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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Different HT have been studied with the electron microscope and the findings compared to those in the literature. Five patients with thrombasthenia and three with Willebrand's diseases showed various disorders, usually anisocytosis and hypertrophic open canalicular system, in relation to regenerative states. Thirteen young children with 21-trisomy (2 with
leukemia
) and 13/15 trisomy (1 case) had enlarged platelets with abnormalities of membranes and vacuoles indicating some metabolic disorders and necrotic lesions. One child with
Cooley's anemia
showed a few granules and necrotic lesions. All these symptoms were related to regenerative or primitive megakaryocytopathias. The lesion of these latter cell appears in other HT: aberrations of membranes in giant platelets syndroms (J. Bernard and J. P. Soulier syndrome), disorders in membranes and/or granules in thrombopenic thrombopathias, the short platelet life span in May-Hegglin anomaly, storage pool disease in Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome. Finally the ultrastructural abnormalities of the platelets mainly help to distinguish several diseases of megakaryocytes.
...
PMID:[Megakaryocytes and platelets in congenital thrombopathies]. 13 24
One hundred consecutive patients with hemoglobin concentration less than 3.5 g/dL (hematocrit reading, less than 10%) were admitted to the University of Baghdad Teaching Hospital, Iraq, during a 30-month period. Twenty-eight patients had aplastic anemia, 27 had
leukemia
or other hemopoietic malignancies, 16 had chronic renal failure, eight had iron-deficiency anemia, eight had hemolytic anemia, seven had
thalassemia major
, and six had other conditions. Twenty-three patients died within seven days of admission, mostly due to the underlying disease or complications thereof. Heart failure developed in ten patients, and five had retinal exudates and hemorrhages attributed to severe anemia. Arrhythmias and ECG abnormalities were noted in 20 of 68 patients. Blood transfusion was instituted in all but three patients, whose anemia was corrected with specific therapy without blood transfusion. The tolerance of the 100 patients to such severe anemia was remarkable.
...
PMID:Severe anemia. Clinical observations in 100 patients with very low hemoglobin levels. 47 23
95 splenectomies carried out at the General Surgery Division of the Busto Arsizio Circolo Hospital between 1967 and 1977 are reported. After some brief historical notes, stress is laid on those forms of primary or secondary splenopathy which are receptive to surgical intervention. Splenectomies with surgical indication (traumatic ruptures during other operations for various conditions) are distinguished from those with medical indication:
Cooley
, Werlhoff, Hodgkin, hair cell
leukaemia
, Banti. The clinical, haematological and physiopathological aspects responsible for splenic change are considered for each individual disease on the basis of personal experience.
...
PMID:[Splenectomy. Medical and surgical indications (observations on 95 cases)]. 57 14
Between 1985 and 1989, eight children underwent two successive bone marrow transplantations. The initial disease was chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in three patients, chronic myelocytic leukemia in two, acute M7 nonlymphoblastic
leukemia
in one, sickle cell anemia in one, and
thalassemia major
in one. The preparation in view of the second grafting included high-dose chemotherapy in all patients, associated with antithymocytic globulin transfusion and total nodal irradiation in three patients. Hematological recovery was similar after both graftings. Infectious complications were not more common following the second graft than after the first one. On the other hand, the rates of rejection and graft-versus-host disease were lower, probably due to a more intensive immunosuppressive therapy. The prognosis of chronic leukemia relapsing after a first graft does not seem to be improved by a second attempt.
...
PMID:Second bone marrow transplantation in eight children. 146 68
The International Bone Marrow Transplant REgistry conducts periodic surveys to determine activity in the field of allogeneic and syngeneic bone marrow transplantation. Data were reported to the IBMTR by 258 institutions in 41 countries regarding their patients who received bone marrow transplants during the period 1985-1987. To the best of our knowledge, the data represent essentially all bone marrow transplants (exclusive of autologous transplants) performed in the past 3 years. A total of 10,887 patients received bone marrow transplants; 73% were for
leukemia
, 11% for other malignant diseases, 9% for severe aplastic anemia and related disorders, 3% for immune deficiency diseases, 2% for
thalassemia major
, and 2% for genetic, metabolic, and several other rare diseases. 161 (62%) of the 258 institutions performed fewer than one transplant per month. More than 50% of the patients were transplanted in 37 institutions. 46% of the world's bone marrow transplants were performed in North America, 42% in Western Europe, 5% in Asia, 3% in Australia and New Zealand, 2% in the Mideast and Africa, 1% in South and Central America, and 1% in Eastern Europe and the USSR. The data reflect continued growth in utilization of allogeneic and syngeneic bone marrow transplantation and quantify the annual increases in the number of patients receiving transplants.
