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)

Increasing evidence has accumulated that the direct assay of reverse transcriptase in human blood cells is of value in the diagnosis of leukaemia. The isolation and characterization of this enzyme has shown that it possesses remarkable similarities to the DNA-polymerase of the RNA-tumour virus of simian sarcoma. Hence, leukaemic cells in humans are thought to possess a virus-related gene, namely, reverse transcriptase. Various clinical reports have established the presence of this enzyme in blood cells, not only in the case of morphologically-proven malignant change, but also in cases classified as non-leukaemic from the morphological picture, such as acute leukaemia in remission and in the pre-leukaemic state. In confirmation and augmentation of earlier views we now report on the presence of reverse transcriptase in a patient with pancytopenia, who subsequently developed acute leukaemia i.e. isolation of the enzyme occurred in the pre-leukaemic state.
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PMID:[New polymerase gene in pancytopenia (author's transl)]. 6 82

The levels of N-acetyl-neuraminic acid were determined in patients with preleukemic states, acute micromyeloblastic leukemias and pancytopenias. A statistically significant increase of NANA was found in patients with micromyeloblastic leukemia in comparison with preleukemic states and pancytopenias. A significant rise in the NANA level was observed in preleukemic states in comparison with pancytopenia of other origins. The assay of the NANA level may be employed as a sensitive biochemical test for differential diagnostics of these diseases.
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PMID:N-acetyl-neuraminic acid (NANA) serum level in the diagnostics of preleukemic states, acute micromyeloblastic leukemias and pancytopenias. 7 19

Over a 4-year period 203 patients with various types of leukaemia were treated by the Haematology Unit at the Johannesburg Hospital. Ten of them were suffering from the condition known as hairy-cell leukaemia or leukaemic reticulo-endotheliosis. They were all men, and ranged in age from 29 to 67 years (mean 56 years). The majority presented with pancytopenia, and there was invariably splenomegaly, while lymphadenopathy was rare. Hairy cells were identified microscopically in the peripheral blood of 7 patients and in 5 the specific cytochemical marker, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, was present. In addition, in a further 2 patients this feature, which was not identified in the peripheral blood, was found in the splenic cells. The bone marrow trephine biopsy specimens characteristically showed extensive lymphoid infiltration associated with a dense disordered deposition of reticulin fibres. Electron microscopical and immunological studies proved to be of doubtful diagnostic value. Splenectomy was carried out on 9 patients, and there was tumour involvement in all the spleens removed. Two patients died from septicaemia, the one before splenectomy and the other 9 months after the operation. The 8 remaining patients have had their subjective symptoms alleviated and their peripheral blood indices have been improved by splenectomy, and none has required further treatment for periods now ranging from 7 to 41 months.
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PMID:The diagnosis and management of hairy-cell leukaemia. 8 70

Published data on Japanese leukemia patients with a preleukemic hematological disorder were assessed. The reexamined cases were from the "Japona Centra Revuo Medicina" reported during the period from 1952 to 1971. Among preleukemic hematological disorders, hypoplastic anemia was the most frequently reported (41 of 62 cases). These "hypoplastic preleukemia" patients were rather elderly and terminated mostly in atypical myelocytic leukemia. The chief hematological feature of the hypoplastic preleukemia cases was the coexistence of a relative erythroid hyperplasia and a slight increase of myeloblasts in the bone marrow that was unusual in hypoplastic anemia. The presence of pancytopenia and hypocellular marrow with a relative erythroid hyperplasia combined with a slight increase of myeloblasts probably indicates hypoplastic preleukemia that terminates later in acute leukemia.
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PMID:Preleukemia: hematological disorders prior to onset of leukemia. 13 44

The clinical and morphological characteristics of Shwachman's syndrome (exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, pancytopenia, skeletal changes) were observed in a boy who, at the age of 8 years, developed a juvenile form of chronic myeloic leukemia which did not respond to cytostatic treatment. Autopsy revealed a striking lipomatous atrophy of the pancreas, defects in the ossification zones of the bones and marked dwarfism. In addition there was leukaemic infiltration of the pancreas, the spleen, the liver and the lymph nodes. The association of Shwachman's syndrome with leukaemia is a rare, but remarkable complication of this entity because of its relationship to the preceeding pancytopenia. Thorough follow-up of the haematological status of patients with Shwachman's syndrome is recommended.
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PMID:Shwachman's syndrome and leukaemia. 16 96

Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), Fanconi anaemia (FA), ataxia telangiectasia (AT) and Bloom disease (BS) are four rare autosomal recessive disorders in which there is defective DNA repair and/or chromosome instability and proneness to malignancy. Between 80 and 90% of patients with XP have a defect, demonstrable at cell level, of excision of DNA lesions induced by ultraviolet rays, while the remainder have a cellular error of post-replication repair. XP cells are also deficient in repairing DNA damage caused by a variety of chemical mutagens. There are at least five different complementation groups of the first, or classical, type of XP (A to D, etc.) Apparently group C patients, as well as those with defective post-replication repair, do not show the progressive neurological illness found in a proportion of the other patients. AT is heterogeneous clinically and genetically. Clinically it presents with a progressive neurological illness, progressive telangiectases and a developmental disorder of the thymus. AT is characterized by sensitivity to X-rays and AT cells are unable to repair gamma-ray-induced damage to bases in the DNA. It appears that in many cases of the disorder a chromosomally marked cellular clone is found. In BS the main defect, which results in growth retardation, sun-induced lesions of the face and susceptibility to infection, appears to be a slow DNA chain maturation during DNA synthesis. An increase of sister chromatid exchanges is characteristically seen in the chromosomes of cultured BS cells. In FA, in which there is progressive pancytopenia with eventual bone marrow exhaustion and a tendency to haemorrhage and infection, the cellular defect seems to consist of faulty removal of repair of cross-links in the DNA. In this condition, as in BS and AT, various structural chromosome changes are detected in cultured cells. Patients with XP develop skin cancers in early life and often maligant melanomas. In the other three disorders, in which an immune deficiency is often present, leukaemia and related proliferative disorders are a frequent cause of death while other malignancies also occur. There is some evidence that points to an increased risk of malignancy in heterozygotes who carry the FA and AT genes.
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PMID:DNA repair defects and chromosome instability disorders. 25 77

Three patients with aplastic anaemia following chloroquine therapy are described. In two, chloroquine had been administered in large doses over a long period. One of them subsequently developed acute myeloblastic leukaemia. The third received only a small dose and pancytopenia with aplasia followed three weeks after ingestion of the drug. The mechanism(s) of chloroquine-induced marrow injury is not known. A parallel to chloramphenicol-induced blood dyscrasias is drawn, but remains unproved.
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PMID:Aplasia and leukaemia following chloroquine therapy. 27 9

A 54 year old woman presented with acute lymphocytic leukemia. Following an initial response to chemotherapy with vincristine and prednisone, progressive pancytopenia developed coincident with intense bone marrow infiltration by abnormal histiocytes. At autopsy two months later, no evidence of leukemia was found, but the bone marrow was replaced by abnormal histiocytes showing active erythrophagocytosis, consistent with histiocytic medullary reticulosis. Detailed morphologic, ultrastructural and histochemical studies performed throughout the course of the patient's illness served to confirm the transition from leukemia to histiocytosis. Four similar cases of acute lymphocytic leukemia terminating in histiocytic medullary reticulosis have been reported. This association may represent a distinct clinicopathologic syndrome.
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PMID:Development of a histiocytic medullary reticulosis-like syndrome during the course of acute lymphocytic leukemia. 27 70

Serum lysozyme activity has been determined in patients suffering from myeloproliferative diseases, chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML), acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML), chronic lymphatic leukaemia (CLL) and pancytopenia (P). Lysozyme activity was tested in undiluted and tenfold diluted sera. Increased lysozyme activity was found in patients with CML and CLI, whereas there was no change in patients with AML and P. Dilution of sera enhanced lysozyme activity. These data may indicate the presence of inhibitor in the sera tested. The diagnostic significance of the presented findings is discussed.
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PMID:Serum lysozyme activity in some myeloproliferative diseases. 27 10

Heterogeneous clinical features of inherited hemolytic anemia due to pyruvate kinase (PK) deficiency were observed in three related homozygous patients. Erythrocytes were separated into old and young cells by means of density-layer centrifugation using a new supporting medium: Stractan-Urografin gradients. Those fractions containing older RBC disclosed defective PK which resulted in an impaired metabolism. Following an intake of chloramphenicol the clinical course of one female family member converted to acute monocytic leukemia. Thus, the report of a PK instability trait, in one family member associated with pancytopenia which converted in leukemia, suggests that inherited red cell enzyme deficiency might be also an expression of the vulnerability of the hematopoietic stem cells.
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PMID:[Inherited hemolytic anemia due to pyruvate kinase deficiency: II. Density-layer centrifugation of erythrocytes (author's transl)]. 28 28


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