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)

A 30 year old man with Hodgkin's disease, clinically in remission, presented with blurred vision in one eye due to a choroiditis. He developed headaches 10 days after commencing oral steroids and was subsequently found to have cryptococcal meningitis. The meningitis and choroiditis resolved on antifungal medication. This is the first case of cryptococcal choroiditis recorded in the United Kingdom.
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PMID:Cryptococcal choroidoretinitis and immunodeficiency. 345 Dec 21

Meningitis should be suspected in a patient who presents with fever, meningism, or severe headache. A careful physical examination should be performed of perimeningeal foci, with emphasis on the sinuses, ears, throat, neck, and lungs. A history of exposure to tuberculosis, viral disease, rodents, or suspicious dairy products or farm animals may give clues to the source of the meningitis. Immunosuppression through the use of corticosteroids or chemotherapy for such conditions as Hodgkin's disease, lymphoma, leukemia, malnutrition, or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) should also be noted and alert the clinician to the possible presence of an unusual pathogen. Meningitis associated with leukemia or most of the non-T-cell lymphomas is likely to be from a common bacterial agent (often Listeria), unless the patient is being treated with a steroid or is receiving other chemotherapy. Patients with Hodgkin's disease or AIDS or who have been treated with a steroid are more likely to have cryptococcal or tuberculous meningitis. Neonates and the very elderly may present with only irritability or lethargy and fever, without any of the other common symptoms. In neonates up to one week of age, group B streptococcal infection should be suspected. Gram-negative organisms should be suspected in elderly patients and those who have had neurosurgery. In patients with CSF shunts, infection with coagulase-negative Staphylococcus should be assumed and these patients are treated empirically until results of cultures are received. Several noninfectious conditions may mimic infectious meningitis, as may some unusual causes of infectious meningitis (eg, syphilis and schistosomiasis), which have not been discussed in this article.
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PMID:The many causes of meningitis. 361 11

Hodgkin's disease involving contiguous areas of the skull, overlying soft tissue, and extending to the underlying epidural space, developed in a 29-year-old woman with a 3-year history of pseudotumor cerebri. The patient had been on varying doses of steroids since shortly after the development of headaches and papilledema in 1981. In 1984, following radiation therapy for Hodgkin's disease, the tumor and headaches resolved. Pseudotumor cerebri antedating Hodgkin's disease has not been previously reported. The pseudotumor cerebri may have been an early manifestation of Hodgkin's disease in an unusual location.
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PMID:Primary Hodgkin's disease of the skull following a 3-year history of pseudotumor cerebri. 371 24

Four men and four women, aged 16 to 43, developed dural sinus thrombosis, five patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (L.A.L.) and three with non Hodgkin malignant lymphoma (N.H.M.L.). All the cases of L.A.L. were F.A.B.-2 subtype without any unusual hematological features. In 6 cases, the disorders occurred during the phase of therapeutical induction (E.O.R.T.C.-A.L.L.-H.R. protocol) at D5, D10, D15, D26, D30, D38, and in 2 cases during maintenance after a period of remission. All patients had received Vincristine and Prednisone, intrathecal Methotrexate in 5 cases, encephalic irradiation in 3 cases and L-Asparaginase in one case. Three women were taking contraceptive drugs. The neurological symptoms and signs were headache due to intracranial hypertension in 6 cases, Grand Mal seizures in 5 cases, focal seizures in 2 cases, a regressive hemiparesis in 4 cases, stupor in 3 cases. CT scan was abnormal in 4 cases, displaying oedema in 3 cases and an hemorrhagic infarction in 1 case. Angiography showed in all cases occlusion of the superior sagittal sinus in 7 cases and of the transverse sinus on 1 case. Six patients received anticoagulant therapy. Outcome was fatal in 3 cases: in 2 cases of L.A.L., the condition worsened rapidly after the onset and death was related to a tentorial herniation; in 1 case of N.H.M.L. death resulted from an intercurrent infection.
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PMID:[Dural venous sinus occlusions in hemopathies]. 385 30

