Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A child with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia complicated by prolonged gastrointestinal and skin haemorrhages due to profound thrombocytopenia finally died of thrombotic occlusions of major cerebral arteries due to mucormycosis. Biopsy of any suspect lesion is needed urgently before prolonged therapy with amphotericin B is started. So far there have been no cures in childhood.
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PMID:Congenital rubella associated with hypsarrhythmia. 18 87

A case of subcutaneous localized mucormycosis infection which developed following intramuscular (IM) injection of corticosteroid in a patient with leukemia is presented. Aggressive treatment, which included wide local excision, systemic amphotericin-B, and chemotherapy for the leukemia, resulted in eradication of the infection and complete healing of the wound. A review of the literature revealed nine other patients with the localized subcutaneous form of mucormycosis (excluding patients with burns and rhinocerebral types) and six of those nine patients also survived the infection. It is possibly the mildness of the underlying predisposing factors that allows some of these patients to contain the infection at a single site. It is apparent from review of the literature that in subcutaneous localized forms of mucormycosis, the outcome has been generally good. This contrasts sharply with other clinical forms of mucormycosis infections where the underlying predisposing factors are usually severe and any kind of therapeutic approach has been almost always futile. Subcutaneous mucormycosis infection differs clinically and histopathologically from subcutaneous localized entomophthoromycosis which is seen predominantly in tropical countries. An attempt is made to clarify the terminology of these interesting fungi in language that is taxonomically up-to-date and still useful to clinicians.
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PMID:Localized mucormycosis following intramuscular corticosteroid. Case report and review of the literature. 27 63

Phycomycoses are opportunistic fungal diseases as far as mucormycosis is concerned, but for basidiobolomycosis and entomophthoromycosis, the adjective 'opportunistic' should be used with caution. Mucormycosis assumes cranial, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, disseminated, cutaneous and focal forms: the infection nearly always develops in a person whose resistance is lowered by a metabolic disorder, a blood dyscrasia, corticosteroid or immunodepressive therapy. It is a frequent complication in leukemia or diabetic acidosis. Basidiobolomycosis and entomophtoromycosis are caused by fungi which belong to the order, Entomophthorales. They are characterized in tissue by broad hyphae which are surrounded by eosinophilic material. These mycoses are treated by potassium iodide.
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PMID:[Phycomycoses]. 48 89

A 52-year-old man with mild diabetes and acute stem cell leukaemia developed an orbitofacial mucormycosis. Cultures showed the fungus to be Rhizopus oryzae. Vigorous treatment with amphotericin B and other bactericidal and bacteriostatic antibiotics for a concurrent sepsis failed to suppress the infections, and the patient died. On post-mortem examination characteristic haematoxylin-staining, broad, aseptate fungal hyphae were found in the right eye, orbit, and lung. A striking and unusual feature of this case is the presence of brightly birefringent crystals within the severely degenerated eye. These were found by histochemical staining and x-ray diffraction studies to be calcium salts of fatty acids, apparently liberated from necrotic adipose tissue of the orbit.
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PMID:Orbitofacial mucormycosis with unusual pathological features. 50 83

Pulmonary mucormycosis in an ill patient with poorly controlled chronic lymphocytic leukemia was diagnosed with open lung biopsy without excision. He improved on medical management and became ambulatory. At autopsy one year later, no residual mucormycosis was present. Better control of leukemia and more specific antimicrobial therapy are discussed as potentially important factors in patient management.
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PMID:Pulmonary mucormycosis: another cure. 87 62

A child with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia complicated by prolonged gastrointestinal and skin haemorrhages due to profound thrombocytopenia finally died of thrombotic occlusions of major cerebral arteries due to mucormycosis. Biopsy of any suspect lesion is needed urgently before prolonged therapy with amphotericin B is started. So far there have been no cures in childhood.
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PMID:Multiple major cerebral artery thromboses with profound thrombocytopenia in acute leukaemia. 106 86

Mucormycosis is an opportunistic infection that has been mainly described in adults with preexisting disease affecting immune status, eg, diabetes, leukemia, lymphoma, and renal failure on peritoneal dialysis. Few cases have been described in neonates. The presentation of mucormycosis as a cause of neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis is an unusual phenomenon. Three fatal cases of mucormycosis of the gut in premature infants in the period 1990 to 1991 are described. It is not clear whether this should be considered a separate disease or a variant of necrotizing enterocolitis. All three patients died soon after laparotomy from septic shock and the histological diagnosis of mucormycosis was made too late for effective chemotherapy.
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PMID:Mucormycosis of the neonatal gut: a "new" disease or a variant of necrotizing enterocolitis? 150 Oct 34

Rhizopus oryzae was the causative organism in a fatal case of rhinocerebral and then pulmonary mucormycosis in a patient cured of her underlying leukaemia by bone marrow transplantation. We discuss the risk factors involved and the need for maintaining a high index of suspicion of fungal infection in the late post-transplant period.
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PMID:Rhinocerebral mucormycosis following bone marrow transplantation. 154 20

Mucormycosis is a rare opportunistic fungal infection of immunosuppressed patients. We describe here 5 cases of mucormycosis: three with facial and eye involvement, one with lung involvement and one affecting skin and joints. All five patients had underlying diseases: diabetes, leukemia, lymphoma, neoplasia and AIDS. Four patients were treated with amphotericin B and also with surgical debridement. Infection could be controlled only in two patients. Both survived but with major sequelae. In two additional patients, death was directly related to the infection and the remaining patient was lost to follow-up.
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PMID:[Infection by Mucorales fungi]. 180 50

Mucormycosis is a rare infection that occurs in immunocompromised patients. The rhinocerebral form presents in diabetics as a severe necrotizing sinusitis and is not frequent in patients with haematologic malignancies. Diagnosis requires direct examination and culture of biopsy specimens. Two patients with rhinocerebral mucormycosis and haematologic neoplasms (Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and acute myeloblastic leukaemia) are described. Both patients had severe drug-induced neutropenia when the infection appeared. One patient died in spite of aggressive treatment with surgery and amphotericin.
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PMID:[Rhino-cerebral mucormycosis and hematological neoplasia]. 186 53


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