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)

A strong association exists between cigarette smoking and several diseases namely, cancer of the lung, bronchitis and emphysema, cancer of the larynx, oral cavity and oesophagus, gastric and duodenal ulcers, Crohn's disease, cancer of the bladder, coronary artery disease, macrocytosis, polycythaemia, leukaemia, etc. This is due to the harmful constituents of cigarette and other modalities smoking. Smokers not only harm themselves but also harm those around. Foetal malformations, abortions, stillbirths, prematurity and low birth weight are common in smoker mothers. These are the effects of passive smoking. There is no safer cigarette in the market even by lowering its harmful constituents. Mass education about the hazards of smoking with emphasis on complete stoppage of smoking is the only way to prevent its rising incidence.
...
PMID:Hazards of smoking. 194 Apr 6

Of 99 children in the Royal Blind School, Edinburgh (which serves Scotland and part of N E England), 15 had optic atrophy (hydrocephalus 4, intracranial haemorrhage 2, prematurity 2, fetal distress 2, birth asphyxia 2, cerebral atrophy 1, cardiac arrest during hernia operation 1, and leukaemia 1). Fourteen had congenital cataract, 12 congenital retinal aplasia (Leber's congenital amaurosis) and 11 retinopathy of prematurity. There were small numbers in many other diagnostic categories, including three with non-accidental head injury. Mental retardation, spasticity, and nystagmus were frequent other correlates in all diagnostic categories. 'Very probably hereditary' was a conservative attribution in 36, while 'probable' seemed appropriate for 12-that is, almost 48% were hereditary. Only about 11 cases might have been prevented through genetic counselling, which testifies to the frequency of autosomal recessive hereditary disease, although no parents were consanguineous.
...
PMID:Blindness in schoolchildren: importance of heredity, congenital cataract, and prematurity. 365 73

We treated eight children, aged 7 weeks to 17 years, for lung abscess. Each abscess followed an episode of aspiration or a bacterial pneumonia. Associated conditions were leukemia, congenital immune deficiency, endocarditis, cerebral palsy, and prematurity. Seven of the 8 children had polymicrobial infections, usually containing both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. The success of medical treatment by antibiotics and chest physiotherapy was age related; 3 of the 8 children, aged 10 to 17 years, recovered on this regimen, whereas five children, aged 7 weeks to 7 years, required catheter drainage or resection for cure. Drainage by catheter pneumonostomy was performed for solitary peripheral bacterial abscesses. A large intercostal catheter was inserted into the cavity, either operatively or percutaneously. Wedge resection was performed for multiple, central, or fungal abscesses. Pneumonostomy was curative in 3 of 4 children. One chronic abscess recurred after pneumonostomy and required resection. Wedge resection was curative in the two children who came to thoracotomy; lobectomy was not necessary. Although all eight children recovered from their lung abscesses, three of them died within a year of sepsis. Lung abscess today occurs in immunocompromised children who are vulnerable to fatal infections. Chest physiotherapy is unlikely to achieve good drainage in children under 7 years of age. Medical failures can be identified within the first week of treatment. Early and aggressive surgical treatment is indicated in such children, and may be lifesaving.
...
PMID:Drainage of pediatric lung abscess by cough, catheter, or complete resection. 373 40

Five hundred ninety-three nonstress tests were performed on 41 obstetric patients, at gestational ages ranging from 20 to 40 weeks. Diagnoses included 10 cases of prematurity, six cases of diabetes mellitus, five cases of collagen-vascular disease, five cases of poor obstetric history, three cases of cardiac arrhythmia, and one case each of asthma, polyhydramnios, leukemia, nonimmune fetal hydrops; and eight volunteers were without high-risk factors. All neonates had a 5-minute Apgar score greater than 8; 29 neonates weighed greater than or equal to 2500 gm, 12 weighed less than 2500 gm, and four weighed less than 1500 gm. One neonate died of prematurity, and one was small for gestational age. There were no congenital anomalies. There was a significant difference in the number of reactive nonstress tests and nonreactive nonstress tests between the 20- to 24-week, 24- to 28-week, 28- to 32-week, and 32- to 36-week gestational age groups. The increased incidence of nonreactive nonstress tests at earlier gestational ages may have clinical implications.
...
PMID:The relationship of the nonstress test to gestational age. 390 68

