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)

The application of ion-selective electrodes is discussed for the kinetic determination of K+ and Na+ concentrations in the system, containing human red blood cells modified by nystatin. A series of mixed solutions was worked out, according to which the Na(+)-glass and the K(+)-thick membrane valinomycin electrodes were calibrated. The human erythrocytes were washed for 3 times with the basic solution (in mol per liter: 0.141 NaCl, 0.004 KCl, 0.002 CaCl2, 0.003 MgCl2, 0.01 glucose), and then were resuspended in it. The suspension was kept in a shaking bath at 37 degrees C. The modification of the cell membranes was performed by the introduction of different amounts of the antibiotic nystatin into the probe. Under these conditions the concentration of Na+ decreased, while K+ concentration increased. The values of concentration were registered ionometrically. In an hour and a half the stationary lines were obtained. Being based on the values of the stationary cation concentrations and the final concentrations, registered after the complete lysis of erythrocytes promoted by saponin, the ratio of cation fluxes across the modified membrane to the flux across the nonmodified membrane was calculated in accordance with the Hodgkin-Katz equation.
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PMID:[An ionometric study of Na+ and K+ fluxes across the nystatin-modified human erythrocyte membrane]. 165 Sep 67

We report a rare case of Hodgkin's disease in which intracranial involvement developed during the course of the patients illness. A 20-year-old man who had complained of lymph node swelling on the right neck was admitted to a hospital in December 1978. Lymph node biopsy revealed Hodgkin's disease, and he was treated by various series of chemotherapy and radiotherapy with unsatisfactory results. He was transferred to Yamanashi Medical College Hospital in June 1985. He was in a far-advanced state at the time, and palliative treatment was applied. In the middle of May 1986, he complained of headache, tinnitus, and sleeplessness. Vomiting and tremor were observed by the end of May 1986. Brain CT scan revealed a space occupying lesion in the right temporal region. Whole brain irradiation of 45 Gy was effective, and the lesion disappeared. However, his general condition deteriorated and he died in November 1986. Brain autopsy could not be performed.
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PMID:A case of intracranial involvement of Hodgkin's disease. 829 Jun 98

The results of the first global grafting of the thymus and a thymus-sternum block are given. The grafting of immunocompetent organs in children with the Louis-Bar syndrome is shown to cause to a partial and in some cases significant recovery of immunological parameters. Thus, blast-cell transformation showed 10-40% increases, the titers of antibodies to Staphylococcus and Escherichia coli rose, and immunoglobulin A that was generally absent in these children before surgery appeared. The clinical effect of grafting was noticeably observed 20-30 days after surgery. The most significant parameters were as follows: cessation of sinusitis, rhinitis, bronchitis, and purulent skin lesions. Neurological syndromes improved: tremor and staggering gait diminished, ocular convergence normalized. Thereafter such operations were made in 27 patients with Bruton's disease and in 3 patients with lymphogranulomatosis. The grafting of immunocompetent organs led to the design of agents derived from the thyroid gland (Tactivin) and bone marrow (myelopid). The immunobiological and clinical effects of Tactivin in the past 15-20 years are given in detail. The basic principles in immunomodulating therapy with thymic agents are presented.
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PMID:[From transplantation of the thymus to molecular reconstruction of the immune system]. 1039 94

