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

Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) is observed in people suffering from severe anemia of prolonged duration and appears to be a compensatory mechanism for disturbed medullary hematopoiesis. The hemoglobinopathies (such as thalassemia, spherocytosis, and sickle cell disease), neoplastic diseases such as leukemia and lymphoma, and others, including myelofibrosis and osteitis fibrosa cystica, are associated with EMH. These diseases and their resultant anemia have in common the ability to stimulate erythropoietin production, which in turn may stimulate hematopoiesis in organs of mesenchymal origin. The liver and spleen are the most common sites of EMH; however, other sites, including the falx cerebri, thoracic cavity, retroperitoneal area and pelvis have been reported. When present, intrathoracic EMH is most frequently associated with thalassemia. Spinal cord compression and hemothorax have also been reported as complications of intrathoracic EMH.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic intrathoracic extramedullary hematopoiesis: a report of three cases. 262 Nov 1

Granulocytic sarcoma (GS) usually occurs during the course of, or as a presenting sign of myelogenous leukemia. Rarely it is found before peripheral blood or bone marrow evidence of leukemia is present. We describe a man who presented with low back pain and lower extremity weakness. He had spinal cord compression due to GS without evidence of leukemia. Only four such instances have been previously reported. Such aleukemic presentations of GS are frequently misdiagnosed. The chloroacetate esterase stain and electron microscopy are useful in demonstrating the myeloid origin of GS cells. GS lesions are probably best treated by localized radiation therapy and systemic chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Granulocytic sarcoma presenting as an epidural mass with cord compression. 292 90

The data for 19 patients with solitary plasmacytoma of the spine were reviewed with regard to clinical course and prognosis (median follow-up, 96 months). Eight patients presented with spinal cord compression. A monoclonal immunoglobulin was initially detected in seven of 15 evaluable patients. Treatment included radiotherapy (18 of 19) and/or surgery (11 of 19) and chemotherapy (eight of 19). Spinal cord compression was reversed in every patient. The expected survival rate was 85% at 10 years after diagnosis. Local recurrence or dissemination was observed in 13 patients. It occurred within 5 years of diagnosis in 11 patients and was localized (that is, local recurrence or single bone metastasis) in eight patients. It was always associated with the appearance or an increase of the M component. Dissemination frequently had a "metastatic" pattern with no diffuse bone marrow plasmacytosis. The incidence of local recurrence (five patients) and leukemia (four patients) was high. Local recurrence and/or dissemination were significantly more frequent in patients with the M component at diagnosis than in those without it (P less than 0.05; relative risk, R = 4). The effectiveness of surgery and chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy is also discussed.
...
PMID:Solitary plasmacytoma of the spine. Long-term clinical course. 334 31

In a series of 116 patients with hairy cell leukemia at the Ohio State University, followed for over 20 years, several unusual presentations and complications were encountered. The awareness of these unusual findings might be of help to investigators in the prompt diagnosis and treatment of this disease. The patients presented had, at the time of initial diagnosis, spontaneous rupture of spleen, cryptococcal meningitis, massive splenomegaly with hairy cell infiltration with normal peripheral blood and bone marrow examination, and marked leukocytosis. Some patients developed unusual complications during the course of their illness, such as gastric submucosal infiltration by hairy cells with secondary protein-losing enteropathy, spinal cord compression with paralysis, esophageal perforation with fistula tract, and massive ascites and pleural effusion with typical hairy cells present in the ascitic and pleural fluid.
Leukemia 1987 Apr
PMID:Unusual presentations and complications of hairy cell leukemia. 366 49

We previously reported that urokinase (uPA) is produced by the human prostate cancer cell line, PC-3, and could function as a growth factor for cells of the osteoblast phenotype. To examine the role of uPA in metastasis to the skeleton and to extraskeletal sites, we have developed a homologous model of uPA overexpression in a rat prostate cancer cell line. Full length cDNA encoding rat (r) uPA was isolated and subcloned as a 1.4-kilobase XbaI-BspHI fragment in the sense and antisense orientation into the Moloney murine leukemia retroviral vector pYN. The control (pYN) and experimental (pYN-ruPA, pYN-ruPA-AS) plasmids were transfected into Dunning R 3227, Mat LyLu rat prostate carcinoma cells. Experimental clones expressing at least 5-fold higher (pYN-ruPA) or 3-fold lower (pYN-ruPA-AS) than controls were selected, and control and experimental cells were inoculated into the left ventricles of inbred male Copenhagen rats. Animals were sacrificed at timed intervals to examine the evolution of metastatic lesions. Control animals developed metastases to the lumbar vertebrae resulting in spinal cord compression and hind limb paralysis at 20-21 days postinoculation. Animals inoculated with cells overexpressing uPA developed hind limb paralysis significantly earlier (by day 14-15 postinoculation). Additionally, more widespread skeletal (ribs, scapula, and femora) metastases were seen. Serum from experimental animals showed a progressive elevation in alkaline phosphatase levels, and histological examination of lumbar metastases revealed markedly increased osteoblastic activity over that observed in control animals. In contrast to this, animals inoculated with cells underexpressing uPA developed hind limb paralysis significantly later (days 25-29 postinoculation) and displayed decreased tumor metastasis. These studies support a role for the catalytic domain of uPA in enhancing both skeletal and nonskeletal prostate cancer invasiveness and are consistent with a role for the growth factor domain of uPA in mediating an osteoblastic skeletal response.
...
PMID:Urokinase overproduction results in increased skeletal metastasis by prostate cancer cells in vivo. 816 83

