular hyperpermeability, upregulated cytokines such as matrix metalloproteases may induce blood-nerve barrier breakdown and demyelination of the peripheral nerve. Furthermore, microangiopathy due to proliferative endothelial cells and hypercoagulated occlusion also affect axonal damage. Novel strategies that have recently been proposed for the management of this disease include high-dose chemotherapy combined with autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT) and molecular-targeted therapy against plasma cells and VEGF. Notably, PBSCT exerts a dramatic effect on polyneuropathy; such an effect has rarely been achieved by the previously described modalities of low-dose melphallan and steroid therapy. PBSCT is observed to induce a rapid and persistent decrease in the serum VEGF levels. In conclusion, VEGF is not only the primary molecule involved in the pathogenesis of CSF, but also an important marker for both the diagnosis and treatment of this disease.
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PMID:[Crow-Fukase syndrome and VEGF]. 1856 56

Renal transplantation is method of choice for treatment of patients with end-stage renal disease without contraindications for immunosuppressive therapy. Neurological complications occur frequently in renal transplant recipients. They may be the consequence of immunosuppressive treatment, but more often evolve as the consequence of previous disturbances which developed during the state of uraemia and treatment with dialysis. The most pronounced neurotoxic effect has calcineurin inhibitors tacrolimus and cyclosporine. The spectrum of neurological disturbances caused by calcineurin inhibitors range from very mild symptoms as paraesthesiae, tremor, headache or flushing, to severe changes that may cause lethal outcome. Peripheral neuropathies in renal transplant recipients may occur in the form of mononeuropathy or polyneuropathy. Cerebrovascular diseases are consequence of changes on blood vessels caused by uraemia, dialysis and side effects of immunosuppressive drugs. They cause death in 8% of renal transplant recipients. Central nervous system (CNS) infections usually occur during the first posttransplant year. Unclear symptomatology frequently postpones the diagnosis. Diagnostic evaluation should include magnetic resonance imaging for localization of the process, as well as lumbal puncture in cases without contraindications for the procedure, in order to determine the causative agent. Regarding the ominous prognosis of CNS infections in the immunocompromised host, only timely diagnosis may improve survival. The most common causative agents are Cryptococcus neoformans, Listeria monocytogenes and Aspergillus funigatus. Viral infections also occur, and are commonly caused by herpes virideae, varicella-zoster virus and papova virus. CNS infections clinically present as meningitis, progressive dementia or focal neurological defect. The most common primary brain tumors are B-cell lymphomas, but glioblastoma, hemangioblastoma, leiomyosarcoma or glioma may also occur. In cases of neurological posttransplant complications, optimal treatment should be guided by neurologist, nephrologist and infectologist, in some cases also by neurosurgeons.
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PMID:[Neurological complications in renal transplant recipients]. 1857 36