Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to determine the incidence and causes of death during the first 100 days after BMT (early deaths) in a pediatric population we have examined data reported in the AIEOP BMT Registry. Up to July 1990, data on 486 children who underwent allogeneic (180) or autologous (306) BMT were evaluable. The children had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (148 cases), acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (127 cases), neuroblastoma (82 cases), chronic myelogenous leukemia (15 cases), aplastic anemia (nine cases), solid tumors, lymphoma, immunodeficiency or storage diseases. The overall survival is 55% for allogeneic HLA matched and 38% for autologous transplants at 5 years, 24% for HLA mismatched graft at 2 years. Out of the 486 children, 70 (14%) died during the first 100 days after BMT: 33/306 (11%) after autologous BMT, 24/150 (16%) after allogeneic matched BMT and 13/30 (43%) after mismatched BMT. Causes of early death were as follows: disease progression: 12 children (10/306 after autologous and 2/180 after allogeneic BMT); infection: 12 children (five after autologous and seven after allogeneic BMT); interstitial pneumonitis: 21 children (seven after autologous and 14 after allogeneic BMT); cardiac failure: five children (four after autologous BMT); veno-occlusive disease: eight children (three after autologous, five after allogeneic BMT); acute renal failure: three children (one after autologous and two after allogeneic BMT); multiple organ failure: two cases (one after autologous BMT); cerebral hemorrhage: three children (one after autologous BMT); hypertension: one child; acute GVHD: three children (12% of early deaths after allogeneic BMT).
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PMID:Early deaths in children after BMT. Bone Marrow Transplantation Group of the Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP) and Gruppo Italiano Trapianto di Midollo Osseo (GITMO). 146 3

We describe a patient with CML who developed hypercalcemia in his course of blast crisis. A 25-years-old man was diagnosed as CML with priapism in April 1985, and controlled with BHAC-DVP, VMP, busulfan therapy. In December 1987, he readmitted to our hospital with abdominal pain. Investigations at that time showed: white blood cell count 11600/microliters (blast cells 9%); hemoglobin 8.4 g/microliters; platelets 19.0 X 10(4)/microliters; serum calcium 13.2 mg/dl; BUN 44 mg/dl; creatinine 2.7 mg/dl. Treatment with predonine, 6-MP and vincristine was begun. But serum calcium level rose gradually up to 16.5 mg/dl. So we tried middle dose Ara-c therapy, serum calcium decreased to 6.8 mg/dl. At once he was in a chronic phase, but he relapsed and died of heart failure. Necropsy showed extensive leukemic blast-cell infiltration of the bone marrow, liver, spleen, lung, and kidney. The cause of hypercalcemia in our case was suspected of local osteolytic hypercalcemia, because multiple bone destruction was found.
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PMID:[Hypercalcemia associated with blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia]. 218 69

An 11-year-old girl with CML in chronic phase was treated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). She had had no episode of heart disease, and her chest roentgenogram and electrocardiogram were within normal ranges. She had no anthracycline, but 120 mg/kg (2.01 g/m2/d x 2 days) of cyclophosphamide (CY) for conditioning of BMT. She suffered from an acute heart failure on 14 days after BMT and died 2 days later. Autopsy revealed "specific heart muscular disease" with apparent degeneration and necrosis of heart muscle cells. More than 30 fatal cases of CY cardiotoxicity after BMT have been reported, and most patients developed acute heart failure within 10 days after CY dosing. Goldberg et al. reviewed 14 cases of CY cardiotoxicity, and considered more than 1.55 g/m2/day to be the critical doses for the onset of fatal cardiomyopathy. This case was considered to be first case in Japan. CY cardiomyopathy is an early fatal complication of BMT when CY used for conditioning. The dosing schedule may be considered.
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PMID:[Specific cardiomyopathy caused by high dose cyclophosphamide immediately after bone marrow transplantation]. 267 36

Ten children between the ages of five and fifteen years old with leukemia (two with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia in first remission, four with acute lymphocytic leukemia in first or second remission, one with acute lymphocytic leukemia in relapse, and one with chronic myelocytic leukemia in chronic phase), malignant lymphoma (one) or severe aplastic anemia (one) were given transplants from HLA-matched or mismatched family members between March, 1982 and April, 1984. Two patients died of leukemia relapses on days 107 and 257 following transplantation. One patient died of cardiac failure on day 157. One patient who received HLA-mismatched marrow from his father died of pulmonary edema and acute graft versus host disease on day 32. Six are alive 268-843 days post transplantation. None of the ten patients developed interstitial pneumonia due to cytomegalovirus which is one of the major causes of death reported in other published studies.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in children: Tokai experience 1982 to 1984. 301 May 9

Granulocytic sarcoma (GS) is a localized destructive tumor mass composed of immature cells of the granulocytic series, occurring before, concomitantly, or after the overt development of acute or chronic myelogenous leukemia. Although this tumor is known to occur in almost every site of the body, cardiac involvement is rare. We report a case of a 12-year-old female previously treated for 28 months with chemotherapy for acute promyelocytic leukemia, who presented with GS in the left mastoid 3 months after discontinuing treatment. The patient was treated with local radiotherapy only. Thirty months later she presented with heart failure, the result of a right-sided intracardiac mass, while in continuous hematological remission of the primary disease and off therapy. The cardiovascular, hematological, and postmortem findings are described and the literature is reviewed. This is the first clinicopathologic report of GS involving the heart in which the echocardiographic and pathologic findings are detailed.
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PMID:Cardiac relapses in myeloid leukemia: case report and review of the literature. 315 29

