Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The anatomy and physiology of the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction were studied. 2. The dependence of muscle resting potentials on [K+]o and [Na+]o follows the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation (PNa/PK=0-23). Chloride ions distribute passively across the membrane. 3. The mean specific membrane resistance of muscle fibres is 4-3 X 10(3) omega cm2, and the mean specific membrane capacitance is 7-1 muF/cm2. The muscle fibre is virtually isopotential. 4. Transmitter release is quantal. Both the miniature excitatory junctional potential and the evoked release follow the Poisson distribution. 5. Transmitter release depends on approximately the fourth power of [Ca2+]o. If Sr2+ replaces Ca2+, it depends on approximately the fourth power of [Sr2+]o. Mg2+ reduces transmitter release without altering the fourth power dependence on [Ca2+]o.
...
PMID:Properties of the larval neuromuscular junction in Drosophila melanogaster. 1 39

1. Threshold changes of Na and Ca currents due to various polyvalent cations (stabilizing cations) or H(+) ions were studied in the egg cell membrane of a tunicate, Halocynthia roretzi, by using the voltage-clamp technique.2. With an increase in [Ca](o) or a decrease in pH in the external solution, the current-voltage (I-V) relations for the peak of the Na and Ca currents shifted along the voltage axis in the positive direction. These voltage shifts in the I-V relations, measured at a potential of V((1/2)) where inward current attains its half-maximum, were shown to be identical to shifts in voltage-dependence of the time courses of Na and Ca currents, and also identical to shifts in the inactivation curves of Na current along the voltage axis.3. The shifts in V((1/2)) produced by various polyvalent cations or H(+) ions were analysed by the Gouy-Chapman equation for the diffuse double layer, by assuming that a change in V((1/2)) directly corresponds to a change in the surface double layer potential.4. The V((1/2))-divalent cation concentration relations of Na current were exactly described by the predictions of the theory with a constant value of the surface charge density of 1e(-)/(9 A)(2). The weak stabilizing effects of Mg(2+), Sr(2+) and Ba(2+) were quite similar to each other and were explained in terms of a ;screening' effect. Other divalent cations, such as Ca(2+), Mn(2+) and Ni(2+), showed various different stabilizing effects which were explained in terms of a ;binding' effect. The binding constants (K(1)'s) for Ca(2+), Mn(2+) and Ni(2+) were 0.21, 0.45 and 0.94 M(-1), respectively.5. H(+) ions showed a powerful stabilizing effect upon the Na current with a K(H) of 6 x 10(4)M(-1). This value indicates that the acidic sites around Na channels have a pK(a) of 4.78. La(3+) ions also acted as a strong stabilizer upon the Na current with a K(La) of 15 M(-1). For both H(+) and La(3+), the V((1/2))-concentration relations were also exactly described by the Gouy-Chapman equation with the same charge density of 1e(-)/(9 A)(2) as estimated by varying divalent cations.6. The stabilizing effect of permeant cations such as Ca(2+), Sr(2+) and Ba(2+) on Ca channel currents was analysed. The effect of lowering pH was also studied. It was found that the surface charge density of 1e(-)/(9 A)(2) estimated by Na current is also applicable to the explanation for the V((1/2))-divalent cation concentration or - pH relationships. The estimated binding constants for H(+), Ca(2+) and Sr(2+) were 1.2x10(5), 0.58 and 0.035 M(-1), respectively. Ba(2+) does not bind to charged sites near to the Ca channels.7. It was noticed that a considerable reduction in the conductances of Na and Ca currents occurred in parallel with a stabilizing effect. This reduction was ascribed to a decrease in the concentration of permeant cations at the external surface of the cell membrane, as predicted by the theory of the diffuse double layer. The Goldman, Hodgkin-Katz equation for ionic currents was applied to explain the conductance suppression.8. The conductance suppressions of Na and Ca channel currents due to Ca(2+), Sr(2+) and Ba(2+) were found to be apparent ones, only reflecting decreases in the surface concentration of permeant cations without any changes in the permeability. After correction for the apparent suppression, the real permeability ratio among Ca(2+), Sr(2+) and Ba(2+) for Ca channels was determined as 1.00, 0.56 and 0.21 respectively.9. The conductance suppression of Na current by lowering pH was explained in terms of a real suppression or blocking which is superimposed on the apparent suppression. Considering the surface [Na](o), the plot of P(Na) against the surface pH yielded a blocking curve of Na channel by H(+) ions, which implies that two H(+) ions are necessary to block each Na channel. For Ca channels no real blockage was observed in acidic pH.10. It was concluded from the present experiment that there exists a surface potential capable of affecting both gating and permeation mechanisms of ionic channels in this tunicate egg cell membrane.
...
PMID:Surface potential reflected in both gating and permeation mechanisms of sodium and calcium channels of the tunicate egg cell membrane. 1 34

