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)

An experimental dosimetry by an Alderson Phantom was carried out at the Istituto Nazionale Tumori of Milan to evaluate the scattered radiation in the abdomen for a radiotherapeutic treatment of some lymph node supradiaphragmatic regions. This information is very important when a radiological treatment of stage I and IIA Hodgkin's disease must be set up after the 3rd month of pregnancy. A dose of 3000 rad (30 Gy) was given to left supraclavicular and mediastinum as if involved by a lymphoma. A cobalt 60 unit and a 6 MeV linear accelerator were sequentially tested. Scattered radiation was measured by TLD dosimeters in multiple abdominal sections from diaphragm to pubis ever 5 cm. Scattered radiation was lower with the linear accelerator than with cobalt. Doses to the pelvis ranged from 3.5 rad to 6.3 rad for the linear accelerator. These values are not negligible but acceptable, because the risks of fetal malformation are very low after the third month of pregnancy.
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PMID:Abdominal dosimetry for supradiaphragmatic irradiation of Hodgkin's disease in pregnancy. Experimental data and clinical considerations. 728 Dec 39

The natural history of malignant lymphomas of the oropharynx and their response to treatment are described by evaluating the course of 41 patients, who after histological verification underwent radiotherapy in the Radiological Clinic of Kiel University between 1965 and 1979. The analysis of the malignant non-Hodgkin lymphomas according to the "Kiel classification" reveals a clear predominance of the germinal center tumors and the high grade malignancies. The long-term results of treatment show a good prognosis for clinical stages I-II1 (two adjacent lymph node or extranodal regions involved above the diaphragm, "Ann Arbor"-classification modified by Musshoff) with a 85% probability of both survival and freedom of disease. For clinical stages II2-IV long-term actuarial survival and disease free survival were lowered to 51% and 23%. Whereas in 93% a complete tumor regression could be achieved by the primary treatment, one third of these patients developed a recurrence of the disease, mainly caused by incomplete therapy, such as missing the "extended field" radiotherapy or a necessary chemotherapy because of old age, myelodepression or simply refusion of further treatment. According to the results of this study chemotherapy seems to be necessary from clinical stage II2 on (two distant lymph node or extranodal regions or three or more regions located anywhere involved above the diaphragm). Finally a refined locoregional irradiation technique for malignant lymphomas of the oropharynx is described: fast electrons and cobalt rays in daily alternation for the posterior cervical lymphnodes. Last not least we present the unusual treatment schemes of the "Kiel Lymphoma Study Group" for malignant non-Hodgkin-Lymphomas of different histologies and stages.
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PMID:[Treatment of malignant lymphomas of the oropharynx (author's transl)]. 731 49

The activation marker CD30 is expressed on the cell surface of the malignant cells in Hodgkin's disease and a few non-Hodgkin lymphomas. We have analyzed the regulation of membrane-bound CD30 and found that the binding of a variety of anti-CD30 antibodies induced down-regulation of CD30 on cell lines. In addition, such down-modulation was also observed after treatment of the cell surface proteins with the sulfhydryl reagent iodoacetamide or after stimulation of the second messenger pathway with phorbol ester or calcium ionophore. This modulation was abolished at 4 degrees C and strongly inhibited by chelators like EDTA or 1,10-phenanthroline, whereas EGTA, a selective inhibitor of Ca(2+)-dependent proteinases and other inhibitors of serine, thiol and acid proteinases, showed no effect. The down-modulation was strengthened by Zn2+ or Cd2+, but not by other divalent cations such as Fe2+, Mn2+, Mg2+, Ca2+ or Co2+, thus indicating the involvement of a zinc metalloproteinase in CD30 modulation which can be activated by protein kinase C and by alkylation of sulfhydryl groups. Pulse-chase experiments, analysis of the CD30 glycosylation and specific measurement of the 90-kDa soluble form of CD30 (sCD30) with a sandwich radioimmunoassay revealed that CD30 down-modulation results from enhanced release of 90-kDa sCD30 by the site-specific cleavage of CD30 accomplished by a zinc metalloproteinase. This release occurs at the cell membrane without prior endocytosis.
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PMID:A zinc metalloproteinase is responsible for the release of CD30 on human tumor cell lines. 759 Dec 96