A 4-year study of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteraemia was carried out at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH) in Enugu, Nigeria. The average age of the patients was 14.7 years. Thirty-three per cent of the patients were between 0-6 months of age, with males being in the majority. Underlying factors/diseases were present in 70.8% of patients, with prematurity, chronic suppurative otitis media and leukaemia being the major ones in infancy and childhood and diabetes mellitus, urogenital disorders and head injuries in adults. Overall mortality was 50% and highest (16.6%) in the 0-6 months age group. Antipseudomonas antibiotics are extremely costly and therefore beyond the financial scope of many people in the developing world. In Nigeria aminoglycosides are the best affordable antibiotics.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteraemia in Enugu, Nigeria. A review of 24 cases. 855 39

Isolated fungal soft-tissue infections are uncommon but may cause severe morbidity or mortality among transplant recipients and other immunosuppressed patients. Twelve immunocompromised patients illustrating three patterns of infection were treated recently at the Duke University Medical Center. These groups comprised (I) locally aggressive infections, (II) indolent infections, and (III) cutaneous manifestations of systemic infection. Patient diagnoses included organ transplant, leukemia, prematurity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Time from immunosuppression to biopsy ranged from 5.5 to 31 weeks. Organisms included Aspergillus, Rhizopus, Fusarium, Paecilomyces, Exophiala, and Curvularia. Patients presented with necrotic ulcerations or nodules. Surgical treatment ranged from radical debridement to excisional biopsy to none. Antifungal chemotherapy also was employed in some cases. The mortality rate was 33 percent, two patients dying without evidence of fungal infection. Six of the eight survivors cleared their infections. Necrotic skin lesions with surrounding erythema in this population call for prompt examination, biopsy, and culture. Group I lesions mandate radical excision with rapid intraoperative microscopic control and systemic antifungal medication. Group II requires surgical control with or without antifungal therapy. Group III requires systemic antifungal therapy for metastatic infection. In our opinion, treatment of fungal soft-tissue infection should be tailored to infection type and requires a team approach of surgeon and expert infectious disease consultation.
...
PMID:Soft-tissue fungal infections: surgical management of 12 immunocompromised patients. 864 22

Available information on organochlorines and the chronic effects of exposure to them are set out. Organochlorinated compounds are the most persistent pesticides and can be found in all ecosystems. Although they are generally efficient in pest control, they are also a potent environment pollutant and can provoke health problems in man. The evidences of the carcinogenic potential of organochlorines are controversial and insufficient, but they have been related to an increase in the incidence of some kinds of tumors, such as leukemia and solid tumors. Reproductive effects, due to anti-androgenic and estrogenic action, on embryonic virilization, the incidence of abortion and the frequency of prematurity, have also been observed. The accumulation of the organochlorines in the adipous tissue is positively correlated to the increase in aging and could be implicated in the development of aging diseases, such as Parkinson's disease. The effects of pesticides on human health have not yet been completely elucidated. Genotoxicity is one of the most serious of the possible harmful effects caused by these compounds and calls for special attention in view of the irreversible nature of the process and to the long latency associated with its manifestation.
...
PMID:[Delayed effects of organochlorine pesticides in man]. 987 30

