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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 57-year-old woman who suffered from
acute myeloblastic leukemia
during the course of chronic thyroiditis, is described. The patient was diagnosed as having chronic thyroiditis in 1984 when she was 53 year-old, and was treated with L-T4.Na. She admitted in July 1988 because of general fatigue, fever, cough and sore throat. On admission, hematological examination in the peripheral blood showed marked anemia and increased leukocytes with 20.5% leukemic cells positive for
peroxidase
staining. Bone marrow aspiration showed 38.8% leukemic cells. She was diagnosed
acute myeloblastic leukemia
. She reached complete remission after combination chemotherapy. The case of
acute myeloblastic leukemia
associated with chronic thyroiditis is rarely reported. We reviewed the literature and discussed
acute myeloblastic leukemia
associated with chronic thyroiditis including this case.
...
PMID:[Acute myeloblastic leukemia associated with chronic thyroiditis]. 269 19
A case of
acute myeloblastic leukemia
associated with multiple intracerebral hematomas is presented. A 19-year-old woman with a two week's history of mild fever suddenly lost consciousness, and was afflicted right severe hemiparesis, left mild hemiparesis and motor aphasia. A CT scan revealed bilateral thalamic hyperdense lesions and paraventricular small hematoma in the right hemisphere. Hematology showed marked leukocytosis (450,000/mm3), mild anemia and no coagulopathy including disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome. Cytology showed myeloblasts with positive stain in
peroxidase
and negative in esterase both in cerebrospinal fluid and blood. These findings indicated M 1 type, myeloblastic leukemia without maturation, according to FAB (French-American-British Co-operative group) classification. CT scan on the second day demonstrated expansion of the hematoma in the right thalamus, and nine brand-new small hematomas in different locations. The patient deteriorated into brain death soon after this examination. The pathology of this case was supposed to be "hyperleukocytosis", which is defined as a leukocyte count greater than 100,000/mm3. Severe leukostasis due both to dense leukocytes and lack of mobility of the myeloblast brought about an increase in permeability because of local impairment of nutrition to the walls of the vessels. As a result, the following histological changes occurred: 1) cellular exudation into Virchow-Robin space, 2) the appearance of leukemic nodule, admixtures of leukemic cells and erythrocytes, 3) mechanical compression of the capillaries and venules by the enlarging mass of the leukemic nodules. CT scan showed these characteristics as follows: 1) multiplicity, 2) small-size, 3) cerebral hemisphere, especially in white matter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of acute myeloblastic leukemia associated with multiple intracerebral hematomas]. 269 89
A 55-year-old woman developed a secondary leukemia following 1-year treatment of Hodgkin's disease. She was admitted to our hospital because of the celiac lymphadenopathy. Open laparotomy was performed. Biopsy specimens of the lymph node demonstrated Reed Sternberg cells with mature lymphocytes. She was diagnosed as having Hodgkin's disease (lymphocyte predominant type). She was treated by the combination chemotherapy consisting of mitoxantrone, cyclophosphamide, vincristine and prednisolone for Hodgkin's disease in November 1986. Hodgkin's disease achieved complete remission and she was regularly followed. No abnormal findings were observed in the peripheral blood and bone marrow. But thrombocytopenia and the blastoid cells appeared in the peripheral blood in February 1988. The bone marrow specimen was hypercellular and occupied by 90% of blastoid cells that were positive for
peroxidase
staining. She was diagnosed as having
AML
from the bone marrow aspiration and biopsy specimens. She did not respond to several chemotherapy regimens and now she is treated by low dose Ara C.
...
PMID:[Acute myeloid leukemia after the treatment of Hodgkin's disease]. 276 76
Cytologic and cytogenetic results obtained from patients fulfilling the FAB criteria for the diagnosis of
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia
(
ANLL
) of megakaryocytic lineage (
ANLL
-M7) are reported. Eleven cases were de novo
ANLL
-M7, of whom three presented with acute myelofibrosis. Four cases were megakaryoblastic transformations of chronic myelogenous leukemia (two cases), refractory anemia with excess of blasts (one case), and polycythemia vera (one case). Four patients showed a minority of granular blasts, with occasional Auer rods in one. Positive
myeloperoxidase
and/or sudan black-B stainings and CD13 positivity in these cases were consistent with the presence of a myeloid involvement. Morphologic evidence of associated myelodysplastic features was detected in all evaluable patients with de novo
ANLL
-M7. These cytologic findings indicate that
ANLL
-M7 may frequently represent a multilineage proliferation. Cytogenetic studies revealed -7/7q- and +8, alone or in combination with additional aberrations, in three cases each. Rearrangements involving bands 3q21 or 3q26 were seen in two patients and +21, as an additional aberration, in one. Other structural rearrangements all observed in a single patient were inv(16)(p13q22) at megakaryoblastic relapse with bone marrow eosinophilia, t(13;20)(q13 or 14;q11), del(20)(q11), and der(7)t(7;17)(p14;q22). Most breakpoints of these aberrations are located at bands frequently rearranged in malignant myeloid stem cell disorders. A review of 31 cases of the literature showed a frequent occurrence of -7/7q- and -5/5q- in
ANLL
-M7. Many of the chromosome aberrations so far described in
ANLL
-M7 appear to be shared by a spectrum of myeloid neoplasias and may be related to mechanisms conferring proliferative advantage to undifferentiated stem cells.
