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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cytochemical and electron-microcopic studies have been carried out on leukemic monocytes and 'hairy cells' (HC), 'reticulosarcoma' (RS) cells and cells of cases of 'reticulosis' and 'reticulosarcoma cell leukemia'. Additional investigations included equantitative determinations of the urinary lysozyme excretion, skin window studies, testing of the phagocytosis of ferritin by HC, and labelling of the Fc receptors on CH at the ultrastructural level. Clear evidences against any cytological relationship among leukemic HC and monocytes have been provided. Further results argued also against the frequently stressed relationship among leukemic monocytes and RS cells. Cases of 'RS cell leukemia' and 'reticulosis' had to be reclassified as lymphosarcoma cell leukemia, acute lymphatic, and myeloblastic leukemias. Besides distinct ultrastructural differences among HC, RS cells, and lymphocytes, mainly gradual differences have been noted using cytochemical methods and by evaluating the phagocytosis of ferritin particles. A further common trait of HC, RS cells, and B lymphocytes seems to be the presence of surface Fc receptors. A more precise classification instead of the diagnosis 'reticulosarcoma' and 'reticulosarcoma cell leukemia' is required, and the use of the term 'hairy cell' leukemia is suggested stead of the misleading term 'leukemic reticuloendotheliosis'.
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PMID:Hairy cell leukemia ('leukemic reticuleondotheliosis'), reticulosarcoma, and monocytic leukemia. Cytochemical and ultrastructural investigations. 80 67

Using immunoelectron microscopy, the distribution of the H antigen sites on human erythrocytes was observed in 40 samples of adult, newborn and fetal blood of different ABO phenotypes. The attached ferritin particles indicating the H antigen sites conspicuously varied in number from cell to cell in every specimen. The number of H antigen sites per single red cell was estimated on an average for each sample as follows: O, 3 X 10(5); B, 2 X 10(5); A1, 1.5 X 10(5); A1B, 10(5); A2B, 1.5 X 10(5); Ax, 2.5 X 10(5); AxB, 10(5); Bm, 4 X 10(5); Bw(leukemia), 4 X 10(5); O(newborn), 2.5 X 10(5); B(newborn), 3 X 10(5); A1(newborn), 1.5 X 10(5); A1B(newborn), 2 X 10(5); A1B(fetus), 10(5). The cells in each sample were divided into six cell-populatons according to the number of H antigen sites present. The ratios of distribution of such cell populations are compared for all samples.
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PMID:Electron microscopic observations on the H antigen sites of human erythrocytes using ferritin antibody conjugates. 100 54

In patients with acute myeloblastic leukaemia the mean serum ferritin concentration showed a twenty-five-fold increase compared with normal people, and in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (A.L.L.) there was a thirteen-fold increase. The high concentration of circulating ferritin seemed to be related to increased synthesis by leukaemic cells. The return of serum concentrations to normal in A.L.L. patients after successful chemotherapy suggested that ferritin concentration may be a useful index of active disease and may help in prognosis.
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PMID:Serum ferritin in acute leukaemia at presentation and during remission. 105 32

The specific antiserum against a type of ferritin that is especially common to leukemia cells and the placenta was used to test, by countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis, sera from humans with various diseases. The best results were obtained with leukemia; patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blastic phase, acute myelogenous leukemia, lymphogenous leukemia, and unclassifiable juvenile leukemia frequently showed a positive reaction, but patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in static phase did not. The average incidence of positive reaction among all leukemia patients was 54.0%. Patients with other malignant tumors (i.e., multiple myeloma, malignant lymphoma and carcinomas of the stomach, rectum, and liver) also often showed a positive reaction. The average incidence of positive reaction among all the patients with malignant diseases of the hematopoietic system, except for leukemia, was 34.3%, and that among patients with nonhematologic malignant neoplasms was 36.8%. However, the incidence of a positive reaction in patients with benign diseases and healthy individuals was less than 3%.
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PMID:Antiserum against leukemia cell ferritin as a diagnostic tool for malignant neoplasms. 105 55

1. The properties of ferritin in serum have been compared with those of ferritin from a number of tissues including blood cells. On anion-exchange chromatography with DEAE-Sephadex, the behaviour of human heart ferritin is different from that of liver, kidney or spleen ferritin. Reticulocyte ferritin appears to have similar characteristics to heart ferritin. 2. Serum ferritin from normal subjects and patients with various degrees of iron load, leukaemia or liver disease all have a much lower affinity for the anion-exchange column that any tissue ferritin, suggesting a difference in isoelectric point. The elution point of serum ferritin from patients with acute myeloblastic leukaemia is significantly different from normal. 3. Density gradient centrifugation in sucrose showed that ferritin in leucocyte extracts and partially purified ferritin from the serum of two patients with iron overload behaved as apoferritin rather than the iron-rich protein. 4. The results suggest that ferritin is modified during its entry into the plasma and that even in cases of iron overload the iron content of serum ferritin may be low. The findings are of importance in considering the origin of plasma ferritin, the clearance of ferritin from plasma and its role in iron metabolism.
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PMID:The characteristics of ferritin from human tissues, serum and blood cells. 116 59