Bone involvement in Hodgkin's disease is uncommon and seldom encountered at initial diagnosis. Seven cases with osseous involvement were identified from a series of 147 patients with Hodgkin's disease treated at Auckland Hospital from 1980 to 1988. Only one patient was found to have bone lesions at the time of initial presentation. Two patients had multiple lesions and 5 had a solitary lesion. Sites of involvement included the spine, pelvis, femur, humerus, ribs, sternum, scapula and base of skull. Six patients had nodular sclerosing histology and one had mixed cellularity disease. All 7 patients were treated with systemic chemotherapy for their advanced disease, and 5 patients needed local radiotherapy to sites of bone involvement. The radiation dosage schedules were individualized, ranging from 30 Gy to 40 Gy, using either a 6 MeV linear accelerator or cobalt machine. At the time of analysis of this study, 4 patients were in complete remission, 2 patients completed chemotherapy with good response and only 1 patient died of disseminated disease. The current review has demonstrated an encouraging response to treatment and good long term control. We believe that combined-modality therapy is effective in the treatment of osseous involvement in Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Bone involvement in Hodgkin's disease. 832 14

1. Spike adaptation of neocortical pyramidal neurones was studied with sharp electrode recordings in slices of guinea-pig parietal cortex and whole-cell patch recordings of mouse somatosensory cortex. Repetitive intracellular stimulation with 1 s depolarizing pulses delivered at intervals of < 5 s caused slow, cumulative adaptation of spike firing, which was not associated with a change in resting conductance, and which persisted when Co2+ replaced Ca2+ in the bathing medium. 2. Development of slow cumulative adaptation was associated with a gradual decrease in maximal rates of rise of action potentials, a slowing in the post-spike depolarization towards threshold, and a positive shift in the threshold voltage for the next spike in the train; maximal spike repolarization rates and after-hyperpolarizations were unchanged. 3. The data suggested that slow adaptation reflects use-dependent removal of Na+ channels from the available pool by an inactivation process which is much slower than fast, Hodgkin-Huxley-type inactivation. 4. We therefore studied the properties of Na+ channels in layer II-III mouse neocortical cells using the cell-attached configuration of the patch-in-slice technique. These had a slope conductance of 18 +/- 1 pS and an extrapolated reversal potential of 127 +/- 6 mV above resting potential (Vr) (mean +/- S.E.M.; n = 5). Vr was estimated at -72 +/- 3 mV (n = 8), based on the voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation (h infinity) curve. 5. Slow inactivation (SI) of Na+ channels had a mono-exponential onset with tau on between 0.86 and 2.33 s (n = 3). Steady-state SI was half-maximal at -43.8 mV and had a slope of 14.4 mV (e-fold)-1. Recovery from a 2 s conditioning pulse was bi-exponential and voltage dependent; the slow time constant ranged between 0.45 and 2.5 s at voltages between-128 and -68 mV. 6. The experimentally determined parameters of SI were adequate to simulate slow cumulative adaptation of spike firing in a single-compartment computer model. 7. Persistent Na+ current, which was recorded in whole-cell configuration during slow voltage ramps (35 mV s-1), also underwent pronounced SI, which was apparent when the ramp was preceded by a prolonged depolarizing pulse.
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PMID:Slow inactivation of Na+ current and slow cumulative spike adaptation in mouse and guinea-pig neocortical neurones in slices. 873 96

1. Voltage-gated ionic currents were recorded from cells of an immortalized neuroepithelial cell line named V1. The cell line was produced by insertion of the temperature-sensitive tsA58 allele of the SV40 large T-antigen into embryonic day 14 mouse hypothalamic cells. V1 cells display a mixed immature neural-glial phenotype and have two phenotypes, round and flat. 2. Recordings from round V1 cells demonstrate voltage-gated Na+ and K+ currents (n = 297), while no voltage-gated currents were observed in flat V1 cells (n = 45). Voltage-gated currents were recorded from cells cultured at both permissive and restrictive temperatures. 3. Internal Cs+ and external tetraethylammonium (TEA) were used to suppress outward currents. The remaining inward current has rapid activation and inactivation time constants which decreased as the test potential increased. In different cells, the amplitude of the peak inward current varied from about 50 pA to as large as 4500 pA (in 120 mM external Na+). The reversal potential for the inward current was close to the predicted Nernst equilibrium potential for Na+. Both the magnitude and reversal potential of the inward current were dependent on the external Na+ concentration. It is therefore considered to be a Na+ current, INa. 4. INa was found to be TTX resistant. About 5% of the INa was blocked by 200 nM TTX and 20 microM TTX fully suppressed the Na+ current. The apparent Kd for TTX blockade was estimated to be 1.49 microM. 5. The activation kinetics of INa could be described by a Hodgkin-Huxley model with an m3 variable. The time constants of activation and inactivation of INa are fast, similar to those of the TTX-resistant and TTX-sensitive Na+ currents in central nervous system neurons and glial cells. 6. The divalent and trivalent cations Cd2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Zn2+ and La3+ shifted the activation of INa to more positive potentials and decreased the maximal conductance in a dose-dependent manner. The apparent Kd values for blockade of the INa by Cd2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Zn2+ and La3+ were 430, 3500, 1900, 83 and 202 microM, respectively. 7. The addition of phorbol myristate acetate, an activator of protein kinase C, consistently produced a reduction in the amplitudeof INa without affecting the time course of activation or inactivation. 8. INa in V1 cells expresses a unique combination of voltage and time kinetics and sensitivity to blockade by TTX and cations. We hypothesize that this Na+ current may be expressed transiently during development of the central nervous system at the stage of development represented by the V1 cell line.
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PMID:A novel tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium current from an immortalized neuroepithelial cell line. 874 76

