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)

The direct fluorescent antibody technique was used for detection of "specific" antigen in leukocytes of cattle with different forms of leukomia. Using fluorescein isothicoyanate-labeled immunoglobulins from colosterum of cows hyperimmunized with leukocyte mass from cattle with acute leukemia (hemocytobastosis), the "specific" antigen was detected in the cytoplasm of lymphoid and myeloid cells of animals with this and other forms of leukemia. This antigen was not detected in nuclear cells of the peripheral blood wither in normal animals or in animals with non-leukemic diseases (brucellosis, tuberculosis, various helminthic diseases) accompained by qualitative and quantitative changes in the blood similar to those leukemia.
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PMID:[Detection of specific antigen in the white blood cells of cattle with leukemia by a direct fluorescent antibody method (author's transl)]. 5 98

Medical histories of themselves and their first-degree relatives were obtained from parents of 82 leukaemic children (54 acute lymphoblastic (ALL), 28 acute myeloblastic (AML)) and from control couples matched for age. The possibility of a primary familial immunological abnormality as an aetiological factor in childhood leukaemia was suggested by binding some infections significantly more frequently reported in parents than in controls, but more strongly supported by the finding of a significantly (P less than 0.02) increased prevalence of disorders associated with autoimmunity (but not of other conditions such as peptic ulceration, infective hepatitis, tuberculosis or malignancy) amongst members of ALL families compared to those of controls. Analogy with Down's syndrome and the strain of NZB mice, in which diminished T-cell function is associated with autoimmune disease and lymphoid neoplasia, is discussed. Varicella and herpes zoster occurred respectively in 2 ALL mothers during their pregnancies involving the patients and in none of the other 388 pregnancies here reported. This supports previous evidence that antenatal varicella infections may be of aetiological importance in some cases of ALL.
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PMID:Family studies in acute leukaemia in childhood: a possible association with autoimmune disease. 28 5

The results of a retrospective autopsy study of 115 adult patients with haematological or lymphoreticular malignancies or who had undergone transplantation procedures, are presented. The overall incidence of infection was 65%, 123 infections being detected in 75 patients. The bulk of the infections involved the gastro-intestinal and respiratory systems, other systems being considerably less frequently affected. Patients who had received allografts and subsequent immunosuppression had the highest incidence of viral inclusions, especially cytomegalovirus. Candida infections were more common than aspergillosis, and severe fungal infections were most frequent in patients with acute leukaemia who had been treated aggressively. The only other mycosis detected was cryptococcosis. Bacterial pneumonia was the most frequent infection over-all (36%). Tuberculosis, pyelonephritis and Pneumocystis pneumonitis were also encountered.
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PMID:The incidence of infections in compromised patients at Groote Schuur hospital. An autopsy study. 34 75

The risk factors for radiation induced cancer (no dose threshold) given by UNSCEAR and ICRP are discussed. Under the (uncertain) supposition of the validity of these values for the roentgendiagnostic the number of cases induced by the mass screenings (VRRU) are estimated (lung and breast cancer, leukaemia). For 30 radiophotofluorographs of the thorax per person during the whole life there may be induced about 180 cancer of the lung, 5 of the breast and 27 leukaemias each year. These numbers are compared with the cases per year of lung tuberculosis and lung cancer found by VRRU. The connection between the cases of cancer and the irradiation cannot be validated statistically.
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PMID:[On the problem of radiation damage caused by roentgenography of the thorax (author's transl)]. 43 28

A study of 3451 cholesterol determinations in different diseases was carried out. The mean cholesterol levels for male and female adults and children with different diseases were compared with values for their healthy counterparts. Sickle cell anemia, leukemia, liver cirrhosis, hepatosplenomegaly, tuberculosis, and diabetic, nutritional, ataxic, and tropical neuropathies in male and female adults were associated with reduced cholesterol level while in children malnutrition and anemia were the main causes of low cholesterol levels. Obesity and hypertension caused an elevated level but the mean values were within the range for adult Nigerians in the high income group. Only nephrotic syndrome in both adult and children was associated with a markedly increased cholesterol level in Nigerians of low income status.
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PMID:Serum cholesterol and diseases in Nigerians. 50 76

