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)

Herpes zoster is a self-limited disorder which in most cases resolves without complications. The specific defect in host immunity that permits activation of latent V-Z virus and the occurrence of herpes zoster in both healthy and debilitated individuals has not yet been identified. In some patients, particularly the aged, complications occur during the acute phase of the disease or there are sequelae that may incapacitate the patient later. The most important of these is postherpetic neuralgia. In the elderly the chance of developing neuralgia following herpes zoster is about 50%. Involvement of the eye may produce minimal scarring or permanent blindness. There is an increasing incidence and severity of herpes zoster in association with malignant disease and in particular with Hodgkin's disease. Treatment of herpes zoster in the elderly should be determined by presenting symptoms. Topical medication such as the basic shake lotion is helpful. Personal experience and published reports suggest that early systemic administration of corticosteroids to healthy patients with severe herpes zoster pain with lessen the occurrence of postherpetic neuralgia. Administration of herpes zoster immune globulin is only effective in reducing the morbidity or preventing varicella in high risk individuals. ZIG does not affect the clinical course of herpes zoster.
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PMID:Herpes zoster in the elderly. 6 46

Histologic sections of spleen and liver prepared from tissue obtained during exploratory laparotomy and splenectomy in 91 untreated patients with Hodgkin disease were reviewed to assess the incidence and possible implications of noncaseating, epitheliod, sarcoid-like granulomas. The 17 patients with granulomas and the 74 patients without granulomas did not differ appreciably with respect to pretreatment indexes. All patients were observed for at least 15 months following laparotomy or until the time of death (range, 15 to 67 months; median, 25 months). The 17 patients with granulomas tended to have fewer relapses, longer survival, and lower incidence of subsequent herpes zoster infection compared to the 74 without granulomas. The presence of epithelioid granulomas in association with Hodgkin disease may reflect a host response to the tumor with favorable prognostic implications.
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PMID:Epithelioid granulomas in Hodgkin disease. A favorable prognostic sign? 16 15

In an endeavour to find an explanation for th raised incidence of herpes zoster in hemoblastoses, serum samples of 50 patients with histologically confirmed Hodgkin's disease and 80 control sera of normal persons of similar age groups were tested for the presenchods of indirect hemagglutination (IH), complement fixation (CF), and immunodiffusion (ID). The geometric mean titer of IH antibodies and the rate of positive ID results were significantly higher in the patients' group. The geometric mean titers of CF antibodies did not differ significantly in the two groups. A certain correlation between serological results and the histological type of Hodgkin's disease was found, but it was not statistically significant. No other correlation of serological results with clinical data was ascertained.
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PMID:Varicella-zoster antibodies in patients with Hodgkin's disease. 18 67

Thirty-two patients with Hodgkin's disease and 12 normal donors were studied for their in vitro lymphocyte responsiveness to a membrane-associated varicella-zoster (VZ) antigen. When compared to the normal donors, patients with Hodgkin's disease in whom radiotherapy was recently completed and those with active, recurrent disease had markedly impaired cell-associated immunity to VZ antigen. In addition, there was a suggestion that patients in long-term remission who had received primary combined modality therapy (radiotherapy plus chemotherapy) had an impaired response when compared to normal persons or to patients who had received single modality therapy. Newly diagnosed, untreated patients with Hodgkin's disease did not differ significantly from normal persons as a group but two of six were unresponsive to the VZ antigen whereas all normal subjects were responsive. Most patients in remission for at least one year following therapy had normal in vitro responsiveness. In two patients herpes zoster developed after the demonstration of absent in vitro lymphocyte reactivity to the VZ antigen.
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PMID:Herpes zoster and impaired cell-associated immunity to the varicella-zoster virus in patients with Hodgkin's disease. 18 4

Eruptive herpes zoster infection (VZV) and its primary and secondary diseases are reported in 28 patients aged between 25 and 85 years. In 2 cases, malignant primary diseases were found. In 16 patients, a disorder of glucose utilization was diagnosed, 8 of them accompanied by a disorder of fat metabolism and 5 by a hyperuricemia. In one case a severe encephalomyelitis was observed. In 2 patients the activation of the VZV infection was related to the cytostatic or immunosuppressive therapy of a generalized Hodgkin's disease and a multiple sclerosis. Once a liver abscess as a sequel to amebic dysentery was diagnosed and once a megaloplastic anemia with symptoms of a funicular myelopathy following a vitamin B12 deficiency syndrome. In VZV infection the search for basal metabolic disorders is of particular importance.
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PMID:[Significance of diabetes mellitus in the activation of the varicella zoster virus (author's transl)]. 19 45