A case of malignant lymphoma in the skull after head injury associated with whole bone metastasis is reported. The patient was a 66-year-old man who was admitted to Almeida Memorial Hospital because of headache and general fatigue 2 months after head injury. After admission tumors appear in the frontal and occipital region and grew rapidly. Plain craniogram revealed large map-like bone destructions and multiple punched out lesions. Bone scintigram with 99mTc-MDP revealed multiple accumulations of RI in the skull, vertebrae, ribs and pelvis. CT scan revealed destructive, markedly enhancing bone tumor which was compressing the brain as an extradural mass in the left frontal and occipital regions. Pathological examination of the tumor revealed malignant lymphoma of non-Hodgkin type and diffuse pleomorphic type. Though combination chemotherapy with ACNU, FT 207, PSK, CHOP (Cyclophosphamide, Adriamycin, Vincristine and Predonisone) and Acracinomycin A was performed after operation, and brought forth regression of tumor size and improvement of clinical symptoms transiently, he died 6 months after the onset because of recurrence in many bones with pathological fracture and complications such as pneumonia, DIC and acute renal failure. At autopsy the tumors were found to be localized only in the bones, but in none of lymphnode or visceral organs. Malignant lymphoma appearing initially as a skull tumor is rare, and its diagnosis and treatment were discussed.
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PMID:[A case of malignant lymphoma in the skull after head injury associated with multiple bone tumors]. 408 41

Recombinant interferon-gamma was given to patients with tumours by a six-hour intravenous infusion using a portable mini-pump, to assess the side-effects of the drug. At present, 11 patients have been treated; 2 adenocarcinoma of the ovary, 3 squamous carcinoma of the bronchus, 1 adenocarcinoma of the breast, 1 adenocarcinoma of the stomach, 1 Hodgkin's lymphoma, 1 case of two primaries, adenocarcinoma of the breast and ovary, and 1 adenocarcinoma of unknown origin. Two patients received 1 X 10(6) units/m2/infusion, four received 3 X 10(6) U/m2/inf., three received 6 X 10(6) U/m2/inf. and two received 9 X 10(6) U/m2/inf. Two further dose levels will be used in the future; 27 and 51 X 10(6) U/m2/inf. Three 6-hour infusions a week were given for a four week period. The major side-effects of gamma-interferon were dose-related pyrexia with rigors to which there was no tachyphylaxis, acute and chronic tiredness, nausea with or without vomiting, headache, backache and myalgia. There was also a dose-dependent immediate but mild and transient decrease in the total white cell count. All effects have been transient, and none have been severe. We have also noticed that intravenous infusions by mini-pumps are tolerated far better by the patients than conventional drip systems, and we feel mini-pumps are the ideal way to give intravenous infusions.
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PMID:A phase 1 study of recombinant interferon-gamma given intravenously by portable mini-pump: a preliminary report. 624 30

A total of 483 adult patients with non-leukemic non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) were reviewed for neuromeningeal (NM) involvement. NM involvement was found in 20 patients (4,1%). Presenting complaints were mainly headache (9 cases) or diplopia (8 cases). Cranial nerve palsies were frequent (12 cases). CSF examination was abnormal in 76% of the patients and was the most reliable diagnostic procedure, but abnormal cells were found in only 50% of the cases. The pattern of the lymphoid proliferation was diffuse in 90% of the cases. The most frequent histological subtypes of NHL were diffuse histiocytic (10 cases) and diffuse lymphocytic poorly differentiated (6 cases). In 65% of the cases, the lymphoma was initially disseminated. NM involvement was inaugural in 20% of the cases and was the only site of proliferation in 35% of the cases. Median survival after the NM localization was only 3 months. Long remissions were achieved in 3 patients with isolated NM involvement. These results are compared to previously published data. The indications of CNS prophylaxis are discussed.
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PMID:[Neuromeningeal localizations in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas in adults]. 630 Oct 49