The value of splenectomy is assessed from diagnostic and therapeutic viewpoints in a series of 80 patients with various syndromes marked by hypersplenia. In the congestive type of splenomegaly, splenectomy resulted in complete normalization of the blood picture in all cases but one, and in primary splenic congestion it even proved curative in the majority of the cases. In leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, in myelofibrosis, and first of all in immuncytopenia, splenectomy was also of benefit, and had generally a palliative effect in non-autoimmune hypersplenia as well. In non-haematological syndromes associated with hypersplenia, namely, splenic tuberculosis, Boeck's sarcoid, SLE, haemorchromatosis and splenic vein thrombosis, splenectomy had generally a palliative, and combined with other therapeutic measures, a curative effect, depending on the primary disease. In a number of patients with hypersplenia associated with splenomegaly, it was only with the aid of splenectomy that the primary disease could be diagnosed.
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PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of splenectomy in syndromes associated with hypersplenia. 52 25

In the Tri-State Leukemia Survey, the history of diseases in 605 adult male leukemia cases 15 years and older and in 668 adult male population controls was examined. These diseases occurred at least 1 year before leukemia was diagnosed. The data were based on respondents' answers that the disease was diagnosed by a physician; the respondent was either the subject or his spouse. Of 30 diseases studied, 7 showed an excess among the patients with leukemia: infectious hepatitis, eczema, psoriasis, diabetes, arthritis and rheumatism, heart disease, and ankylosing spondylitis. Mumps had a lower reported occurrence among the cases, whereas pneumonia was less frequent in acute lymphatic cases than in population controls. Three diseases occurred significantly less in controls than in persons with specific histologic types of leukemia. Our data revealed a more frequent history of herpes zoster (shingles) in chronic lymphatic leukemia, more hives in acute chronic myeloid cases, and meningitis in acute myeloid leukemia. When we only considered the patients' responses, more of them admitted having had acne than did our controls. The remaining diseases--childhood viral diseases, infectious mononucleosis, smallpox, typhoid fever, dysentery, scarlet fever, tuberculosis, asthma, hay fever, and goiter did not occur more frequently in cases than in controls. The findings were consistent with evidence from previous laboratory and clinical studies. The increased occurrence of infectious hepatitis in our case series is consistent with the findings of other studies showing an increased frequency of Australia antigen in patients with hepatitis, leukemia, and Down's syndrome.
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PMID:Epidemiology of diseases in adult males with leukemia. 99 1

Four cases of leukaemoid reactions to tuberculosis, notwithstanding the presence of Auer's rods in the myeloblasts, have previously been reported. A fifth case of disseminated tuberculosis in which Auer's rods were similarly observed, is described. However, we believe that this association does not mean that Auer's rods occur as part of a leukaemoid response, but rather that it indicates the simultaneous presence of acute leukaemia and tuberculosis.
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PMID:Leukaemoid reaction and disseminated tuberculosis. A case report. 106 Jan 80

A non-concurrent prospective study was made on deaths from cancer and other causes occurring among 2,675 male workers at a metal refinery from 1949 to 1971. The expected number of deaths computed by applying age- and cause-specific death rates of Japanese males to these workers was compared with the observed number of deaths. Among 839 copper smelters, significantly increased mortalities were noted for lung cancer (SMR = 1,189) and colon cancer, but nor for cancer of the stomach, liver (primary) and biliary passages, pancreas and skin or for leukemia, tuberculosis, cerebrovascular diseases, heart diseases and liver cirrhosis. A dose-response relationship was demonstrated between the mortality from lung cancer and the degree of exposure. A very high excess mortality from lung cancer (SMR = 2,500) was seen among copper smelters who were considered to have been most heavily exposed to arsenic or workers who had engaged in sintering and blast furnace operations for 15 years of more before 1949. The latent period of lung cancer was 37.6 years on average, and not related to level of exposure. Twenty-six of 29 deaths from lung cancer among copper smelters occurred after they had left the refinery. Other production workers and clerical workers showed no significant excess mortality from any kind of cancer.
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PMID:A cohort study on mortality from cancer and other causes among workers at a metal refinery. 125 55

Between January, 1982, and January, 1992, a total of 112 patients with adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) and 109 patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) were admitted to our hospital. They were studied for their infectious complications. Infectious complications were seen in 90 patients (80.4%) with ATL, and 51 patients (46.8%) with NHL (p < 0.001). Documented infections were seen in 70 patients (62.5%) with ATL, and 30 patients (27.5%) with NHL (p < 0.001). Pneumonia (p < 0.005), skin infections (p < 0.05), Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (p < 0.05), fungal infections (p < 0.05), cytomegalovirus infections (p < 0.05) and herpes simplex virus infections (p < 0.01) were identified infections at high risk for patients with ATL. Tuberculosis, listeriosis and salmonella infections were seen only in patients with ATL.
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PMID:[Infectious complications in patients with adult T-cell leukemia]. 129 24


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