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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 349 subjects with Hodgkin's disease 520 bone marrow biopsies were carried out: 454 did not lead to the discovery of any tumour (87.5%), 66 permitted us to discover a tumour (12.5%). Among the bone marrows without Hodgkin tissue, the hematopoietic tissue was normal in 233 bone marrows (51.2%), hyperplastic in 157 bone marrows (34.7%), hypoplastic or aplastic in 64 bone marrows (14%). Eosinophilia was noted in 13% of cases, marked plasmacytosis was noted in 24%. Among the cases with a tumour, 89.2% showed a massive lesion; 10.7% showed partial lesions. The frequency of involvement was 5.4% for clinical stages I. 6.2% for stage II. 17.1% for stage III. 47.6% for stageIV. Bone marrow involvement at the start of the disease was found in 3% of cases, even in stages I and II. The involvements were especially frequent in the histological forms, stage III (19.4%) and IV (30.4%). In splenectomised patients, bone marrow involvement was 5 times more common when the spleen was also involved. 50 times more common when the liver was involved. The bone marrow which may be used to detect hematogenic spread of Hodgkin's disease is an investigation which should be carried out as a routine in the early stages of the disease and whenever a relapse is suspected.
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PMID:[Bone-marrow biopsy in Hodgkin's disease]. 18 22

Differential counts for neutrophil, eosinophil, and macrophage colonies were performed in 364 methylcellulose cultures of myeloid precursor cells. 2n bone marrow cultures from normals we found a mean total colony count of 56 +/- 17/10(5), of which 65% were neutrophil, 12% eosinophil, and 23% macrophages. In cultures from normal peripheral blood, the mean total colony count was 26 +/- 16/10(6) with 49% neutrophils, 44% eosinophils and 7% macrophages. There was an increase of eosinophil and macrophage colonies in cultures from patients with malignant hematological diseases, solid tumors and Graft-versus-Host disease. Highest eosinophil colony counts were found in Graft-versus-Host disease, highest macrophage colony counts in untreated Hodgkin's disease. Only 1 patient with extremely high eosinophil colony counts had eosinophilia in the peripheral blood. We conclude that in vitro conditions favor eosinophil "commitment". Its increase as nonspecific sign of disease is thus more likely to be recognized in vitro than in vivo.
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PMID:Differential counts of neutrophil, eosinophil, and macrophage colonies in cultures from human bone marrow and peripheral blood. 70 90

Eosinophilia and plasmacytosis of the bone marrow were found in a group of patients with newly diagnosed Hodgkin's disease. An attempt was made to correlate these cytologic findings with other modalities used in the staging of patients with Hodgkin's disease and believed to have prognostic importance, such as age, sex, histologic type of Hodgkin's disease, presence or absence of bone marrow involvement, and pathologic stage. Statistical analyses of these finding s indicated that eosinophilia and plasmacytosis occur frequently but to date appear to be nonspecific findings. Whether the occurrence of eosinophilia and plasmacytosis is related to an immune response in unknown.
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PMID:Eosinophilia and plasmacytosis of the bone marrow in Hodgkin's disease. 115 87

The clinical records and treatment results of 163 patients with Hodgkin's disease, who were seen at Ellis Fischel State Cancer Hospital (EFSCH) between 1940 and 1971, were reviewed and analyzed. More than 200 clinical and histological variables were recorded for each case of Hodgkin's disease, including details of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Statistical studies were carried out in order to evaluate the independent prognosis significance of each of these factors. All of the lesions were reclassified according to the Lukes proposal which was modified and recommended at the 1965 Rye classification (except for hepatomegaly which was included in Stage IV). This is a retrospective study, and the modern techniques of staging were rarely used in pretreatment studies (since 1965, only ten patients have had an abdominal exploration). The basic work-up consisted of a complete blood count, urinalysis, blood type, chest X ray, and EKG. Lymphangiogram and radioisotope liver scans were used on less than 10% of the patients. About 30% of the patients had gastrointestinal X rays and 70% had IVP. Bone marrow biopsies -- the majority of which were done by needle aspiration -- were obtained for approximatley 50% of the patients. Clinical stage, histological type, and presence of absence of systemic symptoms appeared to be themost significant prognostic factors. The classification of systemic symptoms according to the criteria of either the Rye or Ann Arbor conferences showed no particular difference in determining the survival rate. Among the systemic symptoms, fever appeared to be the most important for survival rate. Survival rates were higher in nonanemic and nonlymphocytopenic patients. Eosinophilia, blood group, and Rh factor had no prognostic significance. The relapse-free interval was an important indicator of long-term prognosis. The unfavorable influence of relapse in ultimate prognosis was clearly seen; however, the extent of the relapse site was shown to have no significant influence on survival.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in Hodgkin's disease. 117 60

The cases are presented of 4 hydantreated epileptic patients developing malignant lymphomas (1 Hodgkin's lymphoma). The duration of the hydantoin therapy ranged from 7 to 23 years. There was no evidence of an allergic drug reaction, with the exception of slight blood eosinophilia. Prior to the lymphoma one patient exhibited leukopenia and a second thrombocytopenia. Hydantoins were discontinued in 3 cases but the lymphomas never disappeared spontaneously and only once did tumor progression came to a stillstand. Two patients were successfully treated with either chemo- or radiotherapy. Possible correlations between the documented immunosuppressive action of hydantoin derivatives and tumor induction are discussed. Malignant lymphomas may be sequelae of long-term hydantoin therapy and are not always preceded by the well-known reversible hydantoin lymphadenopathy.
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PMID:[Malignant lymphoma following years of hydantoin treatment for epilepsy]. 121 68