...
PMID:Multipotent stem cell involvement in megakaryoblastic leukemia: cytologic and cytogenetic evidence in 15 patients. 279 Feb 2
The authors presented 5 cases of
ANLL
and 6 cases of ALL according to FAB classification and further classified them with leukemic cell morphology, cytochemistry and immunophenotyping. Five cases of them belonged to low grade
peroxidase
ANLL
(LP-ANLL), 4 to hybrid acute leukemia (HAL) and 2 to acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL). The importance of immunophenotyping of leukemic cells in classification of acute leukemia was emphasized and the criteria for diagnosis of LP-
ANLL
, HAL and AUL discussed. The authors are of the opinion that the diagnosis of these three kinds of acute leukemia is difficult and the prognosis is serious.
...
PMID:[Some difficult problems in the classification of acute leukemia]. 280 64
Leukemic blasts from 40 consecutively admitted adults with untreated acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were examined for myeloid surface antigen expression. Of these, 14 (35%) were reactive with one or more myeloid monoclonal antibodies. Each example of myeloid surface antigen-positive (My+ ALL) met the standard morphologic and cytochemical criteria for ALL. In addition, none of the 13 samples studied for ultrastructural evidence of
myeloperoxidase
met the criteria for
acute myelocytic leukemia
(
AML
). All patient samples reacted with lymphoid monoclonal antibodies: CD10+ (8 patients), CD19+ CD10- (2 patients), T cell+ (2 patients), and T cell+ CD10+ (2 patients). Coexpression of myeloid and lymphoid determinants was established by two-color immunofluorescence studies using flow cytometry in five of five samples analyzed. Cytogenetic abnormalities that have been associated with myeloid and mixed leukemias were common, including t(9;22), 7q-, abnormalities of 11q with or without a translocation, 20q-, and -5. Blasts from seven patients were studied at the molecular level. Immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements were detected in five of five samples with B cell+ T cell- phenotypes. One sample that was T cell+ CD10+ was germline for the immunoglobulin heavy chain and the T cell receptor gamma- and beta-chain genes. The other patient with T cell+ CD10+ blasts relapsed with
AML
following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The leukemia cells at the time of diagnosis and the cells at relapse demonstrated similar cytogenetics and the same immunoglobulin gene rearrangement, suggesting a clonal relationship. As a group, the My+ ALL patients had a significantly decreased complete remission rate when compared to My- ALL patients. Further studies at the molecular level will be required to determine the significance of karyotype abnormalities in My+ ALL.
...
PMID:Myeloid surface antigen-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (My+ ALL): immunophenotypic, ultrastructural, cytogenetic, and molecular characteristics. 281 78
A panel of eight antibodies was used by the alkaline-phosphatase/anti-alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) method to stain peripheral blood films, bone marrow smears, and cytocentrifuge preparations from 29 cases of
acute myeloid leukemia
. These findings were correlated with the French-American-British (FAB) classification. Leukemic cells from six cases of myeloblastic leukemia (FAB;M1) were predominantly labeled by the antimyeloperoxidase monoclonal antibody (
MPO
-7). Leukemic cells from the majority of eight cases of myeloblastic leukemia with maturation (FAB;M2) and progranulocytic leukemia (FAB;M3) stained with monoclonal antibodies
MPO
-7, NP57 (anti-elastase), and EBM11 (antimonocyte/macrophage). Leukemic cells from six cases of myelomonocytic (FAB;M4) and five cases of monocytic (FAB;M5) leukemia were most often labeled with antibodies
MPO
-7, NP57, and EBM11 as well as monoclonal antibodies Y1/82A (anti-monocyte) and KB90 (against the p150, 95 molecule, CD11c; a monocyte/granulocyte marker), but not with monoclonal antibody C17 (antiglycoprotein IIb/IIIa) and/or monoclonal antibody Y2/51 (antiglycoprotein IIIa). Erythroblasts from a single case of erythroleukemia (FAB;M6) were not labeled with any of the antibodies from this panel. Leukemic cells from two cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia (FAB;M7) stained strongly with the monoclonal antiglycoprotein IIIa/IIb antibody (C17) and antiglycoprotein IIIa antibody (Y2/51). Staining by the APAAP method with this panel of antibodies was easy to perform, required no expensive instrumentation, and provided useful information in the classification of
acute myeloid leukemia
.