Teorell's fixed charge theory for membrane ion permeability was utilized to calculate specific ionic permeabilities from measurements of membrane potential, conductance, and specific ionic transference numbers. The results were compared with the passive ionic conductances calculated from the branched equivalent circuit membrane model of Hodgkin Huxley. Ionic permeabilities for potassium, sodium, and chloride of crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) medial giant axons were examined over an external pH range from 3.8 to 11.4. Action potentials were obtained over this pH range. Failures occurred below pH 3.8 during protonation of membrane phospholipid phosphate and carboxyl, and above pH 11.4 from calcium precipitation. In general, chloride permeability increases with membrane protonation, while cation permeability decreases. At pH 7.0, PK = 1.33 X 10(-5), PCl = 1.49 X 10(-6), PNa = 1.92 X 10(-8) cm/s. PK: PCl: PNa = 693:78:1. PCl is zero above pH 10.6 and is opened predominately by protonation of epsilon-amino, and partially by tyrosine and sulfhydryl groups from pH 10.6 to 9. PK is activated in part by ionization of phospholipid phosphate and carboxyl around pH 4, then further by imidazole from pH 5 to 7, and then predominately from pH 7 to 9 by most probably phosphatidic acid. PNa permeability parallels that of potassium from pH 5 to 9.4. Below pH 5 and above pH 9.4, PNa increases while PK decreases. Evidence was obtained that these ions possibly share common passive permeable channels. The data best support the theory of Teorell, that membrane fixed charges regulate permiability and that essentially every membrane ionizable group appears involved in various amounts in ionic permeability control.
...
PMID:Ionic permeability of K, Na, and Cl in crayfish nerve. Regulation by membrane fixed charges and pH. 1 19

Rosetting and non-rosetting lymphocytes collected from normal individuals were stained for the presence of beta-glucuronidase, periodic-acid Schiff activity, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, acid phosphatase, and alpha-naphthyl butyrate esterase. Lymphocytes which formed rosettes with sheep erythrocytes and non-rosette forming lymphocytes contained cytochemical reaction products for all five stains. Beta-glucuronidase (P less than 0-02) and acid phosphatase (P less than 0-01) were more frequently found in rosette forming lymphocytes. However, non-rosetting cells were more frequently periodic-acid Schiff positive (P less than 0-001). Gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and alpha-naphthyl butyrate esterase were present equally in rosette and non-rosette forming lymphocytes. In addition, 33 non-Hodgkin's lymphomas were studied for cell surface markers and cytochemical reactions. In 17 of 19 B cell lymphomas, there was a paucity of lymphocytes containing beta-glucuronidase. However, in three of four T cell proliferations, there were numerous lymphoid cells positive for beta-glucuronidase. The periodic-acid Schiff and acid phosphatase reactions varied greatly within B, T, and null cell lymphomas and thus were of little diagnostic value in determining the cell of origin of these neoplastic lymphoid cells.
...
PMID:Cytochemical reactions of normal and neoplastic lymphocytes. 1 90

The levels of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) and, when appropriate, alkaline phosphatase (AP) and 5'-nucleotidase (NTD) have been measured as a routine in 276 patients with malignant haematological diseases during a 26-month trial period. GGT levels add no prognostic information to the routine haematological surveillance of leukaemia. Polychemotherapy does not appear to be an inducer of liver drug-metabolising microsomal enzymes. Polycythaemia rubra vera, myelofibrosis and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia may cause little change in GGT, AP and NTD levels despite marked hepatomegaly. A raised GGT in Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin lymphoma is generally associated with active and widespread disease, but not necessarily a sign of malignant tissue in the liver. The elevations of GGT in myeloma may be secondary to liver infiltration though this group merits further detailed study.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the usefulness of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels in the management of haematological neoplasia. 2 19