This study is a retrospective investigation to determine the species of yeasts causing fungemia in a university hospital in Saudi Arabia during the years 1991-2000. A total of 189 episodes of fungemia were encountered, of which 121 (64%) occurred during 1991-1995, whereas only 68 cases (36%) were found between 1996 and 2000. Overall, 50.3% episodes were due to Candida albicans including five episodes of C. dubliniensis, followed by C. tropicalis (27%), C. parapsilosis (7.9%), C. glabrata (7.4%), C. krusei (3.2%), C. famata (1.0%); 3.2% were due to other species, namely Blastoschizomyces capitatus, Hansenula anomala, Rhodotorula rubra, and Trichosporon beigelii. The percentage of episodes of fungemia caused by C. albicans ranged from 36.4% in 1991 to 71.4% in 2000, revealing an increase in recent years. The incidence of non-C. albicans fungemia decreased from 63 (33.3%) during the first 5 years (1991-1995) to 31 (16.4%) episodes during the second 5 years. Moreover, no fungemia due to C. glabrata and C. krusei were observed during the last 3 years. Overall, during the years of the study, a decreasing incidence of yeast fungemia was observed. Fungemia occurred more frequently in patients with leukemia (24%), prematurity (16%), postsurgery (10.6%), and lymphoma (9.5%). Patients with respiratory infections and preterm infants more often had C. albicans fungemia, whereas C. tropicalis predominated in patients with hepatic disorders and leukemia. The study reports for the first time the involvement of C. dubliniensis in yeast fungemia occurring in Saudi Arabia.
...
PMID:The yeast species causing fungemia at a university hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, during a 10-year period. 1295 Aug 97

The first successful transplantation of umbilical-cord blood (CB) was performed in 1988 to treat a boy with Fanconi's anemia, using CB from his HLA full-matched sister. A few years later, CB transplantation (CBT) was also performed in an adult recipient, however major obstacles still prevent a wider application of CBT in this age group. The principle limiting-factor is the low numbers of nucleated (NC) and CD34+ cells available for transplantation compared to a typical bone marrow (BM)/peripheral blood (PB) allograft, resulting in a lower engraftment success as well as delayed hematopoietic recovery with its characteristic complications, including infections and transplant related mortality (TRM). Other problems include uncertainty regarding potency and efficacy of graft versus leukemia (GvL)/tumor effects in this kind of transplant, considering the reduced graft versus host disease (GvHD) manifestations and immunologic prematurity. These subjects are reviewed with orientation to technical methods directed to improve CB grafts and graft engineering.
...
PMID:Unrelated and related cord blood banking and hematopoietic graft engineering. 1525 67

Over the last decade, increasing evidence of cognitive functions of the cerebellum during development and learning processes could be ascertained. Posterior fossa malformations such as cerebellar hypoplasia or Joubert syndrome are known to be related to developmental problems in a marked to moderate extent. More detailed analyses reveal special deficits in attention, processing speed, visuospatial functions and language. A study about Dandy Walker syndrome states a relationship of abnormalities in vermis lobulation with developmental problems. Further lobulation or volume abnormalities of the cerebellum and/or vermis can be detected in disorders as fragile X syndrome, Downs's syndrome or William's syndrome. Neuropsychological studies reveal a relation of dyslexia and attention deficit disorder with cerebellar functions. These functional studies are supported by structural abnormalities in neuroimaging in these disorders. Acquired cerebellar or vermis atrophy was found in groups of children with developmental problems such as prenatal alcohol exposure or extreme prematurity. Also focal lesions during childhood or adolescence such as cerebellar tumour or stroke are related with neuropsychological abnormalities, which are most pronounced in visuo-spatial, language and memory functions. In addition, cerebellar atrophy was shown to be a bad prognostic factor considering cognitive outcome in children after brain trauma and leukaemia. In ataxia teleangiectasia, a neurodegenerative disorder affecting primarily the cerebellar cortex, a reduced verbal IQ and problems of judgment of duration are a hint of the importance of the cerebellum in cognition. In conclusion, the cerebellum seems to play an important role in many higher cognitive functions especially in learning. There is a suggestion that the earlier the incorrect influence the more pronounced the problems.
...
PMID:The cerebellum in cognitive processes: supporting studies in children. 1778 20


1 2 Next >>