Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (graft-versus-host disease)
18,032 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Radiographically detectable complications in 35 children after bone marrow transplant are reviewed. These complications are most frequently due to infection, chemoradiotherapeutic toxicity, and graft versus host disease (a transplant rejection phenomenon peculiar to bone marrow transplant patients). The pulmonary complications within the first 2 months are secondary to a form of interstitial lung disease. Interstitial lung disease has a strong correlation with graft versus host disease. Extrapulmonary visceral complications include hepatosplenomegaly, nephromegaly, and hemorrhagic cystitis. These are due to graft versus host disease, radiation, and chemotherapeutic toxicities, respectively. Sinusitis, cerebral atrophy, and intracerebral hematomas are less frequent complications. Osteoporosis due to steroids is the single most important osseous complication.
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PMID:Radiographic manifestations of bone marrow transplantation in children. 3 66

Abdominal complications were evaluated with ultrasonography in 20 patients who received marrow-ablative chemotherapy and bone marrow or blood stem cell transplantation for the treatment of hematologic malignancies. Ultrasonographic findings compatible with veno-occlusive disease of the liver, cytomegalovirus infection of the colon, hepatic lesion of graft-versus-host disease, and cyclophosphamide-induced hemorrhagic cystitis were demonstrated in 6 of these patients. In addition, ascites, pleural effusion, gall bladder wall thickening, and hepatosplenomegaly were easily detected. Since ultrasonography is noninvasive and can be repeated, ultrasonographic studies are useful for evaluating and monitoring abdominal complications which are frequently encountered in these transplant patients.
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PMID:Ultrasonographic studies on abdominal complications in patients receiving marrow-ablative chemotherapy and bone marrow or blood stem cell transplantation. 168 46

We report the immunological characteristics of five patients with Omenn's syndrome, a rare inherited immunodeficiency also known as combined immunodeficiency with hypereosinophilia. The syndrome is characterized by T cell infiltration of skin, gut, liver, and spleen leading to diffuse erythroderma, protracted diarrhea, failure to thrive, and hepatosplenomegaly. Blood T cells as well as those infiltrating the skin and gut were found to express activation markers and were partially activated by mitogens but not by antigens. Although the lesions resembled those in graft-versus-host disease, the blood T cells were shown by DNA haplotype analysis using probes revealing variable number of tandem repeats to belong to the patients as well as the T cells infiltrating the gut and skin in one patient. A given T cell subset (TCR alpha beta+, CD4+/CD8+, or TCR gamma delta+) was predominant in each patient, with a specific distribution in the skin lesions. Moreover, the study of T cell receptor beta, gamma, and delta gene rearrangements in four patients revealed oligoclonality involving C beta 1, C beta 2, or different V gamma J gamma or V delta J delta genes. This indicates that restricted heterogeneity of the T cell repertoire, previously reported in one case, is a major feature of this syndrome. The occurrence of alymphocytosis-type severe combined immunodeficiency in the brother of one of the patients suggests that the restricted heterogeneity of T cell receptor gene usage in Omenn's syndrome may arise from leakiness, within the context of a genetically determined faulty T cell differentiation.
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PMID:Restricted heterogeneity of T lymphocytes in combined immunodeficiency with hypereosinophilia (Omenn's syndrome). 201 May 48

We report four cases of Omenn's syndrome (OS), an autosomal recessive disease characterized by early erythrodermia, protracted diarrhea, severe infections, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, and leukocytosis with marked eosinophilia. The immunological investigations revealed B lymphopenia with increased levels of serum IgE and marked depression of T-cell activation, not restored by the addition of exogenous interleukin 2 (IL-2). IL-2 and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production in vitro were very low or absent. One patient was treated with HLA-identical bone marrow transplant with a complete remission of the clinical picture and the immunological defect. The infant died of graft versus host disease 4 months after the graft. For the remaining three infants the outcome was also fatal within the first year of life. In conclusion, OS should be considered a severe combined immunodeficiency disease with peculiar clinical, immunological, and histological findings.
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PMID:Clinical and immunological findings in four infants with Omenn's syndrome: a form of severe combined immunodeficiency with phenotypically normal T cells, elevated IgE, and eosinophilia. 311 64

A one-year-old boy with type I H mucopolysaccharidosis (Hurler's disease) was given a bone-marrow transplant (BMT) from his mother in an attempt to replace the deficient enzyme, alpha-L-iduronidase (iduronidase). These is definite evidence of engraftment, the enzyme activity of the recipient's leucocytes reaching heterozygote levels within 37 days of the BMT. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) developed but was partially controlled by steroids. From 3-4 months after graft until the present (13 months after the graft) iduronidase activity has been present in the serum and the urine and there has been evidence of considerable degradation of glycosaminoglycans excreted in the urine. The hepatosplenomegaly has disappeared, corneal clouding has cleared, and deterioration in the child's development seems to have been arrested.
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PMID:Reversal of clinical features of Hurler's disease and biochemical improvement after treatment by bone-marrow transplantation. 611 56

