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)

Increased quantities of the third component of complement (C3) were found in the macromolecular fractions of plasma from patients with untreated Hodgkin's disease (H.D.) These changes provide indirect evidence that immune complexes are present in the plasma of patients with this disease; their presence is closely correlated with the symptoms of night sweats and fever which are associated with a poor prognosis. It is suggested that the detection of circulating complexes may help in assessing the severity of H.D.
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PMID:Circulating immune complexes and symptoms in Hodgkin's disease. 5 19

Recently developed techniques for the investigation of iron kinetics were used to study the disturbance of iron metabolism in 19 untreated patients with Hodgkin's diseases (HD). The erythroid abnormality in newly diagnosed HD appears to be confined to those patients with systemic symptoms of weight loss, night sweats and fever, and consists of depression of marrow erythroid activity. These patients had a significnatly lower haemoglobin and serum iron concentration and a higher serum ferritin concentration, both when compared to normal subjects and to those patients with HD who lacked systemic symptoms. Ineffective erythropoiesis and red-cell destruction were not significantly increased. The present findings, confirm that HD patients with systemic symptoms have a depression of erythropoiesis, and that in these patients the marrow fails to respond to the stimulus of mild anaemia.
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PMID:Erythropoiesis and iron metabolism in Hodgkin's disease. 50 65

Serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) concentrations are increased in Hodgkin's disease (HD) but not in other types of lymphoma. The prevalence of atopic disease is similar to normal in both groups. Patients with high IgE concentrations and HD were separated into atopic and non-atopic groups, which were found to differ clinically. Atopic patients had a significantly lower incidence of night sweats, fever, and weight loss, and treatment had no significant lasting effect on their IgE concentrations. In the non-atopic group there was a striking correlation between high IgE concentrations and a histological appearance of nodular sclerosis, particularly in the presence of night sweats, fever, and weight loss. Successful treatment in the non-atopic group led to a noticeable fall in IgE concentrations, in most cases to normal, though on relapse of the disease they rose again.
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PMID:Atopy and immunoglobulin E concentrations in Hodgkin's disease and other lymphomas. 62 79

In 1967-1973, 74 patients with histologic classified Hodgkin's disease were treated in Marburg. We proved the incidence of the most important prognostic criteries: stage, histologic type and clinical symptoms. These criteries are evaluated as equally significant and independent. The B-symptoms, fever, weight loss and night sweats we found in 24 patients, 18 (75%) of them were in stage IV. In the remaining 6 patients in stage II and III, the B-symptoms were followed by relapse or generalisation. We think that the good correlation to the stage means, that clinical symptoms as prognostic signs are not independent.
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PMID:[Generic symptoms of Hodgkin's disease in relation to other prognostic criteries (author's transl)]. 71 7

Spontaneous (pathologic) rupture of the spleen in lymphoma is a rare event. A 38-year-old man with a 6-week history of fever, night sweats, and weight loss, and with known splenomegaly presented in shock as a result of a ruptured spleen. There was no known antecedent trauma. Hodgkin's disease was demonstrated in the spleen and liver. Review of the literature failed to reveal any previous report of spontaneous rupture of the spleen due to undiagnosed Hodgkin's disease. Only one survivor of spontaneous rupture of the lymphomatous spleen has been reported previously.
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PMID:Spontaneous (pathologic) rupture of the spleen in previously undiagnosed Hodgkin's disease: report of a case with survival. 83 49

Long survival in Hodgkin's disease after diagnosis of the stage IVb is very rare. A 45-years old woman is reported on, who survived for 12 years after detection of Hodgkin's disease involving lymph node regions on both sides of the diaphragm, bone, and lung parenchyma, including night sweats and weight loss (stage IVb according to the Ann Arbor classification 1971). This unexpectedly favorable course is possibly due to a so-called host resistance.
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PMID:[Hodgkin's disease, stage IVb: survival for 12 years (author's transl)]. 85 78

Hodgkin's disease presenting as spontaneous splenic rupture is rare. A 46-year-old man with a 4-week history of fever, chills, and night sweats developed sudden abdominal pain and hypotension. At surgery, an enlarged, ruptured spleen with a nodular surface was found. Histologically, there was diffuse infiltration of the red pulp by mixed-cellularity Hodgkin's disease with patchy involvement of the white pulp. The histopathologic findings in the three previously reported cases are all dissimilar to this. These differences most likely represent rupture occurring at different stages of splenic infiltration by Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease presenting as spontaneous splenic rupture. 141 48

A 41-yr-old man presented with jaundice, night sweats, and weight loss. The patient had been on phenytoin for seizure disorder. The drug was discontinued, and a diminution of bilirubin and transaminases occurred over several weeks. Percutaneous liver biopsy revaled cholestasis at the time of maximal hyperbilirubinemia. Recurrent jaundice ensued several weeks later, and an ERCP revealed a common bile duct lesion. Laparotomy revealed Hodgkin's disease involving the common bile duct and periportal node. This cause represents the first report of extrahepatic biliary obstruction from Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Obstructive jaundice secondary to primary biliary involvement with Hodgkin's disease. 151 80

A 67-year-old previously well man was admitted with hypercalcemia after a 7-day history of fever, night sweats, and back pain. The blood showed 5% multilobated lymphoid cells. A multilobated non-Hodgkin lymphoma associated with marked reticulin fibrosis was diagnosed on a bone marrow biopsy. During the next 7 days, in the absence of specific therapy, his symptoms disappeared. Three weeks after admission his biochemical abnormalities had resolved and after 9 weeks his bone marrow examination was normal. He remains in clinical and laboratory remission 16 months after presentation.
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PMID:Spontaneous remission of multilobated non-Hodgkin lymphoma. 160 76

The authors verified the hypothesis regarding an unawareness of possible febrile alterations during night sleep in patients with Hodgkin's disease who complain of night sweats as their only symptom. In these patients, body temperature was monitored by means of a 0.01 degrees C-sensitive linear transducer coupled with a digital multimeter. The palm of the hand (after it was passively closed in a fist by a full bandage) was the body site where temperature measurement was found to be most comfortable for a sleeping patient and independent of movements during sleep. A good correlation was found between the hand temperature taken with this technique and oral temperature. Of six patients with sweating as their only symptom, sweating recurred during the night in four and during the afternoon in the other two. In all patients sweating was preceded by a critical 0.5 to 1.5 degrees C increase in hand temperature, which took place no more than 30 minutes before sweating. Those with nocturnal sweats awakened during the subsequent sweating-related, rapid temperature decrease. These results are consistent with the occurrence of slight unperceived febrile pulses that precede sweating. The only peculiarity of night sweats consists in the higher probability that a preceding slight temperature rise may not be perceived by a sleeping patient, who is more likely to be awakened by the discomfort of the subsequent sweating. This would also explain the small prognostic significance of these sweats, which is the same as that of the preceding fever. These results are discussed in light of the increasing clinical evidence that patients with Hodgkin's disease are often affected by an instability of the thermoregulatory hypothalamic centers.
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PMID:Night sweats in Hodgkin's disease. A manifestation of preceding minor febrile pulses. 237 72


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