Eighty-one patients with a variety of refractory disseminated malignant neoplasms have been treated in the first multiple fixed-dose phase I trial of recombinant leukocyte A interferon (IFL-rA). Each patient received IFL-rA by intramuscular injection, three times weekly for 28 days. Dosages were escalated in different patients from 1 to 136 x 10(6) units per injection. The toxic reactions seen with IFL-rA resembled those of nonrecombinant leukocyte interferon and included fever, chills, fatigue, anorexia, myalgia, headache, occasional nausea and vomiting, and dose-dependent reversible leukopenia and hepatic transaminase elevations. The pharmacokinetics of IFL-rA were also comparable with nonrecombinant leukocyte interferon. Objective evidence of antitumor activity was seen in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, breast cancer, and melanoma, indicating that IFL-rA, the first genetically engineered biological response modifier available for testing in cancer patients, is biologically active in vivo.
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PMID:A multiple-dose phase I trial of recombinant leukocyte A interferon in cancer patients. 675 47

M. pneumoniae is a common cause of pneumonia. The diagnosis is suspected when the patient presents with symptoms suggesting primary atypical pneumonia including cough, fever, chills, headache, and malaise in association with a segmental or subsegmental pulmonary infiltrate(s), the white blood cell count is normal or only slightly elevated, and the Gram stain of the sputum (if any can be obtained) reveals polymorphonuclear leukocytes and few bacteria. The diagnosis is more difficult when the patient presents with symptoms not suggestive of pneumonia including lethargy, dyspnea, and a 1- to 4-week history of shortness of breath without cough or fever in association with diffuse reticulonodular or interstitial pulmonary infiltrates. The disease in the previously healthy host is usually benign and self-limiting. However, the course is shortened by the administration of tetracycline derivatives or erythromycin. M. pneumoniae pneumonia can occur in association with other diseases including sickle cell anemia, sarcoidosis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Hodgkin's disease, and various other immunodeficiency states. In these patients mycoplasma pneumonia can be very serious. Although there is no pathognomonic clinical or radiographic presentation, careful consideration of epidemiologic, clinical, laboratory, and radiographic data are usually sufficient to suggest the diagnosis in most patients.
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PMID:Mycoplasma pneumonia. 676 79

Case notes of 722 HIV-infected patients who had died between March 1986 and August 1993 were analysed to evaluate the prevention and characteristic features of sinusitis associated with HIV infection. In 73 patients (10%) sinusitis had been diagnosed at least once on the basis of radiological or clear-cut clinical criteria. In addition, 15 patients with sinusitis were identified among those attending an HIV out-patient clinic. There were altogether 126 episodes of sinusitis in 88 patients (62 men, 26 women; mean age 33 [19-69] years). In 62 patients the CD4 lymphocyte count was under 100/microliters. The most commonly affected site was the maxillary sinuses. Patients with mirror formation had a significantly longer duration of illness than those without (P = 0.021). In 58 patients the symptoms of fever, headache and rhinitis were predominantly caused by the sinusitis, in 49 only partially so, and in 19 sinusitis was a chance diagnosis. In 10 of 49 attacks of sinusitis the concurrent disease (e.g. cerebral toxoplasmosis, malignant non-Hodgkin lymphoma) had not been recognized by the referring doctor. There were 1-5 recurrences over an observation period of 11.8 (0-72) months in 23 patients.-These findings show that sinusitis frequently occurs in HIV-infected patients, takes a protracted course and is difficult to distinguish from concomitant diseases by its clinical presentation. If symptoms persist, possible concurrent respiratory infection or CNS involvement must be looked for. Sinus needle aspiration is of decisive importance to ascertain the causative organism.
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PMID:[Sinusitis in HIV infection]. 773 29


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