In the brain spike synchronization in neurons is involved in information transfer and certain forms of dysfunction. The theory of random point processes was used to relate the statistical properties of input point processes to synchronization between firing in neurons viewed as threshold devices. Derived analytical relations describe normalized synchronization in the case of shared input with balanced excitation and inhibition. For neuronal models with unbalanced shared input and spike generating Hodgkin-Huxley type conductances, the theory satisfactorily describes the temporal dependence of spike synchronization on the delay between spikes. Computer generated stochastic stimulus current was used to stimulate motoneurons in turtle spinal cord slices. Theory was able to approximate the temporal dependence of spike synchronization on the delay between spikes when the membrane time constant and the relative spike threshold measured were used in calculations. In agreement with the theoretical prediction, normalized spike synchrony was reduced when the threshold for spike generation was lowered by injection of steady depolarizing bias current. In spinal motoneurons the relative spike threshold can be lowered by a persistent inward current facilitated by activation of certain metabotropic transmitter receptors. After induction of this inward current spike synchronization was reduced several times. It is suggested that downregulation of the persistent inward current in motoneurons by disruption of brainstem modulatory systems, as in Parkinson disease, can facilitate tremor due to the increased synchrony between motoneurons.
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PMID:Influence of membrane properties on spike synchronization in neurons: theory and experiments. 1465 1

We determined the prevalence of self-reported late-effects in survivors of autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) for Hodgkin lymphoma (HL, n = 92) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n = 184) using a 255-item questionnaire and compared them to 319 sibling controls in the Bone Marrow Transplant Survivor Study. Median age at HCT was 39 years (range: 13-69) and median posttransplant follow-up was 6 years (range: 2-17). Median age at survey was 46 years (range: 21-73) for survivors and 44 years (range: 19-79) for siblings. Compared to siblings, HCT survivors reported a significantly higher frequency of cataracts, dry mouth, hypothyroidism, bone impairments (osteoporosis and avascular necrosis), congestive heart failure, exercise-induced shortness of breath, neurosensory impairments, inability to attend work or school, and poor overall health. Compared to those receiving no total-body irradiation (TBI), patients treated with TBI-based conditioning had higher risks of cataracts (odds-ratio [OR] 4.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.5-15.5) and dry mouth (OR 3.4, 95% CI 1.1-10.4). Females had a greater likelihood of reporting osteoporosis (OR 8.7, 95% CI: 1.8-41.7), congestive heart failure (OR 4.3, 95% CI 1.1-17.2), and abnormal balance, tremor, or weakness (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.0-5.5). HL and NHL survivors of autologous HCT have a high prevalence of long-term health-related complications and require continued monitoring for late effects of transplantation.
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PMID:Late effects in survivors of Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma treated with autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation: a report from the bone marrow transplant survivor study. 1788 51

Neural circuits controlling fast movements are inherently unsteady as a result of their reciprocal innervation. This instability is enhanced by increased membrane excitability. Recent studies indicate that the loss of external inhibition is an important factor in the pathogenesis of several tremor disorders such as essential tremor, cerebellar kinetic tremor or parkinsonian tremor. Shaikh and colleagues propose a new conceptual scheme to analyze tremor disorders. Oscillations are simulated by changing the intrinsic membrane properties of burst neurons. The authors use a model neuron of Hodgkin-Huxley type with added hyperpolarization activated cation current (Ih), low threshold calcium current (It), and GABA/glycine mediated chloride currents. Post-inhibitory rebound is taken into account. The model includes a reciprocally innervated circuit of neurons projecting to pairs of agonist and antagonist muscles. A set of four burst neurons has been simulated: inhibitory agonist, inhibitory antagonist, excitatory agonist, and excitatory antagonist. The model fits well with the known anatomical organization of neural circuits for limb movements in premotor/motor areas, and, interestingly, this model does not require any structural modification in the anatomical organization or connectivity of the constituent neurons. The authors simulate essential tremor when Ih is increased. Membrane excitability is augmented by up-regulating Ih and It. A high level of congruence with the recordings made in patients exhibiting essential tremor is reached. These simulations support the hypothesis that increased membrane excitability in potentially unsteady circuits generate oscillations mimicking tremor disorders encountered in daily practice. This new approach opens new perspectives for both the understanding and the treatment of neurological tremor. It provides the rationale for decreasing membrane excitability by acting on a normal ion channel in a context of impaired external inhibition.
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PMID:Tremorgenesis: a new conceptual scheme using reciprocally innervated circuit of neurons. 1903 42