The authors critically review the problem of Hodgkin's disease (HD) in the light of new morphological, immunohistochemical, kinetic, genotypic, and virological findings. These support the lymphoid origin of neoplastic Hodgkin's and Reed-Sternberg cells, because of regular expression of the CD30 lymphoid activation antigen and frequent detection of B- or T-cell phenotypic and/or genotypic markers. It is possible to hypothesize the release of cytokines by tumoral elements as well as the presence of specific cytokine receptors on their surface. This might explain some clinical and pathological features, such as fever, loss of weight, eosinophilia and attraction of reactive elements that make up the composite cellular milieu of typical HD. Integration of monoclonal EBV in the genoma of neoplastic elements has repeatedly been shown, and this might play an essential role in the pathogenesis of the disease. On the basis of present concepts, the borderlines between HD and some categories of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas--especially the anaplastic large cell forms--have become somewhat blurred. Additional research work in the field of HD is desirable and might pave the way for new and more effective therapeutic approaches, designed on the basis of the natural history of the neoplasm.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease: update of findings. 166 Apr 36

Twenty-five patients with Hodgkin's disease and high eosinophil counts were observed for an average of 90 months. Fluctuations in the levels of eosinophils were important in the course of observation. No relation with stages, histologic type, or evolution was noticed. Steroid-containing regimens and severe premortem conditions seemed to lower the counts. Relapse-free survival was shorter in our 25 patients than in a control group of 50 patients with Hodgkin's disease and no eosinophilia who had approximately the same stage, histologic type, and treatment of disease. However, the overall survival was somewhat better for the eosinophilic patients with stages IIIB and IV (0.1 greater than P greater than 0.05).
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PMID:Blood eosinophilia in Hodgkin's disease. A follow-up of 25 cases in Venezuela. 173 23

Thirty one lymph nodes taken from 24 benign reactive cases, three cases of angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia, one case of Kimura's disease and three cases of Hodgkin's disease, were stained for immunoglobulin heavy chains IgG, IgM, IgA and IgE using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. Reticular staining of germinal centres and cells containing immunoglobulin in germinal centres and extrafollicular regions were features of all groups. No staining pattern was diagnostic for any of these conditions and in particular, the reticular staining pattern of IgE in the germinal centres that is frequently reported in Kimura's disease and in angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia was non-specific.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin heavy chain patterns in reactive lymphadenopathy. 191 3

Eosinophilic fasciitis has been reported to precede hematologic malignant neoplasms such as myelomonocytic leukemia, lymphocytic leukemia, and Hodgkin's lymphoma. In this case study, eosinophilic fasciitis occurred concurrently with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (mycosis fungoides). The clinical diagnosis of eosinophilic fasciitis was based on painful sclerodermatous lesions on the extremities and trunk without acrosclerosis. There was histologic confirmation with edema and lymphocytic inflammation in the superficial muscular fascia and dermis. Deposition of immune reactants was found in the fascia and dermis. In addition, peripheral eosinophilia and circulating immune complexes were detected. The diagnosis of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (mycosis fungoides) was based on extensive erythematous cutaneous plaques, dermal and epidermal lymphocytic atypia, loss of pan-T-cell immunologic markers, and a cutaneous lesional T-cell receptor beta-chain rearrangement by Southern blot analysis. Eosinophilic fasciitis may occur as a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with hematologic malignant neoplasms, including mycosis fungoides. Cytokines or lymphokines released by activated immunocytes, either malignant leukocytes or normal leukocytes reacting to malignant cells, may be responsible for the eosinophilia and sclerosis seen in these associated hematologic malignant neoplasms.
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PMID:Concurrent eosinophilic fasciitis and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Eosinophilic fasciitis as a paraneoplastic syndrome of T-cell malignant neoplasms? 203 34

Hodgkin's disease of nodular sclerosis and mixed cellularity subtypes is frequently associated with eosinophilia. To determine if interleukin-5 (IL-5) is implicated in producing the eosinophilia, we performed in situ hybridization studies on cytopreparations of 16 cases of Hodgkin's disease with eosinophilia as well as cells from various controls. A single-stranded, anti-sense complementary DNA (cDNA) probe coding for a portion of the human IL-5 molecule was tail-labeled with digoxigenin -11-dUTP using terminal transferase, and then hybridized to messenger RNA (mRNA) within cells. An alkaline-phosphatase-conjugated antibody directed to digoxigenin was used with a chromogenic substrate to detect hybridized probe within cells. In all seven cases of nodular sclerosis subtype and nine cases of mixed cellularity subtype with eosinophilia, there was strong hybridization signal localizable to the cytoplasm of morphologically identifiable Reed-Sternberg cells and variants. Similar activity was detected only in rare cells from three normal spleens, and was undetectable in two cell lines used as a negative control and in one case of Hodgkin's disease without eosinophilia. Pretreatment of the cytopreparations with the RNase inhibitor diethylpyrocarbonate greatly increased the hybridization signal. Based on this controlled study, we conclude that mRNA coding for IL-5 is expressed in Reed-Sternberg cells and variants. This observation may explain the eosinophilia associated with Hodgkin's disease and provide insight into the origin of the Reed-Sternberg cell.
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PMID:Detection of interleukin-5 messenger RNA in Reed-Sternberg cells of Hodgkin's disease with eosinophilia. 240 16


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