CD30(Ki-1) positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a distinct entity, in which the monoclonal antibody-positivity against the CD30(Ki-1) antigen of tumour cells has a diagnostic value. The histological subtypes of ALCL show also certain clinical differences. Except for some pediatric cases and cutaneous forms clinical outcome is very unfavourable despite of the various treatment methods. In this prospective study (follow-up of 11-60, median 16 months) clinicopathological data and treatment results of fifteen adult patients with ALCL were analysed, Mean age was 46 (16-69) ys with a bimodal tendency and a distinct female: male ratio (3:2) was observed. Early clinical stages (I-II/A-B, eight patients) dominated, and two main groups could be distinguished histologically (Hodgkin-related, ALCL-HR and common type, -CT in eight and seven patients), respectively. In all histological specimens CD30 antigen expression was detected. Additional immunophenotyping was performed in five cases (two 0-variant, two of B-cell and one of T-cell origin), respectively. A bulky disease, mainly in the mediastinum was observed in six cases, and a primary gastrointestinal localization in two other patients. In the treatment of these high grade malignant lymphomas a combination of cobalt irradiation and aggressive chemotherapy was applied (in elder the CHOP-regimen, in younger patients mainly the Pro-MACE-Cyta-BOM-protocol). In one relapsed younger patient autologous bone marrow transplantation was also performed. A complete or partial remission was achieved in thirteen patients (86.6%) but six patients expired after only a short response period to therapy. Overall survival was 19, whilst disease-free survival revealed to be 15 months. Eight of their living nine patients have a durable complete remission. Due to residual mediastinal mass after radiotherapy in three cases a permanent radiological follow-up is needed. Advanced age and clinical stages are considered to be unfavourable, whilst histological subtypes were indifferent prognostic factors, as well. Favourable results in therapy and durable complete remission in younger patients are probably caused by the their better tolerance of third-line aggressive chemotherapy.
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PMID:[Anaplastic large cell lymphoma based on our clinicopathological cases]. 917 73