Unexpected sudden cardiac death among children with a history of Kawasaki disease has come to be reported in Japan. Death occurred between 2 months and 8 years after complete recovery from Kawasaki disease according to our study material. To study the lesions of Kawasaki disease sequelae we examined 61 cases of Kawasaki disease which came to autopsy. In 17 of these the deaths apparently to be due to sequelae of this disease, were characterized by cardiac insufficiency caused by ancient coronary aneurysm with organized thrombotic occlusion and superimposed acute ischemic myocardial degeneration and/or necrosis. The age of the lesions appears to correlate with the interval period between complete recovery from this disease and death. Six cases succumbed incidentally of other causes: one traffic accident, one hemophilus meningitis, one chronic myeloid leukemia, one neuroblastoma, one meningeal hemorrhage due to rupture of basilar arterial aneurysm, and one acute lymphatic leukemia. Even in these cases, definite sequelae of arteritis were detected. A surgically resected coronary aneurysm and a ventricular aneurysm were also examined. It was disclosed by mass physical check-up of school children that 0.1% had a history of Kawasaki disease, among which 5-6% showed cardiac and/or coronary abnormality including aneurysms. The high incidence of cardiac involvement in Kawasaki disease has been proved in this study and this kind of lesion has the possibility of resulting in unexpected cardiac death of children.
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PMID:Pathological study of sequelae of Kawasaki disease (MCLS). With special reference to the heart and coronary arterial lesions. 379 88

Twenty courses of carminomycin were administered to 18 evaluable adult patients with acute leukemia (14 ANLL, 2 ALL, 2 CGL-BC). All but one received daily doses of 6-14 mg/m2 for 5 consecutive days. Two patients older than 60 yr had not prior chemotherapy and the others had refractory or relapsed disease. The median age was 60 yr. Three ANLL patients achieved complete remission for 8, 9 and 9 months respectively, with no maintenance therapy. None of these had proven clinical resistance to daunomycin and/or doxorubicin. Mucositis was dose-related and dose-limiting. Nausea and vomiting were rare. Alopecia was constant. Cardiac arrythmia was ascribed to carminomycin in two patients. One episode of cardiac failure seemed clearly drug-related and recovered with symptomatic treatment. In conclusion, encouraging antileukemic activity was observed with carminomycin in poor-risk patients. At doses up to 12 mg/m2 day X 5, extramedullary toxicity remained acceptable.
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PMID:Phase I-II evaluation of carminomycin in adults with acute leukemia. 385 51

An attempt was made to see if new forms of treatment of fungal and bacterial septicemia, or new cytostatic combinations have changed the causes of death in leukemia and lymphoma. Autopsies were studied of 16 cases with acute leukemia, 2 with chronic granulocytic leukemia and 24 with lymphoma. 10 of the 18 patients with leukemia and 10/14 lymphoma patients died although they had no, or only slight, tumor infiltration in the bone marrow and parenchymatous organs; only 1/18 leukemias had extensive infiltration. There was a statistically significant correlation between the extent of marrow and organ infiltration. Cardiac failure (5/18 patients) was almost as common as the main cause of death as septicemia (7/18) in leukemia. The corresponding figures in lymphoma were 5/24 and 9/24, respectively. The present findings contrast with earlier ones, where more septicemia and tumor infiltration were found at autopsy, and less cardiac failure was observed. 15 of 16 cases with septicemia at autopsy had terminal fever. Bacteriological and histological signs of septicemia at autopsy agreed satisfactorily. There was a surprising absence of agreement between terminal granulocytopenia and septicemia; 13 of 16 patients with septicemia had over 0.1 x 10(9) and 10 over 0.5 x 10(9) granulocytes/liter blood.
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PMID:Causes of death in leukemia and lymphoma with modern treatment. 676 15

We describe a case of Philadelphia-negative essential thrombocythemia in whom bcr-abl hybrid messenger RNA was detected. The patient suffered from frequent splenic infarctions and myelofibrosis. Interestingly, a transformation to acute leukemia which was commonly seen in patients with bcr-abl-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia did not occur until he died from heart failure due to severe anemia 8 years after the diagnosis. The heterogeneity of bcr-abl-positive thrombocythemia is emphasized.
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PMID:bcr-abl hybrid messenger RNA in a patient with Philadelphia-negative essential thrombocythemia. 754 25

A 41-year-old patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia in the accelerated phase was treated with mitoxantrone. She developed pyrexia 7 days after receiving the third administration of mitoxantrone. After 3 more days, she experienced dry cough and dyspnea. Bilateral fine crackles were audible, but no signs of heart failure were found. A chest X-ray film revealed diffuse reticulogranular infiltrates bilaterally. An increase in the prednisolone dosage led to an improvement. Specimens of the bronchoalveolar lavage revealed an increase in CD4-/CD8- lymphocytes. The peripheral lymphocytes also expressed neither CD4 nor CD8. Specimens of a transbronchial lung biopsy disclosed thickening of the alveolar wall with infiltration of lymphoid cells.
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PMID:Interstitial pneumonitis possibly due to mitoxantrone. 829 77


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