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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the clinical effect by administration of recombinant human granulocyte-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) post chemotherapy in non-
Hodgkin
malignant lymphoma (NHL), 17 patients with NHL were subjected to this study. Administration of rhG-CSF ameliorated the decrease in absolute neutrophil counts after the cytotoxic chemotherapies and activated neutrophil functions in active
oxygen
product and expressions of adhesion proteins. To consistent with these results, rhG-CSF administrations post cytotoxic chemotherapy were effective for reducing infection complications associated with neutropenia. Furthermore, administration of rhG-CSF increased peripheral hematopoietic progenitor cells, thus suggesting promising therapeutic potential for autografting. Recently, it has been reported that blood neutrophils may synthesize mRNA and proteins important in inflammation including various cytokines such as IL-1, IL-6, TNF-alpha and IFN-alpha, but, administration of rhG-CSF showed no obvious effect on the level of either IL-1, IL-6, TNF-alpha or IFN-alpha in sera, and furthermore, the in vitro stimulation by rhG-CSF induced no significant production of these cytokines and expressions of TNF-alpha and IFN-alpha mRNAs. Finally, we studied on anti-tumor effect of administration of rhG-CSF in CDF1 mice inoculated with syngeneic lymphoma cells. rhG-CSF infusion suppressed the liver metastasis and prolonged the overall survival, thus suggesting the hypothesis that use of rhG-CSF in some patients with NHL might control the disease through stimulating both production and functional activation of neutrophils.
...
PMID:[In vivo effects on human neutrophils by administration of rhG-CSF and clinical significance]. 137 67
Eight children (1-17 yr) underwent bone marrow harvesting while in cytostatic-induced remission of their disease (leukemia [n = 6], Ewing sarcoma, and non-
Hodgkin lymphoma
). After the induction of general anesthesia, all patients were loaded with 10 mL/kg of a 6% high-molecular dextran solution (Macrodex--Pharmacia), which resulted in a significant preoperative decrease in hematocrit (Hct) from 32% +/- 6% to 28% +/- 5% (hypervolemic hemodilution) and also allowed the procedure to be performed without systemic heparinization. The blood aspirated during the harvest (24 +/- 6 mL/kg; mean +/- SD) was replaced with a solution of 6% dextran and Ringer's acetate solution, and the Hct decreased from 28% +/- 5% to a minimum of 18% +/- 3%. Immediately after the harvest, 10 mL/kg of homologous packed red blood cells was transfused, increasing Hct to 25% +/- 3%.
Oxygen
saturation in the superior caval vein (ScvO2) decreased from 79% +/- 4% before the harvest to 70% +/- 3% (P less than 0.01) at the end of it, and then increased to 74% +/- 3% after the transfusion of homologous packed red blood cells. There was a strong linear correlation between mean values for Hct and ScvO2 during the various stages (r = 0.99). Mean heart rate decreased gradually during the procedure, from 106 +/- 10 to 86 +/- 7 beats/min. There was no significant change in arterial pressure, but cardiac output measured by impedance cardiography was about 30% greater during harvesting than during undisturbed anesthesia. Pulse oximetric saturation was 99% or 100% throughout. Caval venous blood lactate and pyruvate concentrations remained within normal limits in all children.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hemodilution during bone marrow harvesting in children. 201 22
Given the high cure rate of patients with
Hodgkin's disease
, the complications related to therapy take on great significance. Mantle irradiation to the thorax is used in virtually all patients with early stage
Hodgkin's disease
. Prior studies of patients receiving mantle irradiation demonstrated short-term (up to 24 months) abnormalities of pulmonary function. In the present study, we prospectively studied 13 patients for up to 60 months after irradiation only with serial pulmonary function tests, arterial blood gas tests, diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide, chest radiographs, and ventilation-perfusion scans. No respiratory symptoms attributable to therapy were noted. Frequent radiographic changes (62%) were found consisting of apical fibrosis, paramediastinal fibrosis, or pleural thickening. Two patients developed an asymptomatic spontaneous pneumothorax that resolved with conservative management. Ventilation-perfusion scans often (73%) revealed decreased perfusion to the lung apices with associated ventilatory deficits in one-half of these patients. Patients with intrathoracic disease had decreased lung volumes prior to therapy, and lung volumes did not change following irradiation. Lung mechanics were normal throughout the study. Gas exchange at rest was normal in patients with extrathoracic disease. Patients with intrathoracic disease often presented with an abnormal arterial PO2 and widened alveolar-arterial partial pressure gradient for
oxygen
. However, these parameters normalized by 9 months after therapy. Despite the frequent development of radiographic and V/Q scan abnormalities in the lung apices, patients tolerated mantle radiotherapy remarkably well. In fact, patients with intrathoracic disease demonstrated improved gas exchange at rest following therapy.
...