Graft versus host disease (GVHD) is a well recognized entity following bone marrow transplantation. Similar syndromes have been described after blood product transfusions, notably in patients with primary immunodeficiency syndromes and in patients with malignancies associated with immune deficiency or under immunosuppressive treatment. Review of the literature shows that posttransfusion GVHD is characterized by maculopapular skin rash, gastro-intestinal symptoms, liver disease, severe pancytopenia and, in some cases, hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. The time to onset and the duration of the disease are short (10 days) and the mortality approaches 90%. The clinical features of this rare disorder are presented in the hope that, with increased awareness of this complication, clinicians will take preventive measures in patients at risk because no satisfactory therapy yet exists.
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PMID:[Clinical characteristics and evaluation of risk in the graft versus host reaction following transfusion]. 663 42

BALB/c mice injected at birth with (BALB/c x C57BL/6)F1 hybrid spleen cells developed host versus graft disease (HVGD) with immunological features, such as various autoantibodies, immune complex nephritis, hepatosplenomegaly, and malignant lymphomas. In addition we found that the increased IgE levels correlated strongly with the histological grades or stages of the liver disease. In the sera of mice with HVGD and liver alterations, anti-smooth muscle antibodies (ASMA) and anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA) were detected. The subclass of ASMA was IgG1, whereas the subclasses of ANA were IgG1, IgG2a, and IgG2b. When the recipient BALB/c mice were injected at birth and at Day 3 in addition also with monoclonal anti-IL-4 antibody 11B11, the increase of IgE and IgG1 was markedly reduced and the liver disease was drastically prevented. These observations suggest that IL-4 plays an important role in the initiation of the immunoregulatory function or pathogenesis of the allogeneic effects and that the monoclonal anti-IL-4 antibody 11B11 prevents the immunodysfunctions and the autoimmune hepatopathy in mice with HVGD. The increased IgE level in the serum is a good marker of HVGD.
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PMID:Increased IgE level as a marker of host-versus-graft disease: inhibition of this HVGD with a monoclonal antibody to IL-4. 851 6

A 16-year-old girl developed a pain and paresis in the right hip joint in April 1994. Abdominal CT scan revealed hepatosplenomegaly and large tumor mass (6 x 7 x 13 cm) invading the right psoas muscle in the pelvic cavity. Laboratory data disclosed marked granulocytosis, the presence of Ph1 translocation and bcr-abl rearrangement, thus a diagnosis of CML was made. The tumor was shown to be consisted of granulocytes at all stages of development by a fine needle aspiration cytology. According to the criteria of IBMTR, the disease was classified as accelerated phase solely because the sum of myeloblasts and promyelocytes exceeded over 20%. The patient was treated with hydroxycarbamide, 6MP and dexamethasone, and marked reduction of the tumor mass was observed. Then an allogeneic BMT was performed from her HLA- identical brother on August 1994. She did not develop clinically significant symptoms except for grade I skin GVHD. The tumor was completely disappeared after the BMT as assessed by the abdominal CT scan. No cytological and chromosomal relapse has been observed for 20 months after the BMT.
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PMID:[An allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelocytic leukemia with a large extramedullary tumor in the pelvic cavity]. 891 72

Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a rare disease of infancy and young childhood. The clinical presentation includes recurrent unexplained fever with hepatosplenomegaly. Cytopenia, hypofibrinogenemia and/or hypertriglyceridemia and hemophagocytosis in bone marrow, spleen and lymphnode confirm the diagnosis. Hemophagocytosis may not be present at the beginning. In these cases, diagnosis is facilitated by a positive family history, a relapsing course of the disease, the frequent involvement of the central nervous system and positive findings on immunological work-up. Treatment by chemotherapy and immunosuppressants can achieve sustained remissions in most patients and reinduction of remission after relapse is possible. Most children however, eventually die from progressive disease. At present, allogeneic bone marrow transplantation is the only curative therapeutic option. Between August 1992 and May 1997 eleven consecutive patients with HLH received bone marrow from unrelated (n = 7) or matched sibling donors (n = 4). The conditioning regimen consisted of busulfan, VP-16 and cyclophosphamide. Patients engrafted after a median time of 16 days (13-43). Only one patient developed grade III acute GVHD, another patient, grade II acute GVHD. Although regimen-related toxicity was extensive, all patients have survived without signs of HLH after a median follow up of 20 months (8-63). One patient suffers from chronic GVHD, three patients reveal psychomotoric retardation and one patient has severe impairment with spastic tetraparesis, amaurosis and seizures. Our experience shows that HLH can be successfully treated by allogeneic BMT from unrelated donors.
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PMID:[Treatment of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, HLH, with bone marrow transplantation]. 974 50

We described the successful allogeneic matched sibling bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in a 5-year-old Thai boy in whom osteopetrosis was diagnosed on the basis of anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukoerythroblastosis, sclerotic bone, hepatosplenomegaly, and visual deficit from an encroachment of cranial nerve foramina. The preparative regimen included 4 days of busulfan 4 mg/kg/day, and 4 days of cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg/day. Complete hematopoietic engraftment and no evidence of graft versus host disease were shown after BMT. Complete hematologic findings were corrected. His hematopoietic chimerism was changed to that of his donor. Post BMT, he has no hepatosplenomegaly. His bone radiographic findings revealed normal after BMT. Bone marrow biopsy showed normalized bone and bone marrow matrix. However, his vision remained impaired. We believe that this is the first case of successful bone marrow transplantation in an osteopetrosis patient in Thailand.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in an osteopetrosis patient: first report in Thailand. 1021 1


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