1. The effect of extracellular K+ on membrane currents of bull frog (Rana catesbeiana) taste receptor cells (TRCs) was investigated by the patch clamp and fast perfusion techniques. Extracellular K+ (2.5-90 mM) increased a TRC resting conductance and enhanced both inward and outward whole-cell currents. 2. To isolate the inward current activated by external potassium (PA current), TRCs were dialysed with 110 mM NMGCl while extracellular NaCl was replaced with NMGCl. Under these conditions, the PA current displayed an S-shaped current-voltage (I-V) curve in the -100 to 100 mV range. Extracellular Rb+ and NH4+, but not Li+, Na+ or Cs+, evoked similar currents. 3. The PA current reversal potential (Vr) did not follow the equilibrium K+ potential under experimental conditions. Therefore, K+ ions were not the only current carriers. The influence of other ions on the PA current Vr indicated that the channels involved are permeable to K+ and H+ and much less so to Na+, Ca2+ and Mg2+. Relative permeabilities were estimated on the basis of the Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation as follows: PH:PK:PNa = 4000:1:0.04. 4. All I-V curves of the PA current were nearly linear at low negative potentials. The slope conductance at these voltages was used to characterize the dependence of the PA current on external K+ and H+. The slope conductance versus K+ concentration was fitted by the Hill equation. The data yielded a half-maximal concentration, K1/2 = 19 +/- 3 mM and a Hill coefficient, nH = 1.53 +/- 0.36 (means +/- S.E.M.). 5. The dependence of the mean PA current and the current variance on the K+ concentration indicated a rise in the open probability of the corresponding channels as extracellular K+ was increased. With 110 mM KCl in the bath, the single channel conductance was estimated at about 6 pS. Taken together, the data suggest that extracellular K+ may serve as a ligand to activate specific small-conductance cation channels (PA channels). The mean number of the PA channels per TRC was estimated as at least 2000. 6. Extracellular Ba2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Ni2+ and Cs+ blocked the PA current in a potential-dependent manner. The PA current was blocked by Cs+ as quickly as the blocker could be applied (approximately 15 ms). The time course of the divalent cation block was well fitted by a single exponential function. The time constants were estimated at 26.5 +/- 1.9, 41.7 +/- 3.1, 56.1 +/- 4.2 and 370 +/- 18 ms at 1 mM Cd2+, Co2+, Ni2+ and Ba2+, respectively. The blocker efficiency at negative voltages followed the sequence: Cs+ > Cd2+ > Ba2+ > Ni2+ > Co2+. 7. The data indicate that protons and divalent blockers act within the PA channel pore and that H+ and the divalent ions probably act via similar mechanisms to affect the PA current. These observations and the strong pH dependence of the PA current Vr suggest that H+ occupation of the PA channel pore leading to interruption of K+ flux is the main mechanism of the pH dependence of the PA current. 8. Extracellular K+ enhanced the sensitivity of isolated TRCs to bath solution acidification due to activation of the PA channels. With 10 mM K+ in the bath, half-maximal depolarization of the TRCs was observed at pH values of 6.4-6.8. The possible role of the PA channels in sour transduction is discussed.
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PMID:Extracellular K+ activates a K(+)- and H(+)-permeable conductance in frog taste receptor cells. 951 2

Improving the quality and accessibility of radiation care in the United States has been the primary objective of the Patterns of Care Study (PCS) since its inception. While patient care has two components, technical and interpersonal, the PCS has only studied the quality of technical care. Such assessments of technical quality of radiation oncology, which are representative of the United States as a whole, virtually do not exist outside those of the PCS. The methodology used by the PCS to assess quality in radiation oncology is based on an examination of structure, process, and outcome. Structural elements identified by the PCS to be associated with inferior quality include the use of a Cobalt 60 unit with surface-to-skin distance (SSD) </=80 cm, definitive treatment without the use of a simulator, and facilities with a part-time radiation oncology practitioner (usually a general radiologist) as chief. Process and outcome surveys conducted by the PCS have resulted in major findings related to quality of acre in prostate cancer, cervical cancer, Hodgkin's disease, and seminoma, which findings are reviewed elsewhere in this issue. The results of the PCS process and outcome findings related to quality of care for larynx, tonsil, anterior two thirds of the tongue and the floor to mouth, breast, endometrium, rectum, and palliation of bone and brain metastases and locally advanced lung cancer are reviewed here. The PCS has provided useful information on quality that has aided in standards development and in radiation oncology practice accreditation. Currently, the PCS is examining the patterns of care of minorities and the penetration of the results of clinical trials into national practice and is collaborating with the American College of Surgeons in studying the treatment of early-stage breast cancer. It is crucial that the PCS, rather than the government or health maintenance organizations (HMOs), be a leader in the evaluation of quality as the PCS represents a well-organized, experienced effort to provide professional guidelines for radiation oncology based on well-established methodology and unencumbered by political or shareholder concerns.
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PMID:Quality Assessment in the USA: How the Patterns of Care Study Has Made a Difference. 1071 9

The authors describe the case of male patient of 46 years old, which was diagnosticated with 4 cancers of different localization and histopathological types in the course of 6 years. In chronological order these 4 neoplazias were: the Hodgkin's disease with mixed cellularity, the malign parieto-frontal right meningioma, a Grawitz renal tumor and a lung adenocarcinoma with bilateral lung and pleural metastasis. For both cerebral and renal tumors the patient was given a surgical treatment and for the Hodgkin's disease and lung cancer given chemotherapy and cobalt therapy.
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PMID:[Multiple primary cancers with different localizations and histologic types. Clinical case]. 1470 2


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