Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020639 (hypoproteinemia)
1,134 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We evaluated diagnostic utility of the hematological, biochemical and serological tests comprised in the "essential laboratory tests" advocated by the Japan Society of Clinical Pathology in 1,026 new patients visiting the outpatient unit of Comprehensive Medicine, National Defense Medical College. Of 750 evaluable patients, 52 showed anemia associated with such conditions as ulcer or cancer of digestive tract, inflammatory disease, or renal failure. Leukocytosis (greater than 9,000/microliters) was found only in 25 of 112 CRP-positive (greater than 0.3 mg/dl) patients, suggesting bacterial infection. Forty-four patients showed hypoproteinemia and/or hypoalbuminemia indicating chronic conditions including liver and inflammatory disease. Elevation of serum creatinine level was found in 4 patients subsequently diagnosed with renal failure, whereas 32 patients demonstrated elevated BUN. After application of the "essential laboratory tests", 97 patients were diagnosed with hyperlipidemia (total cholesterol greater than 230 mg/dl and/or triglyceride greater than 250 mg/dl). Determination of serum enzyme activity was useful not only for the diagnosis of liver dysfunction or biliary tract disease but also for those of hematological malignancies or myogenic disorders; however, in patients with abnormal values of LDH, gamma-GT and ALP, clinical significance was not clarified in 53%, 38% and 59%, respectively. These results indicate that the "essential laboratory tests" are useful in the following aspects of primary care medicine: for (1) estimation of the degree or nature of infection or inflammatory status; (2) classification of anemia and its relation to underlying diseases; (3) evaluation of patient general condition and protein-producible function of liver; (4) evaluation of renal function; (5) ambulatory screening for metabolic diseases such as hyperlipidemia; and (6) diagnosis of liver and biliary tract diseases.
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PMID:[Laboratory tests in primary care medicine: "essential laboratory tests" (2). Usefulness of hematological, biochemical and serological tests in diagnosis of new outpatients]. 159 65

Exacerbating factors of tuberculosis were evaluated from the viewpoint of intractability of the disease including the effectiveness of chemotherapy by comparing patients with intractable tuberculosis and those with nonintractable tuberculosis. Of the patients aged 30 years or above admitted to our hospital for the initial episode of tuberculosis, 42 patients with intractable tuberculosis and 247 controls were compared. No difference was observed between the two groups in life-style factors such as smoking, drinking, and living alone or complications such as diabetes mellitus and cerebrospinal diseases. In the refractory group, a poor general condition with fever and body weight losses on admission, massive discharge of tubercle bacillus, and delayed diagnosis and treatment were frequently observed. Also, patients with a lymphocyte count of 500/mm3 or less such as those with anemia, hypoproteinemia/hypoalbuminemia, high LDH and CRP levels, and a low cholinesterase level were significantly more frequent, and resistant bacteria were detected more frequently in this group.
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PMID:[Factors for the onset of and the exacerbation of tuberculosis. 4. Clinical factors related to the onset and exacerbation of tuberculosis. b. Middle-aged and elderly patients]. 1056 36

We report a case of adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) accompanied by polycythemia vera (PV) in which rapid development of myelofibrosis and clinical features of hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) were observed at the terminal stage. The patient, a 53-year-old man who was born in Oita Prefecture, Japan, was diagnosed as having PV in 1996. He had undergone venesection but had not received any chemotherapy. In June 1997, he showed systemic lymphadenopathy with positivity for serum HTLV-1 antibody (x 10,240). Pathological findings and Southern blotting analysis for detection of monoclonal integration of HTLV-1 provirus DNA in a lymph node biopsy sample revealed that he also had acute-type ATL. Although several courses of chemotherapy were transiently effective, high fever, pancytopenia, increased serum LDH, hypoproteinemia and hyperferritinemia appeared, all of which were compatible with the clinical features of HPS. In addition, cytomegalovirus infection became evident. He died of multiple organ failure with rapid progression of myelofibrosis in May 1998. Detection of both increased CD68-positive histiocytes by immunohistochemistry and iron-stained phagocytic cells in marrow biopsy specimens appeared to be helpful for diagnosis of HPS in this patient, whose marrow showed myelofibrosis with hypocellularity.
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PMID:[Rapidly progressive fibrosis and increased CD68-positive cells in the bone marrow at the terminal stage of adult T-cell leukemia accompanied by polycythemia vera]. 1120 Nov 50