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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical features of our cases demonstrated some of the already known characteristics of the variable spectrum of HIV infection. DA are the most important risk category in Italy. 10% of the ARC cases evolved into AIDS during a 12-month follow-up, on average. The most frequent OI in our AIDS cases were PCP, C. albicans
esophagitis
and chronic mucocutaneous ulcers. An high percentage of neurologic involvement from HIV was observed, and malignancies were encountered in AIDS (3 KS and 1 undifferentiated B lymphoma) as well as in ARC (1
Hodgkin's lymphoma
). Statistically, significant worsening of the immunologic situation is evident as the disease progresses from LAS to AIDS. Activated B lymphocytes represent most of the cells of the germinal center during the hyperplastic stage of lymphadenopathy. Reversal of the T4/T8 ratio appears early during the initial stage of lymphadenopathy and is due to a decrease of CD4 and a relative increase of CD8. Also, destruction of the follicular dendritic cells is an early feature which becomes more evident as the disease advances and the lymph node evolves toward progressive involution. Activated B-lymphocyte augmentation with polyclonal Ig secretion appears to be related to T-independent B stimulation by coinfection such as CMV, EBV and HBV. The increase of cytotoxic/suppressor lymphocytes seems to be partly related to the excessive activation of B lymphocytes and partially directed to the cells infected by HIV or coated with its proteins (6,7,8,9). The destruction of follicular dendritic cells has been interpreted not only as a killer effect of the virus but also as a result of the intervention of CTL sensitized to the cells containing the virus (10,11). Their destruction may contribute to the impaired recognition of soluble antigen which is one of the main features of the immune deficiency of HIV infection (9,13,16).
...
PMID:A clinical-immunological evaluation of AIDS cases and related syndromes. 348 82
The autopsies of seven patients with disseminated varicella were reviewed. Six patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and the seventh had
Hodgkin's disease
. All the patients were on chemotherapy at the time of commencement of their varicella rash, and at autopsy only the patient with
Hodgkin's disease
had residual tumor. The typical anatomic lesion of varicella was one of focal necrosis (often hemorrhagic) with eosinophilic intranuclear (Cowdry type-A) inclusions. In fatal disseminated varicella the complications most commonly encountered at autopsy were interstitial pneumonitis, hepatitis, necrotizing splenitis and lymphadenitis,
esophagitis
, enteritis, colitis, and pancreatitis. The most significant of these complications appears to be the interstitial pneumonitis, as the major cause of death is respiratory failure.
...
PMID:Disseminated varicella at autopsy in children with cancer. 632 Oct 8
A 47-yr-old man presented with dysphagia 4 yr after mediastinal radiotherapy for
Hodgkin's disease
. X-ray series, fiberoptic endoscopy, and computerized transverse tomography showed mucosal bridges in the upper esophagus. Histologically, these bridges were constituted from normal epithelium overlying a chronic inflammatory lamina propria, without evidence of
Hodgkin's disease
recurrence or of squamous cell carcinoma. Swallowing was improved by endoscopic electrocoagulation and Eder-Puestow dilatations. Several arguments favor the hypothesis that these mucosal bridges were the late sequelae of radiation
esophagitis
.
...
PMID:Mucosal bridges of the upper esophagus after radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. 683 54
Methyl-GAG was given to 71 patients with advanced malignancies as a weekly brief infusion (30-120 minutes) or as a biweekly 24- or 120-hour infusion. Mucositis (stomatitis, pharyngitis,
esophagitis
, and, rarely, inflammation of other mucous membranes) was dose-limiting in all three schedules. Generalized fatigue, malaise, myalgia, dysesthesias, nausea, and vomiting were more frequent in the brief-infusion schedule. Myelosuppression was mild and not dose-related. Fever, ventricular arrhythmias, skin rash, tender swelling of the palms, neuropathy, and paralytic ileus were rare. Toxicity was increased in patients with renal insufficiency or "third-space" fluid but was not increased by hepatic dysfunction. Cumulative and overlapping toxicity was evident only in the weekly schedule. Higher doses of methyl-GAG were tolerated when the duration of infusion was increased. The recommended doses for phase II trials are 700 mg/m2 weekly as a 1-2 hour infusion, 850 mg/m2/24 hours biweekly, and 1500 mg/m2/120 hours biweekly. Therapeutic effects were seen in all schedules and included objective responses in colon carcinoma (one of 13 patients), renal cell carcinoma (one of nine), and
Hodgkin's lymphoma
(one of two) and objective improvements in esophageal carcinoma (one of three), endometrial carcinoma (two of two), and leiomyosarcoma (one of three).
...
PMID:Methyl-GAG in patients with malignant neoplasms: a phase I re-evaluation. 705 68
We reviewed our upper endoscopy (esophagogastroduodenoscopy, EGD) experience in a group of 65 consecutive patients receiving carmustine (BCNU) 600 mg/m2, cisplatin 200 mg/m2, VP-16 2400 mg/m2, and autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or
Hodgkin's disease
. Forty-one patients (33 with chest irradiation) underwent 48 EGDs for the following symptoms: upper gastrointestinal bleeding (melena and/or hematemesis) (12/48); persistent nausea and vomiting (7/48); odynophagia (25/48); and dysphagia (14/48). All patients who had dysphagia or odynophagia had endoscopic evidence of severe
esophagitis
, with confluent erosions or ulcerations. Gastrointestinal bleeding, which presented as melena or hematemesis, was caused by severe
esophagitis
in 11 of 12 patients. Yeasts were detected in 11/42 histological, or cytological specimens and were isolated in 4/26 cultures. No bleeding or infectious complications occurred in any patient as a result of the EGD procedure. We conclude that severe
esophagitis
documented by EGD is common in lymphoma patients receiving autologous BMT. Use of EGD, however, did not affect the decision to initiate empirical therapy with amphotericin B for persistent fever.