To determine if a normal antibody response can develop after therapy for Hodgkin's disease, we immunized 53 patients and 10 normal controls with dodecavalent pneumococcal vaccine. Antibody concentrations three weeks after immunization (geometric mean of 11 serotypes) were 1566 ng of protein nitrogen per milliliter in controls, 963 ng per milliliter after subtotal radiation (P less than 0.05 compared to controls), 658 ng per milliliter after chemotherapy (P less than 0.05), 377 ng per milliliter after subtotal radiation plus chemotherapy (P less than 0.01) and 283 ng per milliliter after total nodal radiation plus chemotherapy (P less 0.001). Low levels of antibody before immunization correlated with a poor response (r = +0.73, P less than 0.001). The ability to respond to immunization improved significantly but did not return to normal as long as four years after combined therapy. The antibody response to pneumococcal vaccine is profoundly impaired in patients who have received intensive treatment for Hodgkin's disease: the ability of this vaccine to protect them from overwhelming postsplenectomy infections remains in doubt.
...
PMID:Impaired antibody response to pneumococcal vaccine after treatment for Hodgkin's disease. 2 83

Voltage-clamp currents and resting membrane potential of squid giant axons have been studied at extracellular pH varying between 4 and 10. The membrane currents, analyzed according to the Hodgkin-Huxley equations, showed that sodium permeability, PNa(E), and potassium conductance gK(E), curves were shifted toward positive voltages by different amounts and slightly depressed as the external pH was lowered. Under the same conditions, taum(E) and taun(E) were found to be enhanced and shifted to a larger extent in the same direction. The rate constants alpham and alphan were shifted substantially toward positive voltages, but betam and betan changed hardly at all. The shift of the alpham(E) curve was analyzed in terms of a fixed surface charge model; it indicates that unspecific negative groups with an approximate pKa of 4.5 are located in the vicinity of sodium active sites with an average charge separation of 8 A. A similar figure is obtained for the potassium system from the shift of the alphan(E) curve.
...
PMID:Action of extracellular pH on Na+ and K+ membrane currents in the giant axon of Loligo vulgaris. 3 97

Postsplenectomy, 41 patients previously treated for Hodgkin's disease were given pneumococcal vaccine, and type-specific antibody levels were measured before and after immunization. Postimmunization antibody levels in patients with Hodgkin's disease were significantly lower than those in normal control subjects for 10 of the 12 serotypes measured. Mean postimmunization antibody level for patients (587 +/- 427 ng of antibody nitrogen/mL) was much lower than that for control subjects (1787 +/- 694). Antibody levels tended to increase with time from therapy for Hodgkin's disease, and several patients who had not received therapy for more than 3 years had normal responses to immunization. Despite vaccination, one patient developed pneumococcal meningitis and another, pneumococcal bacteremia. Both infected patients had low postimmunization mean antibody levels (282 and 137 ng/mL, respectively). Postsplenectomy sepsis in patients with Hodgkin's disease is related to a humoral immune deficiency probably induced by radiation and chemotherapy, and this immune deficiency persists for several years.
...
PMID:Response of patients with Hodgkin's disease to pneumococcal vaccine. 3 21

Fulminant bacterial sepsis has been described in patients with Hodgkin disease who have undergone splenectomy for staging purposes. The organisms commonly associated with sepsis in this setting include Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae. Polyvalent pneumococcal vaccine (Merck) has recently been licensed and has been suggested for use in patients with Hodgkin disease who are at risk for postsplenectomy sepsis. We administered 14-valent pneumococcal vaccine to 24 patients with Hodgkin disease and 24 normal controls, and measured antibody response to 13 antigens at time of immunization and at 3 wk and 3 mo following immunization. Our results indicate that patients who have been previously treated for Hodgkin disease, with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or both, have severe impairment of antibody response. Untreated patients, however, respond in a manner similar to normal controls.
...
PMID:Use and efficacy of pneumococcal vaccine in patients with Hodgkin disease. 4 Jun 35

Ultrastructural and immunohistologic findings in a nodular variant of Hodgkin's disease with lymphocytic predominance, called nodular paragranuloma, are presented and compared with those in so-called progressively transformed germinal centers. These are large follicles with numerous lymphocytes which can be found not only in nonspecific lymphadenitis, but also in lymph nodes from patients with nodular paragranuloma. The immunoperoxidase technique was applied on paraffin sections to detect intracytoplasmic immunoglobulin and lysozyme. The so-called L & H type Sternberg-Reed cells contained IgG and one type of light chain per cell, suggesting that such cells produce immunoglobulin. The ultrastructure of the L & H type Sternberg-Reed cells favored the immunoblastic nature of these cells. It is concluded that nodular paragranuloma differs from other types of Hodgkin's disease by its localization in B-cell areas and the presence of atypical B immunoblasts.
...
PMID:Nodular paragranuloma and progressively transformed germinal centers. Ultrastructural and immunohistologic findings. 4 15


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>