PMID:Prospective study of long-term pulmonary manifestations of mantle irradiation. 221 Dec 19
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) is considered as a tumor of the lymph nodes histologically characterized by a variety of cell types, resembling a nonspecific inflammatory reaction. The Reed-Sternberg cells present in the granuloma are considered neoplastic due to cytogenetic alterations, tissue culture properties and heterotransplantability. They originate from a macrophage-derived interdigitating reticulum cell. The lymph node is an immunologic organ and its alterations reveal qualitative and/or quantitative defects of the immune system. These are observed in HD at very early stages even with a minimum of lymph node involvement. Considering HD as a neoplasm of the monocyte-macrophage system, our objective was to investigate the functional capability of peripheral blood monocytes transformed into macrophages in vitro. The phagocytic and lytic activities were evaluated by the generation of toxic
oxygen
metabolites as due to an excessive production of PGE-2. This defect could be corrected by cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors. The defect was present at very early stages of HD and persisted even during prolonged continuous complete remissions. We also found a defect in the ingestion of candida which could not be modified by drug treatment, indicating the existence of a global dysfunction of the phagocyte. Presently, more than 90% of HD patients respond to specific therapy and remain in prolonged remission, being considered "cured". This fact may contribute to the diminished number of reports in relation to the biology of the monocyte-macrophage system in this disease.
...
PMID:[The monocyte-macrophage system in Hodgkin's disease]. 264 Apr 76
Superoxide anion (O-2) is the first metabolite of the monocyte
oxygen
burst pathway, which plays an important role in the monocyte microbicidal function. The capacity of peripheral blood monocytes to produce O-2 was studied in 63 patients with
Hodgkin's disease
(31 with active disease and 32 in complete remission), 15 patients with active malignant lymphoma, and 57 normal control subjects. O-2 release was quantified by evaluating superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of cytochrome c after stimulation of monocytes with phorbol myristate acetate. Results were expressed in nanomols O-2 per mg protein per hour. O-2 production was lower than normal in patients with active
Hodgkin's disease
(163.3 v 214.5, P less than .05). It was normal in patients with
Hodgkin's disease
in complete remission (216.2 v 214.5, P greater than .05) and high in patients with malignant lymphomas (317.9 v 214.5, P less than .01). Within the group with active
Hodgkin's disease
, patients in relapse after therapy had a lower O-2 production than those previously untreated (99.8 v 181.8, P less than .01). Stage of disease was unrelated to the defect. The presence of B symptoms and a decreased delayed type hypersensitivity to recall skin test antigens were associated with normal O-2 production. The results obtained suggest that monocyte dysfunction is part of the immune dysregulation associated with active
Hodgkin's disease
. The O-2 determination is a relatively easy test to perform and may be useful in identifying the patients with
Hodgkin's disease
who have an increased risk of opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Superoxide anion (O-2) production by peripheral blood monocytes in Hodgkin's disease and malignant lymphoma. 298 22
The candidacidal activity and the production of
oxygen
radicals by monocytes were investigated in untreated and long-term remission patients with
Hodgkin's disease
(HD). Both groups showed a decreased candidacidal function of monocytes with a chemiluminescence (CL) response significantly lower and delayed with respect to normal controls. Indomethacin at 1 microgram/ml corrected the monocyte deficiency increasing the CL response to normal values and normalizing the kinetics in the untreated patients. However, in patients in remission, the peak was delayed and followed by a significant increase in the production of
oxygen
radicals compared with untreated patients. A direct linear correlation was found between the percentages of lysed Candida and maximum CL peak of stimulated monocytes. When prostaglandin E2 (PGE-2) levels, measured in supernatants of cultured mononuclear cells, were plotted against the percentages of killed Candida, an inverse linear correlation was found. Therefore, monocytes from HD patients have a dysfunction in the generation of
oxygen
radicals and a decreased candidacidal activity associated with excessive production of PGE-2. Indomethacin can correct the oxidative metabolism in the untreated patients while in apparently "cured" patients the disorder persists.
...