...
PMID:Role of upper endoscopy in evaluation of upper gastrointestinal symptoms in patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. 791 3
A 29-year-old woman with
Hodgkin disease
developed odynophagia while receiving chemotherapy. Large esophageal ulcers due to staphylococcal infection of the mucosa were visualized by endoscopy and radiography. This unusual bacterial
esophagitis
represents another potential cause of giant esophageal ulcerations.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal esophagitis causing giant ulcers. 850 78
The high-dose sequential regimen developed by Gianni et al. in Milan is a novel concept in which five active drugs are administered sequentially at their maximum tolerated dosages. In previous studies this treatment was efficacious in relapsed
Hodgkin's disease
and in "de novo" high-risk high-grade NHL. We tested the feasibility, toxicity and efficacy of this approach, administered with simplified supportive measures, as salvage regimen for patients with relapsed (n = 17) or resistant (n = 3) lymphoma (9 high-grade NHL, 4 low-grade NHL and 7
Hodgkin's disease
). The regimen included sequential administration of cyclophosphamide (7 g/m2), methotrexate (8 g/m2), etoposide (2 g/m2), mitoxantrone (60 mg/m2) and melphalan (180 mg/m2) over a period of 8 weeks in an effort to reduce hospitalisation to a minimum. Of the 20 initial patients, 15 completed the planned programme. The regimen was subjectively well tolerated despite frequent hospital stays (median 44 days). Recovery of absolute neutrophil and platelet counts after transplantation occurred on the average on days 13 and 11 respectively. A second neutrophil and platelet nadir was seen 7-8 weeks after transplantation. Long-term side effects were a severe stenosing postactinic
oesophagitis
and a secondary subacute monoblastic leukaemia. At a median follow-up of 24 months, the 2 years disease-free and overall survival are 27% and 60% respectively. Of the 15 patients actually transplanted, 7 (47%) are alive disease-free. Although as feasible and effective as other high-dose regimens, this regimen requires longer hospital stays and its costs may be higher than those of other high-dose programmes.
...
PMID:High-dose sequential chemotherapy with autologous blood stem cell rescue for relapsed or resistant lymphoma. 988 64
A 75-year-old woman was given a diagnosis of malignant lymphoma (non-
Hodgkin
, diffuse large B cell type, stage IIA) at our hospital on August 2003. She received six courses of rituximab-based chemotherapy (R-CHOP regimen) and then she achieved complete remission. On August 16, 2004, she was readmitted in our hospital for difficulty in swallowing. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy reveled esophageal stricture and an ulcerative lesion on the esophageal mucosa. The X-ray examination of the upper gastrointestinal tract reveled a severe esophageal stricture with niches and hiatus hernia. No malignancy was seen on CT scanning, gallium radioisotope scanning and histological examination of biopsy specimens with the upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. The physical examination showed gibbosity, and MR imaging showed multiple compression spined fractures. Finally, we diagnosed benign esophageal stricture with reflux esophagitis. She underwent laparoscopic partial esophagectomy in September 21, 2004, and the postoperative course was satisfactory. The pathological findings showed benign esophageal stricture caused by
esophagitis
. We report here a case of esophageal stricture following complete remission after chemotherapy for malignant lymphoma in an elderly patient.
...
PMID:[Esophageal stricture following complete remission after chemotherapy for malignant lymphoma in an elderly patient]. 1693 48
There have been millions of people found to have AIDS. Death rates from AIDS have declined 15% to 20% in the past 5 years. However, nearly 75000 people will die with AIDS in this year. Patients with AIDS are also at risk for developing both Aids-defining cancers, such as Kaposi's sarcoma and non-
Hodgkin lymphoma
, and non-Aids-defining cancers and opportunistic infections. In patients with advanced Aids, the Cytomegalovirus is a frequent cause of chorioretinitis, pneumonitis, chronic perineal ulcerations and
oesophagitis
. It has been involved in endocrine, bone marrow, central nervous system and kidney abnormalities. CMV infection of the small bowel accounts for only 4.3% of all cytomegalovirus infection of the GI tract (large bowel 47%, duodenum 21,7%, stomach 17,4%); isolated cases of small bowel perforation due to CMV have been reported in AIDS patients, and all but one patient died. The Authors report a rare case of an HIV-positive young man with gastroenteric Cytomegalovirus infection responsible for generalized peritonitis from multiple perforations.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal opportunistic infections and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Case report]. 1762 71
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is frequent in immunocompromised patients, especially in AIDS, organ transplantation and rarely in
Hodgkin's disease
and Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). We present a case of NHL with CMV
oesophagitis
, which has rarely been documented in literature. Apart from fungal and herpes simplex infections, as the common differential diagnosis for
oesophagitis
in patients of lymphoma, CMV should be considered an important etiologic agent. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment of CMV
oesophagitis
with gancyclovir can avert significant morbidity and avoid unacceptable treatment delays.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus oesophagitis in a patient with Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1822 6
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