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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endogenous production of carbon monoxide (VCO), red cell survival and
iron
kinetics were studied in 15 subjects with
Hodgkin's disease
. The subjects were divided into two groups, namely: eight patients with anaemia (group A, haemoglobin (Hb) concentration less than 11.5 g/dl) and seven patients without anaemia (group B, Hb concentration greater than 11.5 g/dl). Red cell survival was not significantly different in the two groups being 91 +/- 40 days (mean +/- 1 SD) in group A and 111 +/- 54 days in group B. Relative VCO (mumol/mmol total body haem (TBH/d) was, however, significantly higher (0.01 greater than P greater than 0.001) in group A (20.7 +/- 4.7) compared to group B (12.0 +/- 3.8). When absolute VCO (mumol/d) was compared to the daily turnover of circulating red cell haemoglobin haem (Vhaem-c), the VCO/Vhaem-c quotient was 2.1 +/- 0.9 in group A and 1.2 +/- 0.3 in group B. Erythron turnover of
iron
(ET, mumol Fe/mmol TBH/d) was calculated through subtraction of the non-erythron turnover (NET) from the total plasma
iron
turnover (PIT). ET was significantly higher (0.05 greater than P greater than 0.01) in group A (39 +/- 21) than in group B (20 +/- 8). The conclusion drawn from the finding of significant increases in VCO and ET without and concomitant significant decrease in red cell survival in the anaemia group is that ineffective erythropoiesis, i.e. bone marrow haemolysis, seems to play an important role in the anaemia of
Hodgkin's disease
.
...
PMID:Erythropoiesis and carbon monoxide production in Hodgkin's disease. 124 90
Bone marrow biopsies from 125 patients at different stages of HIV infection were examined and the histopathological changes are described. Indications for biopsy included peripheral blood abnormalities, search for opportunistic pathogens, a suspected lymphoma or evaluation of its progression. Common histopathological features, suggestive of HIV infection but non-pathognomonic, were: severe hypercellularity (43.2%), myelodysplasia (74.4%), plasmocytosis (86.4%), and lymphocytic (36.8%) and histiocytic infiltrates with or without granulomas (20%). Reticular fibrosis (58.6%),
iron
deposits (59.2%), vascular congestion and mucoid degeneration of fat (18.4%) were frequently observed. Hypoplasia was usually a late-occurring event and/or may have been iatrogenic. Opportunistic infections were detected in 8 patients: Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (4 cases), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (1 case), Cryptococcus neoformans (1 case), and Leishmania (1 case). Neoplastic complications were found in 3 patients: Burkitt's lymphoma (1 case) and
Hodgkin's disease
(2 cases). The pathophysiological mechanisms envisaged include the effect of HIV infection on precursor cells in the bone marrow.
...
PMID:[The bone marrow in human HIV infection. A bioptic study of 125 cases]. 152 53
In this study, we investigated a possible association between the degree of macrophage activation - as measured by serum neopterin concentrations - and disturbances of
iron
metabolism, determined by the concentrations of ferritin and serum
iron
, in patients with malignant disorders. Additionally we evaluated correlations between these factors and the degree and type of anaemia. Seventy-three patients, who suffered from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) (n = 43),
Hodgkin's disease
(n = 11), myeloma or monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance (n = 9), myelodysplastic syndrome (n = 1), and solid tumours (n = 9), were examined. Mean neopterin levels were raised in all groups, patients with NHL showing the highest concentrations. Ferritin but not neopterin concentrations were higher in males than in females. A significant correlation was found between neopterin and ferritin concentrations (p less than 0.01). Considering only female patients the strength of the correlation was the same (p less than 0.02). In addition, we found inverse correlations of neopterin with haemoglobin and
iron
concentrations (all p less than 0.01). Similar relationships existed in patients during follow-up. Our results support the hypothesis of an association between the degree of activation of macrophages and the development of anaemia by a shift or
iron
towards the storage sites.
...
