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)

Remarkable differences were observed when 1,465 healthy Caucasian individuals and 128 healthy Negro individuals were compared for the genetic distribution of 25 different HLA antigens. Caucasians had a significantly higher frequency of A1, A3, B8, and Bw16, and Negroes of A28 and Aw30. The haplotype which had the highest incidence as well as the greatest positive linkage disequilibrium was A1-B8 among Caucasians and A2-B12 among Negroes. Genetic distance between the two races was 0.0592. The 89 Caucasian patients with renal failure did not demonstrate any significant deviations in phenotype frequencies (PF) of various antigens, when compared with healthy Caucasians; however, 48 similar Negro patients had twice as high an incidence of Bw17 as the healthy Negroes. No significant deviation in PF was observed in 77 Caucasian patients who had leukemia; however, 32 Caucasian patients who had back pain (24 also had back stiffness) due to spondylitic, arthritic or disc syndrome, had a significant increase of Bw16 and of B27, and a decrease of B12, when compared to Caucasian controls.
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PMID:The HLA polymorphism and susceptibility to disease. 96 89

A 16-year-old boy is reported in whom back pain, due to localised osteoporosis and partial collapse of a lumbar vertebra, drew attention to unsuspected acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. The patient responded promptly to induction therapy, his symptoms disappeared, and he is presently in the maintenance programme. The skeletal lesion continues to heal slowly. Attention is drawn to this unusual presentation of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, and the importance of bone-marrow examination in the study of unexplained cases of osteoporosis is emphasised.
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PMID:Vertebral rarefaction in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 105 60

Abdominal and back pain has until now been reported as a first sign of severe varicella in immunocompromised children only. We report two adult leukemia patients in whom these symptoms preceded visceral dissemination of varicella infection. Recognizing that this syndrome may occur in adult patients is of clinical importance, since it allows early diagnosis and treatment of the infection.
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PMID:Unusual onset of severe varicella in adult immunocompromised patients. 153 15

We reviewed 63 cases of cytologically confirmed leptomeningeal metastases (LM). 31 (49%) had solid tumors 17 (27%) had leukemia and 15 (24%) had lymphoma. The most common presenting symptom was pain (76%) with radicular discomfort (58%), headache (32%), neck or back pain (17%). The predominant neurological signs were mental status abnormalities (49%), weakness (47%), seizures (14%). The mode of presentation varied with tumor type. Patients with leukemia (18%) and lymphoma (13%) tended to present frequently with LM without systemic involvement, or during periods of apparent remission (leukemia 35%, lymphoma 27%), while patients with solid tumors had established systemic metastases (90%) at time of presentation. Laboratory studies did not vary among the groups. 71% had positive cytology on the first lumbar puncture (LP) and only 8% required more than 2 LPs. The cell count was a poor predictor of positive cytology as 29% of LP's with positive cytology and 36% of all LP's had less than 4 cells/mm. We conclude that 1) LM presents with pain and seizures more frequently than has been previously recognized; 2) LM is frequently the mode of presentation in patients with leukemia and lymphoma and; 3) cytology is positive frequently in CSF specimens with normal cell counts and chemistries.
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PMID:Leptomeningeal metastases: comparison of clinical features and laboratory data of solid tumors, lymphomas and leukemias. 208 37

Ureteral calculi were found in 5 children who were receiving or had recently completed remission induction therapy for acute leukemia or lymphoma. All 5 patients had abdominal or back pain and 3 had gross hematuria. The diagnosis of urolithiasis was suggested by excretory urograms that showed obstructive uropathy (4 patients) and by computerized tomography scans that demonstrated ureterovesical obstruction (1 patient with acute renal failure and anuria). With a single exception the calculi were not associated with urinary tract infections. Chemical analyses in the 2 patients tested indicated that the stones were composed of calcium, in contrast to the uric acid and xanthine compositions of stones in earlier studies of patients with leukemia or lymphoma. Factors that might have predisposed our patients to calculi formation include corticosteroid therapy, immobilization owing to bed rest and urinary alkalization. Other possible contributing factors were urinary stasis (2 patients) and a familial tendency for renal calculi to develop. There was no evidence of idiopathic hypercalciuria in either patient tested. Prompt detection of urolithiasis in children undergoing induction chemotherapy for a malignant disease may avoid potentially serious consequences from urinary tract obstruction.
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PMID:Urolithiasis in childhood acute leukemia and nonHodgkin's lymphoma. 346 63

