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

High altitude exposure and/or aviator status correlate significantly with cancerous conditions of the skin, testicles, bladder, and thyroid based upon a comprehensive literature review and survey of governmental sources. Other lesser significantly associated conditions include leukemia, lymphosarcoma, and Hodgkin's disease. Although radiation and sunlight are strongly associated with cancer incidence and risk at high altitudes, other intervening variables are discussed and critically reviewed using malignant melanoma of the skin as an example.
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PMID:Aviation, high altitude, cumulative radiation exposure and their associations with cancer. 205 25

Mortality among 5365 members of a dry cleaning union in St. Louis, Missouri, was less than expected for all causes combined (SMR = 0.9) but slightly raised for cancer (SMR = 1.2). Among the cancers, statistically significant excesses occurred for oesophagus (SMR = 2.1) and cervix (SMR = 1.7) and non-significant excesses for larynx (SMR = 1.6), lung (SMR = 1.3), bladder (SMR = 1.7), thyroid (SMR = 3.3), lymphosarcoma and reticulosarcoma (SMR = 1.7), and Hodgkin's disease (SMR = 2.1). Mortality from emphysema was also significantly raised (SMR = 2.0). Eleven of the 13 deaths from oesophageal cancer occurred among black men. The risk of this cancer showed a significant association with estimated cumulative exposure to dry cleaning solvents (rising to 2.8-fold in the highest category) but not with level or duration of exposure. Mortality from kidney cancer was not excessive as reported in other studies. Excesses for emphysema and cancers of the larynx, lung, oesophagus, bladder, and cervix may be related to socioeconomic status, tobacco, or alcohol use. Although the number of deaths was small, the greatest risk for cancers of the lymphatic and haematopoietic system (fourfold) occurred among workers likely to have held jobs where exposures were the heaviest. Small numbers and limited information on exposure to specific substances complicates interpretation of this association but is unlikely to be due to confounding by tobacco use. It was not possible to identify workers exposed to specific dry cleaning solvents but mortality among those entering the union after 1960, when use of perchloroethylene was predominant, was similar to those entering before 1960.
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PMID:Cancer and other causes of death among a cohort of dry cleaners. 232 23

This paper presents a review and further analysis of a series of New Zealand case-control studies which have found elevated risks for soft tissue sarcoma (STS), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in abattoir workers. The first published study involved 82 cases of STS (ICD 171) and found a relative risk of 2.8 (90% confidence interval 1.3-6.3). Interviews with an additional 51 cases reported here revealed a relative risk of 1.6 (90% confidence interval 0.9-3.0). Two further studies involved interviews with 100 cases of the category of NHL involving lymphosarcoma and reticulosarcoma (ICD 200) and 83 cases of other NHL (ICD 202). Relative risk estimates were 1.8 (90% confidence interval 1.1-2.9) and 1.7 (90% confidence interval 1.0-2.8), respectively. A study of 150 cases of AML (ICD 205.0) found a relative risk of 2.5 for abattoir workers (90% confidence interval 1.3-4.7). Finally, a United States cohort study found a standardized mortality ratio of 2.4 (90% confidence interval 0.8-5.4) for Hodgkin's disease (ICD 201) and 2.2 (90% confidence interval 0.8-4.5) for cancer of other lymphatic tissue (ICD 202, 203, 208) among abattoir workers. Abattoir workers are potentially exposed to oncogenic viruses, including bovine leukemia virus. Some workers may also be exposed to the animal carcinogen 2,4,6-trichlorophenol when treating pelts.
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PMID:Increased risks of soft tissue sarcoma, malignant lymphoma, and acute myeloid leukemia in abattoir workers. 316 2

Light scattering properties and antigen distribution of lymphocytes labeled with the monoclonal antibodies CD 5 and CD 20 were determined for 19 patients with a chronic B-cell derived leukaemia. The density of the antigen detected by the monoclonal antibody CD 5 appeared to be considerably lower on malignant B-lymphocytes of the patients as compared with T lymphocytes. A large variation was observed in the amount of receptors for the monoclonal antibodies CD 5 and CD 20 on the malignant cells of the different patients. B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) patients were clearly distinguishable from leukaemic follicular non Hodgkin lymphoma patients (LF-NHL, formerly lymphosarcoma cell leukaemia) and from a patient with a prolymphocytoid transformation (PLT) of the B-CLL according to the amount of the antigens for CD 5 and CD 20. Within the B-CLL patient population, no relation of progression of the disease with distribution of these antigens could be observed. In one patient the extraordinary phenotype CD 20+, CD 11+, leu 8+, CD 5- of the malignant lymphocytes was observed. An experimentally simple method to differentiate between the various chronic lymphocytic leukaemias (CLL) appeared to be the determination of orthogonal light scattering properties of lymphocytes. In healthy donors one can always distinguish two populations of lymphocytes in the orthogonal light scatter histograms. Lymphocytes of B-CLL patients show one uniform population with a relatively small orthogonal light scattering signal, lymphocytes of our patients with PLT of B-CLL or with LF-NHL show one uniform population with a relatively large orthogonal light scattering signal.
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PMID:Flow cytometric characterization of chronic lymphocyte leukaemias using orthogonal light scattering and quantitative immunofluorescence. 328 11