PMID:Association between the activation of macrophages, changes of iron metabolism and the degree of anaemia in patients with malignant disorders. 164 56
Bone marrow biopsies from eighty-five patients with different stages of HIV infection were reviewed. Biopsies were generally indicated to evaluate peripheral blood abnormalities, but suspicion of lymphoma and other specific pathologies was another important indication. The histopathological features are described and are often suggestive of HIV infection but non-specific. Hypercellularity (72.9%), dysmyelopoiesis (78.8%), plasma cell hyperplasia (97.7%), lymphoid infiltration (27%) and histiocytosis with or without granulomata (11.7%) were the most striking abnormalities. Other frequent features include: increased stainable
iron
deposits, venous stasis and serous atrophy (gelatinous transformation). Marrow hypoplasia is rather infrequent (28.2%) and usually a terminal event of AIDS. Bone marrow biopsies revealed opportunistic and neoplastic complications in seven cases, with demonstration of pathogens in four cases (Mycobacterium avium, Cryptoccocus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania donovanii) and malignant lymphomas in three other cases (one Burkitt's lymphoma and two
Hodgkin's disease
). Bone marrow biopsy provides useful information for the diagnosis and prognosis of HIV infection and for the diagnosis of complications.
...
PMID:[Bone marrow changes at several stages of HIV infection, studied on bone marrow biopsies in 85 patients]. 175 64
The histopathologic changes of bone marrow during infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are described. Bone marrow biopsies from 73 patients at different stages of HIV-1 infection were studied. Indications for biopsy included peripheral blood abnormalities, suspicion of lymphoma, or search for specific pathogens. Common histopathological features, suggestive of HIV-1 infection but nonpathognomonic were hypercellularity (67%), myelodysplasia (86.1%), plasmacytosis (98.6%), lymphocytic infiltration (31.1%) and histiocytic infiltration with or without granulomata (13.7%). Increases in reticulin fibers (54.7%), and stainable
iron
deposits, vascular congestion and serous atrophy of fat were frequent features. Opportunistic infections and neoplastic complications were detected in 7 cases: pathogens were demonstrated in 4 cases (Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI), Cryptococcus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania) and lymphoma in 3 cases (1 Burkitt lymphoma and 2
Hodgkin's disease
). Bone marrow hypoplasia is usually a terminal event in AIDS and may be iatrogenic.
...
PMID:Bone marrow findings in HIV infection: a pathological study. 210 65
Ferritin is produced in malignant and normal tissues. It acts both as an immunosuppressant and as an
iron
storage protein. As a tumor associated protein, it is related to virally induced tumors, and selective tumor targeting by radiolabeled antiferritin antibodies has led to its use in clinical trials. In patients with advanced
Hodgkin's disease
who have failed conventional therapy, 131I antiferritin produced partial remissions, while 90Y antiferritin led to complete remissions and a demonstrable dose-response relationship. Combining the variable low-dose radiation patterns produced by radiolabeled antibody therapy with chemotherapy in the treatment of hepatocellular cancer has led to enhanced tumor cytotoxicity and, in some cases, the conversion of non-resectable hepatoma to resectable. Further, the potential for clinical and laboratory investigation of radiolabeled antibody therapy is discussed in light of new findings.
...
PMID:The theoretical implications and experimental and clinical results of radiolabeled antiferritin. 222 37
The relationship of
iron
-binding proteins to prognosis was studied in 50 children at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, newly diagnosed with
Hodgkin's disease
(HD). There were five patients with Stage I, 18 with Stage II, 14 with Stage III, and 13 with Stage IV. Initial serum ferritin, transferrin,
iron
, hemoglobin (Hb), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and A or B symptoms were analyzed for their association with progression-free survival (PFS). There was a linear increase of mean and median ferritin levels and a decrease of mean and median transferrin levels with advancing stages. Also, there was a significant inverse correlation between ferritin and transferrin (P less than 0.001). In univariate analyses, high ferritin (greater than 142 ng/ml) (P = 0.02) and low transferrin (less than or equal to 250 mg/dl) (P = 0.008) were significantly associated with poor PFS. Serum
iron
, Hb, ESR, and A or B symptoms were not associated with PFS. Stepwise proportional hazards regression analysis of all factors showed that transferrin was the only factor significantly associated with PFS. These preliminary results suggest that serum transferrin can also be used as a prognostic factor in addition to serum ferritin and that it may be helpful to assay both serum ferritin and transferrin as prognostic factors in childhood HD. Further testing of large groups of patients is needed to determine whether they are independent of tumor bulk and other established prognostic factors.