Serum antibody levels against varicella-zoster virus (VZV) were examined by immune adherence hemagglutination assay (IAHA), indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) assay, and complement fixation techniques in 67 immunocompromised patients with localized and disseminated herpes zoster. In the serum obtained initially, undetectable IAHA titers were found in 56.5% of the patients with disseminated zoster compared with 18.2% of those with localized zoster. When serum obtained within the first seven days of illness was analyzed, undetectable IAHA titers and IFA titers of less than 32 were noted in 77.8% of those with disseminated zoster but in only 18.5% of those with localized disease. Peak serum antibody titers in patients with disseminated zoster were eventually equal to or greater than those in localized zoster. The patient groups were comparable in age, underlying disease, and therapy, although Hodgkin's disease was more frequent in patients with disseminated zoster. Thus, the absent IAHA or low IFA levels of circulating antibody early in illness were highly significant risk factors in dissemination of virus in herpes zoster.
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PMID:Serum antibody levels as risk factors in the dissemination of herpes zoster. 22 83

Four patients with chronic lymphatic leukaemia, M. Hodgkin and metastatic breast carcinoma developed particularly severe generalised herpes zoster, with complications of herpes zoster pneumonia, signs of encephalitis and phrenic nerve paresis. Virus specific complement-fixing antibodies increased regularly or delayed, without strict correlation to the clinical course. However, in all these cases there was a relative or absolute deficiency of T-lymphocytes in the peripheral blood, as a result of the underlying illness and of treatment with cytostatic agents. Because of the vital role of cell-mediated immunity in the control of the varicella-zoster virus (VZV), the observed T-cell deficiency seems to be an important pre-condition for the development of severe generalised herpes zoster.
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PMID:[Severe generalized courses of zoster due to cellular immunologic defects. Importance of an absolute or relative T-cell deficiency]. 30 13

Two women, one with Hodgkin's disease and the other with no malignancy, developed herpes zoster with optic neuropathy and total ophthalmoplegia. Both patients developed an associated mild meningoencephalitis with a predominantly lymphocytic spinal fluid reaction that cleared spontaneously. The patient with Hodgkin's disease suffered a protracted course of the disease and developed a secondary bacterial endophthalmitis that necessitated an envisceration of the left eye. The patient without evidence of immunologic deficit recovered quickly with administration of corticosteroids.
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PMID:Orbital apex syndrome secondary to herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 30 54

The occurrence of sepsis due to Streptococcus pneumoniae and Hemophilus influenza and of herpes zoster (HZ) was reviewed in a series of 72 consecutive, previously untreated children and adolescents with Hodgkin disease. There was not a statistically significant difference in the risk of developing sepsis within five years of diagnosis between patients who had (16.6%) or had not (6.2%) undergone splenectomy. Sepsis occurred most frequently among patients treated initially with total nodal irradiation and combination chemotherapy. The estimated risk of HZ during the first five years after diagnosis was 34%. Patients treated initially with irradiation and combination chemotherapy had a significantly greater risk of developing HZ than patients treated initially with only irradiation (P less than 0.05). Although trends were present which suggested that splenectomy and the extent of disease at diagnosis may influence the occurrence of HZ, these did not achieve statistical significance. Survival was not influenced by the occurrence of HZ.
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PMID:The incidence of post-splenectomy sepsis and herpes zoster in children and adolescents with Hodgkin disease. 31 50

One hundred and seven cases of herpes zoster in a hospitalized population with a variety of illnesses during a 20 year period were reviewed. Zoster occurred throughout the year, without seasonal predominance, and was most frequent in lymphoproliferative malignancy. In the majority, lesions were confined to the skin in one or more adjacent dermatomes (localized zoster) and were most frequent in the thoracic region. In 15 per cent of the cases, cutaneous dissemination of the lesions developed; this occurred four to 11 days after the onset of dermatomal lesions, and in one-third of these there was central nervous system involvement. Dissemination of zoster, however, directly resulted in only one death. Predisposing factors for zoster included local irradiation and, occasionally, surgery in subsequently involved areas. There were trends for more frequent splenectomies in patients with Hodgkin's disease in whom zoster subsequently developed, and for more frequent corticosteroid therapy in patiens with disseminated zoster. Advanced stage of Hodgkin's disease, in itself, was not associated with development of zoster, and the onset of zoster did not herald a poor prognosis for the underlying disease. Herpes zoster was, thus, largely a source of increased morbidity rather than mortality in the population studied, and multiple factors appeared to predispose to the development of zoster in this group of patients.
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PMID:Herpes zoster at the NIH: a 20 year experience. 58 29


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