PMID:Dysfunction of monocytes in Hodgkin's disease by excessive production of PGE-2 in long-term remission patients. 317 26
Diffuse pulmonary infiltrates and acute respiratory compromise frequently occur in patients with cancer who are undergoing chemotherapy, and treatment remains controversial. We initiated a prospective randomized trial in 22 nonneutropenic patients to compare the efficacy of immediate open lung biopsy with that of empirical trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and erythromycin therapy with delayed open lung biopsy if no clinical improvement occurred after 4 days of therapy. Diagnoses included non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (15 patients), T-cell lymphoma (2), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (3),
Hodgkin's disease
(1), and breast cancer (1). The median age was 40 years, and fever (18) and tachypnea (13) were the most frequent signs. Median room air arterial
oxygen
tension in 18 hypoxic patients was 53 mm Hg; 19 patients had diffuse pulmonary infiltrates. Eight of the 10 patients randomized to empirical antibiotic therapy showed improvement after 4 days. The 2 patients whose condition did not improve and who underwent delayed open lung biopsy had Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. One of them did show improvement, and the other died of respiratory failure. Time to clinical resolution in the 9 surviving patients was 14 days; 4 required prolonged ventilation (longer than 24 hours). Findings for the 12 patients randomized to immediate open lung biopsy were P. carinii pneumonia in 7 and nonspecific pneumonitis in 5; there were 3 deaths related to open lung biopsy. Time to resolution in the surviving patients was 13 days for those with P. carinii pneumonia and 5 days for those with nonspecific pneumonitis; 7 required prolonged ventilation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prospective randomized study of open lung biopsy versus empirical antibiotic therapy for acute pneumonitis in nonneutropenic cancer patients. 406 96
The permeability of K channels to various cations is studied in myelinated nerve. Ionic currents under voltage clamp are measured in Ringer solution containing tetrodotoxin and a high concentration of the test ion. Reversal potentials for current in K channels are determined and used with the Goldman-
Hodgkin
-Katz equation to calculate relative permeabilities. The ratios P(Tl):P(K):P(Rb):P(NHNH4) are 2.3:1.00:0.92:0.13. No other ions are found to be measurably permeant including Li(+), Na(+), Cs(+), methylamine, guanidine, hydrazine, or hydroxylamine. The ratio P(Na)/P(K) is less than 0.01. Potassium conductance is depressed at pH values below 5.0. Leakage conductance is higher in K, Rb, Cs, NH(4), and Tl Ringer than in Na Ringer, but the selectivity sequence probably is not the same as for K channels. The hypothesis is offered that the narrowest part of the K channel is a circle of
oxygen
atoms about 3 A in diameter with low electrostatic field strength.
...
PMID:Potassium channels in myelinated nerve. Selective permeability to small cations. 454 Oct 77
The effects of methyl butyl ketone, methyl heptyl ketone and methyl pentanoate on the sodium current of the squid giant axon have been examined. The peak inward current in intact axons was reduced reversibly by each substance. Sodium currents were recorded in intracellularly perfused axons before and during exposure to the test substances and the records were fitted with equations similar to those proposed by
Hodgkin
& Huxley (1952). Shifts in the voltage dependence of the steady-state activation and inactivation parameters (m infinity and h infinity), reductions in the peak heights of the activation and inactivation time constants (tau m and tau h) and changes in the maximum sodium conductance (gNa) caused by these substances have been tabulated and compared with the effects of methyl octanoate (Haydon & Urban, 1983b). Each compound shifted the voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation parameter in the hyperpolarizing direction and that of the steady-state activation parameter in the depolarizing direction. The shifts produced by the ketones are compared with those produced by methyl pentanoate and by methyl octanoate. The possible role of an interaction between the carbonyl
oxygen
of the test substance and the sodium channel protein in producing the h infinity shift is discussed. The peak time constants are reduced and the voltage dependences of tau m and tau h are shifted in a direction commensurate with the shifts in steady-state properties. The maximum sodium conductance is not much affected either by the ketones or by methyl pentanoate. Large reductions in peak inward current coupled with little effect on gNa have been reported for the n-alkanols and other surface-active compounds (Haydon & Urban, 1983b). This lack of a large effect on gNa indicates that whatever direct interaction does take place between the test substance and the channel protein, it does not result in a blockage of the channel.
...
PMID:Anaesthetic action of esters and ketones: evidence for an interaction with the sodium channel protein in squid axons. 609 Jun 52
To examine the effect of lung inflammation on lung volumes and carbon monoxide transfer and their relationship to the ventilatory and gas exchange responses to exercise, a prospective study was performed in patients having
Hodgkin's disease
, with no evidence of intrathoracic involvement, who received prophylactic mantle-field radiotherapy to the chest. From 6 weeks to 6 months from the start of therapy, vital capacity (FVC) was on average 10.4% lower than during the baseline period and the total transfer of carbon monoxide (TLCO) was 10.5% lower. Minute ventilation (VE) at any given work load during an incremental exercise test was on average 10.5% higher than baseline. The stimulation of ventilation after radiotherapy was present at all work rates, but greater at high work rates. A number of other changes in the ventilatory and gas exchange responses to exercise were also seen. Most of these lay outside the range of variability observed in a group of normal subjects tested concurrently with the patients. There was a poor, but statistically significant, positive correlation between reduction in FVC and increase in VE after radiotherapy and between reduction in carbon monoxide transfer and increase in VE. A significant correlation between reduction in FVC and change in respiratory rate was also seen after radiotherapy, together with a significant inverse correlation between increase in respiratory rate and fall in tidal volume. The ratio of VE to
oxygen
consumption, the ventilatory equivalent for
oxygen
, was calculated at each work rate. There was a negative correlation between the mean increase in this parameter, averaged over all work rates, and the reduction in FVC and TLCO, i.e. the greatest stimulation of breathing relative to metabolic demand occurred in those patients with the least change in lung volume.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Differences in the effect of mediastinal radiotherapy on lung function and the ventilatory response to exercise. 646 40
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