The authors have summarized the research data on lymphoid cells of the lymph nodes and peripheral blood of normal donors, patients with hematological nonlymphoproliferative diseases, reactive lymphadenopathies and malignant lymphoproliferative diseases (Hodgkin's disease, chronic lympholeukemia and lymphosarcomas). The data indicate that the use of the panel of the simplest tests of immunological phenotyping provides in many cases sufficient information for differential diagnosis of reactive lymphadenopathies and malignant lymphoproliferative diseases as well as for diagnosing the early stage of lymphosarcoma leukemization.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of reactive lymphadenopathies and the stage of lymphosarcoma leukemization using the simplest methods of immunologic phenotyping]. 349 37

A study of the incidence of malignant lymphoma in Olmsted County, Minnesota, revealed 91 new cases during the period 1970 through 1977. On the basis of the analyzed data, the overall average annual incidence rate per 100,000 population was 12.2 for males and 14.2 for females. The rates for both sexes combined (unadjusted for age) were 1.5 for Hodgkin's disease, 6.2 for lymphosarcoma, and 5.5 for reticulum cell sarcoma. The incidence rate for Hodgkin's disease decreased insignificantly, whereas that for both lymphosarcoma and reticulum cell sarcoma increased significantly during the period 1970 through 1977 in comparison with rates from the period 1945 through 1969. The largest increase was for rural males, for whom the rates for all three histologic types of lymphoma were substantially higher than those for urban males.
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PMID:Malignant lymphoma in Olmsted County, Minnesota, 1970 through 1977. 352 98

The cohort (7676) of this historical prospective study consisted of a group of male chemical workers from seven plants who had been occupationally exposed (continuously or intermittently) to benzene for at least six months and a comparison group of male chemical workers from the same plants who had been employed for at least six months during the same period but were never occupationally exposed to benzene. The observed mortality of the cohort, by cause, was compared with the expected based on the US mortality rates, standardised for age, race, sex, and calendar time. Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) from all lymphatic and haematopoietic (lymphopoietic) cancer combined, leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (lymphosarcoma, reticulosarcoma, and other lymphoma), and non-Hodgkin's lymphopoietic cancer (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and leukaemia) for the exposed group were slightly, but not significantly, raised above the national norm. These SMRs were considerably higher than those in the comparison group. When the group with no occupational exposure was used for direct comparison, the continuously exposed group experienced a relative risk from lymphopoietic cancer of 3.20 (p less than 0.05). Furthermore, the Mantel-Haenszel chi-square showed that the association between continuous exposure to benzene and leukaemia was statistically significant (p less than 0.05).
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PMID:An industry wide mortality study of chemical workers occupationally exposed to benzene. I. General results. 360 66

Two cases of a combination of a malignant blood disease with latent tuberculosis are presented. One of the patients was with acute leukemia and the other one was with non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma (Lymphosarcoma). The blood disease dominated the clinical picture and determined the severity of the course and the lethal outcome. The post mortem examination revealed hepatosplenic form of miliary tuberculosis in both patients. In one of the patients caseous tuberculosis of the bronchopulmonary, peribronchial and periportal lymph nodes was found, too. The tuberculous process had a latent course without characteristic manifestations but it also led to worsening of the patients' condition.
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PMID:[Malignant hemopathies combined with latent tuberculosis (a report of 2 cases)]. 367 41

Bleomycin alone was used in the treatment of 54 patients with Hodgkin's disease in its later stages, 17 with generalized lymphosarcoma, 22 with reticulum cell sarcoma, and 7 with mycosis fungoides. The patients had had radiotherapy and full courses of conventional chemotherapy. Bleomycin was given in doses of 30 mg weekly to an average total dosage of 200 mg, though up to 800 mg could be given because of its marrow-sparing properties. Sixteen (29%) of the patients with Hodgkin's disease remitted, most of them achieving only a partial remission, and similar results were obtained in the other three reticuloses. Bleomycin would seem to have some beneficial action in the late stages of Hodgkin's disease, though it is less effective than some drug regimens recently introduced. Nevertheless it may be useful when there is diminished bone marrow reserve. It would be a suitable drug to use in combination therapy of these four reticuloses.
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PMID:Bleomycin in the reticuloses. 410 1

The immunofluorescent reaction of peripheral blood cells from 10 multiple myeloma, 10 Hodgkin's and 11 lymphosarcoma cases with antiviral (Rauscher) murine leukaemia (AMR) and antihuman stem cell leukaemia plasma (AHS) antisera was studied. Cells from 25 of these patients were reactive at least once with AMR and AHS or AHS alone. Absorption studies suggested that this cytoplasmic immunofluorescent reaction involved cellular isoantigens. Serial studies on multiple myeloma, Hodgkin's and lymphosarcoma cases with significant fluorescence, showed that the fluorescent cell count variation was correlated with the presence of active disease.
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PMID:Cytoplasmic immunofluorescence of blood cells from myeloma, Hodgkin's disease an cultured cells from normal liver. 455 73


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