...
PMID:Increasing utilization of bone marrow transplantation. II. Results of the 1985-1987 survey. 267 6
Human T-cell
leukemia
virus (HTLV-I) is known to be associated with certain hematologic malignancies, and a related virus, HTLV-III/LAV, might be the cause of AIDS. Some persons with AIDS have had evidence of HTLV-I infection. Unrelated to these findings, it has been suggested that HTLV-I is transmitted via blood products. We therefore evaluated the serologic status to the HTLV-I core antigen p24 of 48 persons with hemophilia (Hem A) receiving factor concentrate therapy (a group at risk for AIDS), 49 persons with beta-
thalassemia major
(Thal) receiving frozen packed red blood cells therapy (FPRC), 26 patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA) receiving FPRC, and 18 persons not receiving any blood products. All participants were clinically well; only one had a risk factor other than hemophilia for AIDS, and all were from New York City, an area with a high incidence of AIDS. No Hem A or nontransfused persons had serum antibody to HTLV core p24 antigen; three with Thal and one with SCA were antibody-positive. These results were confirmed by both radioimmunoprecipitation and Western blot techniques. Positive serology did not correlate with any immune findings or quantity of blood products used. These data support that HTLV-I is preferentially transmitted through cellular blood products and that it is an infection for which cellular blood product recipients in at least some areas of the United States are at risk. Concentrate products appear free of transmission risk relative to cellular blood products, but we cannot be certain that this safety is absolute. The public health implications of blood product transmission of HTLV-I merit active, long-term investigation.
...
PMID:Human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV-I) p24 antibody in New York City blood product recipients. 299 70
Host T lymphocytes which escape the effects of chemoradiotherapy may proliferate and lead to graft rejection, particularly in recipients of T cell-depleted bone marrow (BM) allografts. We studied the efficacy of several conditioning regimens including a new immunosuppressive regimen--total lymphoid irradiation (TLI) plus conventional chemotherapy and total body irradiation (TBI)--in abrogating residual host T lymphocytes as assessed by their ability to grow in vitro. A total of 38 patients were evaluated, 29 with hematologic malignancies, six with severe aplastic anemia (AA) and three with beta-
thalassemia major
(TM), of whom 32 were transplanted with HLA-identical T cell-depleted allogeneic BM from sibling donors. The median observation period was 15 months (range 3-21) posttransplant. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) taken from each patient on the day of transplant were cultured with interleukin 2 (IL-2) + phytohemagglutinin + irradiated donors' PBMC. Survival of cells for less than 2 weeks in vitro without proliferation was observed in 20 of 29 cases with malignancies and was considered negative. In this group only two
leukemia
(L) patients rejected the graft. Limited cell growth (less than or equal to 3 weeks) was seen in four L patients, two of whom showed early graft failure. Vigorous T cell growth (greater than 5 weeks, 62-96% CD4+ cells) was noted in eight cases (two L, four AA, two TM; none received TBI). In this group, sustained engraftment was observed in 7/7 patients who were treated with cyclosporin A (CSA) post grafting. Overall, we could demonstrate no clear correlation between graft failure and cell growth in vitro. The proliferating cells exhibited considerable cytotoxic activity in vitro against several tumor cell lines and were susceptible to pharmacological doses of CSA. The low incidence of continuous T cell proliferation in vitro in PBMC of L patients suggests that a combination of TLI, TBI and cyclophosphamide (CY) is highly effective in abrogating the host T cells and subsequent graft rejection. Since a rather small number of patients was included in this study, further studies are needed to determine the possible value of the in vitro T cell proliferation assay as a means for predicting graft failure.
...