...
PMID:Immunophenotyping of acute myeloid leukemia by immuno-alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) labeling with a panel of antibodies. 282 1
Since the last workshop on human leukocyte differentiation antigens, there are 14 well defined cluster-designated (CD) antigens which characterize myelomonocytic cells. Of these, 5 are potentially useful for myeloid leukemia typing (i.e. CD13, CD14, CD15, CD33, CD36) because they are cell lineage-specific and also expressed on immature cells. However, the reactivity of monoclonal anti-CD antibodies, directed against these antigens, with myeloblastic leukemia cells was found to be quite low. We produced monoclonal antibodies against
myeloperoxidase
. These antibodies react also with promyeloperoxidase, synthesized in HL-60 cell line cells. Monoclonal antimyeloperoxidase was found to be the most sensitive reagent to diagnose
acute myeloid leukemia
, even more sensitive than cytochemical stains (Sudan black,
myeloperoxidase
).
...
PMID:Characterization of myeloid leukemia by monoclonal antibodies, with an emphasis on antibodies against myeloperoxidase. 282 87
Neutrophils and band forms from patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
and myelodysplastic syndrome were stained for the presence of
myeloperoxidase
using a cytochemical method (diaminobenzidine/hydrogen peroxide) and the alkaline phosphatase--anti-alkaline phosphatase immunocytochemical procedure (using monoclonal anti-
myeloperoxidase
). Neutrophils and bands were also stained for elastase and lactoferrin using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies, respectively. Subpopulations of neutrophils and bands from cases of
acute myeloid leukemia
and myelodysplasia exhibited a qualitative and/or quantitative deficiency in
myeloperoxidase
. In addition, a quantitative decrease in elastase and/or lactoferrin staining was detected. Thus, neutrophils and bands from patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
and myelodysplastic syndrome have a defect in one or more of the constituents of primary and/or secondary granules. These defects are consistent with the view that abnormal neutrophils and bands are derived from a malignant clone of myeloid precursor cells.
...
PMID:Abnormal neutrophils in acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome. 283 2
Forty-three cases of undifferentiated leukemias by light microscopy examination were diagnosed as acute myeloblastic leukemias by ultrastructural revelation of
peroxidase
and were subsequently studied by immunological markers. In 41 of these cases, blasts were labeled by at least one of the antimyeloid MoAbs (My 7, My 9, and 80H5). An antimyeloperoxidase polyclonal antibody was used in 23 cases and was clearly positive in 11 of them, while cytochemistry by light microscopy was negative. These myeloblasts were frequently mixed with a minority of blasts from other lineages especially promegakaryoblasts. It is noteworthy that in 6 cases myeloid and lymphoid markers (E rosette receptor, common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (cALLA), CD 9, CD 19 antigens (anti-B4 MoAb] were detected on a fraction of blast cells, suggesting a bilineage leukemia. However, in double labeling experiments, blasts with
myeloperoxidase
coexpressed lymphoid and myeloid markers including cALLA and CD 19 antigen. In one case, blasts had a typical non-B, non-T acute lymphoblastic leukemia phenotype (HLA-DR, CD 9, CD 19, cALLA positive) without staining by any of the antimyeloid MoAbs. However, 70% of the blasts were labeled by the antimyeloperoxidase antibody and expressed
peroxidase
-positive granules at ultrastructural level. In conclusion, most of the
AML
undiagnosed by optical cytochemistry are identified by antimyeloid antibodies. Some of these cases are also stained by some antilymphoid MoAbs. Use of antibodies against
myeloperoxidase
may improve the diagnosis of difficult cases of
acute myeloblastic leukemia
.
...
PMID:Immunophenotype of leukemic blasts with small peroxidase-positive granules detected by electron microscopy. 283 65
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