Back pain due to vertebral changes as early feature of acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) in childhood has been infrequently reported. There are 8 previously described patients with similar clinical and laboratory data, suggesting a biologically unique subset of ALL. Characteristic findings of this rare primary manifestation of leukemia are lack of significant organomegaly or lymphadenopathy, normal or low white blood cell count with predominance of lymphocytes and rarely circulating lymphoblasts, normal platelet count, uric acid and lactate dehydrogenase values. In the following report we make a further attempt to confirm the hypothesis of a subset of ALL, demonstrating two additional patients with characteristic features of ALL presenting with vertebral changes and low leukemic burden.
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PMID:[Changes in the vertebrae as an initial symptom of leukemia]. 347 11

Acute leukemia of childhood may present with various clinical manifestations that mimic orthopaedic conditions. The osseous radiographic abnormalities of this disease, although well described in the literature, are not pathognomonic, and certain changes may not be as frequent as was previously thought. In a retrospective study, we reviewed the cases of 107 patients, less than eighteen years old, who had been seen at the Winnipeg Children's Hospital. The mean follow-up was 4.6 years for the fifty-eight patients who were still alive and 2.0 years for the forty-nine non-survivors. In twenty-two (20.6 per cent) of the patients, the presenting complaints were pain in the extremities, back pain, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, or fracture. The radiographic abnormalities, which were present in forty-seven (43.9 per cent) of the children at the time of diagnosis, were osteopenia, lytic lesions, metaphyseal bands, periosteal new bone, and sclerotic lesions. Since the initial symptoms of leukemia commonly involve the musculoskeletal system, a high index of suspicion must be maintained by orthopaedic surgeons.
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PMID:Orthopaedic manifestations of leukemia in children. 395 74

Three patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) in relapse were treated with intravenous infusions of one or more purified murine monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) specific for differentiation antigens on normal and malignant myeloid cells. Three of the MoAbs used were IgM immunoglobulins that react with glycolipids, while the fourth, an IgG2b, reacts with a protein antigen. Peripheral blood leukemia cell counts decreased significantly, but transiently, during treatment. Evidence of in vivo binding of each MoAb to leukemia cells was obtained, although two of the four MoAbs could not be detected in the plasma following infusion, perhaps due to circulating blocking factors. Antigenic modulation was not encountered in these studies. However, the induction of human antibody to murine MoAb was observed in one patient who was treated over a 70-day period. Toxicities encountered were minimal and included fever (3 patients), back pain (1 patient), and arthralgias and myalgias (1 patient). This is the first reported clinical trial of (1) IgM MoAbs, (2) MoAb therapy in patients with AML, (3) combinations of MoAbs directed toward different myeloid differentiation antigens, and (4) MoAbs directed to glycolipids. The relative lack of toxicity and the positive effects of MoAb treatment in the reduction of leukemia cell counts permit the continued study of more innovative approaches to the treatment of AML with MoAbs.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to myeloid differentiation antigens: in vivo studies of three patients with acute myelogenous leukemia. 660 73

Six patients are presented with chronic granulocytic leukaemia in whom sciatica and back pain developed. Within a few months of the onset of the symptoms other manifestations of acceleration of the disease became manifest and all patients subsequently died. Radiological evidence of bony infiltration was noted in two patients and post-mortem evidence of infiltration in a further two patients and it is suggested that the development of sciatica may herald the terminal stage of the disease.
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PMID:Sciatica in CGL: a sign of transformation. 694 58

Hypercalcemia in adult T-cell leukemia has been attributed to increased levels of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D), whereas in other types of leukemia, hypercalcemia has been blamed on direct skeletal invasion by malignant cells, ectopic parathyroid hormone (PTH) production or bone-resorbing cytokines. A 51-year-old man was studied who presented with back pain, circulating myeloblasts, and hypercalcemia. The bone marrow revealed acute myeloblastic leukemia. While the ionized calcium concentration was 8.17 mg/dL (normal, 4.73 to 5.21 mg/dL), the levels of PTH, PTH-related peptide, vitamin D, and thyroxine were normal or subnormal. Bone histomorphometry showed a decreased cortical width with intracortical erosion cavities dissecting into the marrow space. In cancellous bone, the osteoid area, osteoblast perimeter, and tetracycline fluorescence were sparse, whereas the osteoclast perimeter was increased. Persistent marrow fat, the general absence of trabecular narrowing, and the prompt response to calcitonin suggest that the osteoclasts caused the hypercalcemia and lytic lesions, rather than pressure atrophy or osteolysis by leukemic infiltration. Osteoclast activation and subsequent hypercalcemia may have been due to a locally produced cytokine, such as interleukin-1 beta or tumor necrosis factor.
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PMID:Case report: hypercalcemia in acute myeloblastic leukemia is caused by osteoclast activation. 812 79


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