A procedure is described using antigen-coated beads of calf serum as immunadsorbent for the purification of antibodies against ferritin and against leukemia-sarcoma virus-induced antigens.
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PMID:The use of antigen-coated protein beads as immunoadsorbent for the purification of antibodies. 118 28

Glycosylated and total serum ferritin levels were monitored in patients with acute leukemia and lymphoma undergoing bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Serum ferritin was high in relapsing patients and normal in most patients in complete remission (CR). In patients with an uncomplicated course, levels of ferritin increased during the first month after BMT with subsequent decrease. Three patients with lymphoma and five with acute leukemia had high serum ferritin levels despite achieving apparent complete hematological remission which was of short duration. The results were compared with groups of lymphoma patients at presentation and during remission and with healthy normal controls. In all the lymphoma patients and in 3 of the 5 leukemia patients the percent of ferritin glycosylation was normal at CR. It was low at the time of diagnosis in all patients. Thus, the percent glycosylation proved a more reliable marker for clinical remission than total serum ferritin. During follow up after BMT in uncomplicated cases, the percent of glycosylated ferritin returned to normal levels earlier than the total serum ferritin. These findings indicate that the evaluation of the amount of glycosylated ferritin may provide useful information in hematological patients in whom there is a discrepancy between high serum ferritin levels and the clinical condition.
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PMID:Glycosylated serum ferritin in patients with hematological malignancies before and after bone marrow transplantation. 147 27

Sideroblastic anemia is an extremely rare disorder in children. This report describes a 9-year 4-month-old girl with severe refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS) that progressed to severe bone marrow aplasia. Ultrastructural studies revealed the presence of abundant intramitochondrial deposits of iron in erythroblasts similar to that observed in adults with this disorder. Although acid ferrocyanide staining confirmed the ferric valence of the iron deposits, they lacked morphologic and cytochemical characteristics associated with ferritin and hemosiderin. Bone marrow culture showed decreased or absent CFU-GEMM, CFU-GM, CFU-E, and BFU-E. Erythrocyte uroporphyrinogen I synthase, aminolevulinic acid dehydratase, uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase, urinary porphyrins, porphobilinogen, and aminolevulinic acid were normal. Free red cell protoporphyrin was increased. Therapy with corticosteroid and androgens was totally ineffective. The aplastic bone marrow in this child appeared to represent the end stage of RARS and differed from adults with RARS, who more frequently demonstrate a chronic course, often with the onset of leukemia as a terminal sequela. Although this case documents the occurrence of RARS in a child, additional reports of children with this disorder will be required to determine the prognosis and natural history of RARS in children.
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PMID:Severe refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts and bone marrow aplasia in a child. 155 Feb 66

Serum ferritin level was studied in 158 adult patients with different forms and variants of leukemia, and it was found to be elevated in 85.4% of cases. A number of factors influencing ferritin concentration in the blood serum have been established: a high degree of serum iron deficiency, leukemic intoxication, infectious complications (pneumonia, sepsis, necrosis, etc.), hemolytic syndrome. All these factors should be taken into consideration in evaluating serum ferritin levels in acute leukemia patients.
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PMID:[Factors influencing the serum ferritin level in acute leukemia patients before chemotherapy]. 161 76

Ultrastructural, flow cytometric, and molecular studies were performed on leukemia cells from bone marrow and pleural effusion of a 6-year-old boy diagnosed with undifferentiated (MO) leukemia, using routine histology and immunostains at diagnosis and relapse. Ultrastructurally, surface and/or intracellular ferritin particles were present on or in some blasts and the majority of blasts contained identifiable acid ferrocyanide reactive inorganic iron comparable to that seen in normal early erythroblasts. The cells lacked other evidence of differentiation, including diaminobenzidine-reactive or immunoreactive hemoglobin. Flow cytometric analysis of malignant cells showed a lack of lymphoid or myeloid markers. Anti-transferrin receptor antibody was positive on 93% of cells and antibody to glycophorin A reacted with 23% of cells. RNA blot analysis of leukemia cells with myeloperoxidase (MPO) showed an absence of appreciable levels of MPO mRNA. Chromosome analysis showed 51,XY, t(1;16)(p31;q24), +6, +10, +15, +19, +21. The oncogene c-myb, which is specifically expressed and regulated in hematopoietic cells and produces a DNA-binding protein responsible for myeloid differentiation, was found to be duplicated in the patient's tumor cells. Expression of c-jun, N-ras, c-myc, and p53 was normal. The data indicate that the malignant cells in this patient are of early erythroid lineage at diagnosis and relapse and that classification of cell lineage can be enhanced by ultrastructural Prussian blue staining. The failure of this otherwise undifferentiated leukemia to express or evolve into a myeloid phenotype is biologically and clinically distinct from previously described cases of erythroid and myeloid leukemia and may represent a previously unidentified phenotype which should be included in the spectrum of 'undifferentiated' childhood leukemia.
Leukemia 1991 Feb
PMID:Childhood undifferentiated leukemia with early erythroid markers and c-myb duplication. 170 34


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