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)

Diabetes insipidus (DI) is a rare complication of leukaemia. An association between monosomy 7 and DI in leukaemias has been proposed. We present a case of Ph1-positive CML who developed polyuria at the time of lymphoid blast transformation associated with loss of chromosome 7. Biochemical results were not diagnostic of DI and a therapeutic trial of DDAVP was unsuccessful. Post-mortem showed a peripituitary and renal leukaemic infiltrate and although DI is a possibility, the cause of his polyuria remains unresolved.
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PMID:A patient with monosomy 7 and polyuria. 163 85

We describe a patient who, at the onset of acute myelomonocytic leukemia, presented with marked polyuria, polydipsia and laboratory findings consistent with diabetes insipidus (DI). He was treated with vasopressin (DDAVP) with a good response and concurrently induced with daunorubicin and conventional doses of cytosine arabinoside. CR was achieved. The vasopressin requirement decreased progressively, but the patient remained DDAVP-dependent after consolidation treatment. He underwent allogeneic BMT, conditioned with busulfan and cyclophosphamide. By day 15 after BMT vasopressin was no longer required and at a follow-up of 9 months the patient has no evidence of DI. In the absence of specific findings, we think it possible that he had leukemic microinfiltration of the hypothalamic-pituitary area. The drugs used for conditioning may have eradicated CNS disease.
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PMID:Recovery from diabetes insipidus associated with AML after a BMT conditioning regimen including busulfan. 843 67

We report a case of AML with diabetes insipidus (DI). A 68-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of fever and leukocytosis. The WBC was 197,000/microliter with 98% blasts positive for myeloperoxidase, CD33, CD34 and HLA-DR. While, on admission, urine volume was more than 6 liters daily. Blood vasopressin level was 0.3 microgram/ml. The patient was diagnosed as having AML with DI. By chemotherapy consisting of BHAC, DNR, 6-MP and PSL and intrathecal administration of AraC, MTX and PSL, and nasal drip of DDAVP, complete remission was attained and the urine volume was reduced to normal. Finally DDAVP became unnecessary. Although the exact cause of DI cannot be ascertained, rapid increase of leukemic blasts and leukostasis in small vessels might be associated with hypothalamus-pituitary system damage. Reportedly, DI is a rare complication of leukemia and administration of DDAVP could be halted in only two patients with leukemia and DI.
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PMID:[Acute myelogenous leukemia with diabetes insipidus without desmopression administration by anti-leukemic chemotherapy]. 858 72

To report an unusual case of leukemia presenting as both bilateral exudative retinal detachment (ERD) and central diabetes insipidus (DI), we evaluate the clinical hematological records including bone marrow aspirations and CSF tapping, both osmolarity and electrolytes concentration of the serum and urine, brain MRI, fundus photographs and fluorescein angiographs in this 25-year-old female patient. Examinations of peripheral blood and bone marrow aspiration confirmed the diagnosis of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML-M0). Fluorescein angiography (FA) revealed bilateral ERD, dense choroidal leukemia cell infiltration with overlying retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) dysfunction and focal areas of choroidal infarction. Changes in both osmolarity and electrolytes concentration of the serum and urine from vasopressin test supported the diagnosis of central DI. Central DI and ERD may be presenting signs of acute leukemia and both may represent CNS involvement. In our case, dense choroidal leukemic cell infiltration results in devitalization of RPE and choroidal infarction. Leukemic disruption of hypothalamic pituitary area may lead to complete or partial deficiency of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). Rapid improvement in visual acuity and partial symptom relief of DI may ensue from appropriate chemotherapy and nasal DDAVP (1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin) supply.
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PMID:Acute leukemia presenting as diabetes insipidus and bilateral exudative retinal detachment--a case report. 1148 47

A 45-year-old male was diagnosed as having myelodysplastic syndrome (RAEB) in March 2001. He was admitted to our hospital because of cellulitis in his left lower limb in May. The blood cell count showed pancytopenia and immature myeloid cells were seen in the peripheral blood. Bone marrow aspiration showed the proliferation of myeloblasts (11.2%) and complex karyotypic abnormalities were detected including the long arm deletion of chromosome 7. The patient developed polyuria and polydipsia after admission and was diagnosed as having central diabetes insipidus. He was treated with DDAVP and the polyuria disappeared. In November, he underwent unrelated allogeneic bone marrow transplantation after conditioning with total body irradiation and cytarabine. After transplantation DDAVP was no longer required. Central diabetes insipidus has been reported as a rare complication of leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. The complete remission of diabetes insipidus after bone marrow transplantation suggests that the infiltration of leukemic cells into the pituitary gland caused the diabetes insipidus in this case.
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PMID:[Improvement of diabetes insipidus after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome]. 1282 6