The prognosis for the child with cancer has improved dramatically over the past decades. With this success comes the need for recognition and proper treatment of emergencies. Respiratory or circulatory failure may arise from compression of the SVC or airway. Epidural spinal cord compression by tumor may lead to irreversible paraplegia or urinary incontinence if intervention is not rapid. Raised intracranial pressure may be a life-threatening presentation of a brain tumor. Bone marrow failure, with anemia and thrombocytopenia, is associated with malignant infiltration of the marrow. Hyperleukocytosis carries a high risk of thrombotic events if not treated promptly. Coagulation abnormalities are seen in many childhood cancers at the time of diagnosis. Life-threatening metabolic abnormalities are observed at presentation in children with leukemia and lymphoma. Hypercalcemia, although rare, may be a difficult situation to correct. Immediate attention to these emergencies and appropriate treatment may save the life of a child with cancer or make his or her subsequent course just a little smoother.
...
PMID:Oncologic emergencies. 928 86

Although cancer has an annual incidence of only about 150 new cases per 1 million U.S. children, it is the second leading cause of childhood deaths. Early detection and prompt therapy have the potential to reduce mortality. Leukemias, lymphomas and central nervous system tumors account for more than one half of new cancer cases in children. Early in the disease, leukemia may cause nonspecific symptoms similar to those of a viral infection. Leukemia should be suspected if persistent vague symptoms are accompanied by evidence of abnormal bleeding, bone pain, lymphadenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly. The presenting symptoms of a brain tumor may include elevated intracranial pressure, nerve abnormalities and seizures. A spinal tumor often presents with signs and symptoms of spinal cord compression. In children, lymphoma may present as one or more painless masses, often in the neck, accompanied by signs and symptoms resulting from local compression, as well as signs and symptoms of systemic disturbances, such as fever and weight loss. A neuroblastoma may arise from sympathetic nervous tissue anywhere in the body, but this tumor most often develops in the abdomen. The presentation depends on the local effects of the solid tumor and any metastases. An abdominal mass in a child may also be due to Wilms' tumor. This neoplasm may present with renal signs and symptoms, such as hypertension, hematuria and abdominal pain. A tumor of the musculoskeletal system is often first detected when trauma appears to cause pain and dysfunction out of proportion to the injury. Primary care physicians should be alert for possible presenting signs and symptoms of childhood malignancy, particularly in patients with Down syndrome or other congenital and familial conditions associated with an increased risk of cancer.
...
PMID:Recognition of common childhood malignancies. 1077 55

Tropical spastic paraparesis/human T-cell leukemia type I-associated myelopathy (TSP/HAM) is caused by a human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I) after a long incubation period. TSP/HAM is characterized by a chronic progressive paraparesis with sphincter disturbances, no/mild sensory loss, the absence of spinal cord compression and seropositivity for HTLV-I antibodies. The pathogenesis of this entity is not completely known and involves a multivariable phenomenon of immune system activation against the presence of HTLV-I antigens, leading to an inflammatory process and demyelination, mainly in the thoracic spinal cord. The current hypothesis about the pathogenesis of TSP/HAM is: 1) presence of HTLV-I antigens in the lumbar spinal cord, noted by an increased DNA HTLV-I load; 2) CTL either with their lytic functions or release/production of soluble factors, such as CC-chemokines, cytokines, and adhesion molecules; 3) the presence of Tax gene expression that activates T-cell proliferation or induces an inflammatory process in the spinal cord; 4) the presence of B cells with neutralizing antibody production, or complement activation by an immune complex phenomenon, and 5) lower IL-2 and IFN-gamma production and increased IL-10, indicating drive to a cytokine type 2 pattern in the TSP/HAM subjects and the existence of a genetic background such as some HLA haplotypes. All of these factors should be implicated in TSP/HAM and further studies are necessary to investigate their role in the development of TSP/HAM.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of tropical spastic paraparesis/human T-cell leukemia type I-associated myelopathy. 1110 90

Malignant myeloid blast cells may occasionally form a solid mass in tissues outside the haemopoietic system. These tumours are known as chloromas or granulocytic sarcomas. Chloromas occur most commonly in the context of acute myelogenous leukaemia but, rarely, they occur in the absence of other haematological disease, and may be misdiagnosed as lymphoma. A case of a previously well 35-year-old woman presenting with rapidly progressive triplegia caused by a paraspinal and extradural cervical chloroma with no evidence of bone marrow or other haematological involvement is described. Few cases of spinal cord compression caused by chloroma in otherwise healthy patients have been reported. Morphological features of myeloid differentiation, histochemistry and immunohistochemistry, may all aid in rapid diagnosis and allow early and appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Spinal chloroma presenting with triplegia in an aleukaemic patient. 1152 46

Carcinomatous meningitis (CM) is clinically less common than brain metastasis or spinal cord compression, having dire consequences for both the quality of life and the overall survival of patients with solid tumors. It occurs in about 5% of all adult cancer patients, but autopsies may double this number. If leukemia and lymphoma are excluded, most cases are due to breast cancer, lung cancer and melanoma. In this report, we describe a 49-year-old male patient with metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma who developed carcinomatous meningitis. To our knowledge, this is only the second case of carcinomatous meningitis secondary to a pancreatic carcinoma described so far.
...
PMID:Carcinomatous meningitis as a clinical manifestation of pancreatic carcinoma. 1184 55


1 2 Next >>