...
PMID:Prognostic importance of serum transferrin and ferritin in childhood Hodgkin's disease. 236 13
A panel of 17 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) recognizing various keratin polypeptides has been used to define their binding on non-epithelial elements in 28 bone-marrow samples and 14 lymph nodes, in order to establish their limitations for use as a possible tool for immunodiagnosis of carcinoma spread. Immunocytochemical studies have shown that only 8 antibodies consistently exhibited no false-positive staining of marrow cells. All the remaining MAbs labelled (mostly in a non-specific manner) a few cells of marrow samples derived from patients with either haematological disorders or malignant lymphomas. Fine granules and droplet-like cytoplasmic inclusions were predominant patterns of positive reactions. Homogeneous cytoplasmic staining reminiscent of specific keratin immunolabelling was occasionally seen as well. The positive cells could be also identified in some lymph nodes free of tumour infiltration. All antibodies visualized cytoplasmic droplets in scattered cells of lymph nodes taken from a patient with non-
Hodgkin lymphoma
. This type of positivity was mostly associated with positive histochemical reactions for
iron
. Quite significant was the detection of fibrillar positivity in the extrafollicular reticular cells in all nodes examined. Such a specific type of staining was exclusively induced by antibodies directed against epitopes of keratin 8 and 18, whereas those MAbs recognizing keratin 7 and 19 always gave negative results. Our data indicate that caution is required when such MAbs, considered as markers of specific cell types, are being used as an immunodiagnostic tool to identify single carcinoma cells. A series of criteria, including morphological ones, must be utilized in order to obtain meaningful results.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies against individual cytokeratins in the detection of metastatic spread. 246 28
An attempt was made to explore whether relaxation times and/or normalized image intensities obtained from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can separate malignant and non-malignant lymphomatous tissue. Spin-echo (SE) techniques with repetition times of 500 and 1,500 ms and echo times of 35 and 70 ms were used for estimating T1 and T2. Estimation of T1 and T2 with such a low number of spin-echo sequences resulted in considerable variation in the data especially when T1 was long. Similar information was also extracted by normalizing the image intensities to the 'proton density' image (1,500/35), and the spread of the data was then markedly reduced. Therefore, the method of normalizing was considered a more appropriate way of handling the image data when only a few sequences were available. No significant difference could be discerned in the MRI parameters between normal spleens and spleens infiltrated with malignant lymphoma, between normal livers and livers in patients with malignant lymphoma and between lymph nodes with low or high grade non-
Hodgkin lymphoma
. Lymphomatous tissue had similar MRI characteristics irrespectively of whether the cells were malignant or not, or located in spleens or in lymph nodes. The main biologic explanation for variation in data seems to be mostly the variable amounts of fibrosis, necrosis, oedema and/or
iron
content.
...
PMID:An attempt to characterize malignant lymphoma in spleen, liver and lymph nodes with magnetic resonance imaging. 296 Mar 43
The accumulation of
iron
in the lymph nodes of trypan blue treated rats was examined as a possible experimental counterpart of the lymph node siderosis which occurs in patients with
Hodgkin's disease
. Lymph nodes removed from the hilus of the liver, retrosternal area, axilla and root of the small bowel mesentery were examined histologically for
iron
in rats receiving 6-20 subcutaneous injections of trypan blue at biweekly intervals and in control rats. An increase in erythrophagocytosis accompanied by a progressive increase in the amount of stainable
iron
was found in the RE cells of nodes located in the lymphatic outflow tract of the liver. As in patients with
Hodgkin's disease
, an increase in erythrophagocytosis together with the prolonged retention of
iron
by RE cells appears to account for the accumulation of
iron
in the lymph nodes of trypan blue treated rats.
...
PMID:Lymph node siderosis in trypan blue treated rats. 323 99
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