PMID:Preliminary characterization of functional residual host-type T lymphocytes following conditioning for allogeneic HLA-matched bone marrow transplantation (BMT). 304 77
Marrow transplantation is effective treatment for a number of hematological diseases in patients under the age of 50 who have an HLA-identical sibling donor. It is successful in the treatment of aplastic anemia with 70-85% long-term survival. It offers 10-30% apparent cures for patients with acute leukemia who have relapsed at least once, and for those with chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis. Although still somewhat controversial, it appears to be the treatment of choice for patients with acute nonlymphoblastic
leukemia
in first chemotherapy induced remission, and for those with chronic myelogenous leukemia in the chronic phase since approximately 50-60% of these patients experience long-term, disease-free survival. Patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia grafted in second or subsequent remission may expect a 30% "cure" of their disease. Marrow grafting is the only effective treatment for many patients with inherited immunologic deficiencies and certain genetic storage diseases. Cures of congenital Fanconi's anemia, Blackfan-Diamond anemia, osteopetrosis, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and
thalassemia major
have been achieved. Marrow transplantation is being explored for the therapy of patients with lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, preleukemia, multiple myeloma, hairy cell leukemia, small cell lung cancer, testicular cancer, ovarian cancer and neuroblastoma. Marrow transplantation has been limited by the fact that many patients do not have HLA-identical siblings and very few have monozygotic twins. More recently, marrow transplants from HLA-nonidentical family members and even from unrelated donors have been successfully explored.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Marrow transplantation: the Seattle experience. 391 47
With the advent of the era of International Space Station (ISS) and Mars exploration, it is important more than ever to develop means to cure genetic and acquired diseases, which include cancer and AIDS, for these diseases hamper human activities. Thus, our ultimate goal is to develop protocols for gene therapy, which are suitable to humans on the earth as well as in space. Specifically, we are trying to cure the hemoglobinopathies, beta-thalassemia (
Cooley's anemia
) and sickle cell anemia, by gene therapy. These well-characterized molecular diseases serve as models for developing ex vivo gene therapy, which would apply to other disorders as well. For example, the procedure may become directly relevant to treating astronauts for space-anemia, immune suppression and bone marrow derived tumors, e.g.
leukemia
. The adeno-associated virus serotype 2 (AAV2) is a non-pathogenic human parvovirus with broad host-range and tissue specificity. Exploiting these characteristics we have been developing protocols for recombinant AAV2 (rAAV)-based gene therapy. With the rAAV constructs and hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) culture systems in hand, we are currently attempting to cure the mouse model of beta-thalassemia [C57BL/6- Hbbth/Hbbth, Hb(d-minor)] by HSC transplantation (HST) as well as by gene therapy. This paper describes the current status of our rAAV-gene therapy research.
...
PMID:Developing protocols for recombinant adeno-associated virus-mediated gene therapy in space. 1269 49
Stem cell transplantation is curative in a number of otherwise fatal hematological diseases. In Pakistan, SCT was started in October 1995 at Dr Ziauddin Hospital by Dr Tahir Shamsi and his team. The first case was of a young man suffering from AML. In 1999, allogeneic BMT was started at Bismillah Taqee Institute of Health Sciences and Blood Diseases Centre, Karachi. In 2001, the Armed Forces Bone Marrow Transplant Centre, started functioning. Since then, over 350 allogeneic stem cell transplants have been carried out in these latter two centers. Another 50 autologous procedures were carried out in all centers. In 2004, a third center started transplants at the Aga Khan Hospital. The main indications for transplant are aplastic anemia, beta-
thalassemia major
and hematological malignancies. HLA-identical sibling donors provide stem cells for the recipient. In 70% of cases, a matched donor is identified. In sharp contrast to the rest of the world, the majority of transplants are allogeneic, donor-recipient pairs are CMV positive and fungal infection, tuberculosis and malaria are particular problems. The early results are promising, with transplant-related mortality reported to be 10-20%, whereas long-term survival is reported to be 78, 72 and 49% in aplastic anemia, beta-
thalassemia major
and
leukemia
, respectively. Financial constraints, poor socioeconomic status, poor transfusion services, trained human resources and difficulty in keeping pace with technological advances are major hurdles in the growth of transplant medicine. Government support is badly needed to strengthen existing facilities and to develop more centers.
...
PMID:The stem cell transplant program in Pakistan--the first decade. 1872 82
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