Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It was shown by Pincus and Klebanoff that a correlation existed between leukocytic iodination measured in vivo and microbicidal leukocytic activity. We have analyzed the results of this test in relation to time and in the presence of variable quantities of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). The values observed per time and PMN unit proved to be equivalent in the presence of 2.5 X 105 PMN or 5.0 x 105 PMN per 0.5 ml of incubation medium, measured after 10, 20 and 30 minutes or in the presence of 1.0 x 106 PMN, measured after 10 minutes. That is to say iodination is proportional to leukocyte concentration and incubation time. Increase of either the quantity of cells or the incubation time, beyond the area we defined, reduced iodination per cell and per unit of time. Concerning the patients with an insufficient iodination, we have studied 2 parameters in the presence of 5.0 x 105 PMN: 1) initial iodination measured after 10 and 20 minutes and 2) stability of iodination measured after 60 minutes. These two parameters were equally affected in two cases with myelofi-rosis, 3 patients with acquired refractory anaemia, one with chronic lymphoid leukaemia, one with erythroleukaemia, one with hairy cell leukaemia, one with systemic mastocytosis and almost complete myeloperoxidase dificiency, one with sickle cell disease, two with liver diseases and two with chronic myeloid leukaemia. The iodination at the 60th minute was more affected than at the 10th minute with a patient with myelofibrosis and 4 other patients with acquired refractory anaemias. The significance of these differences is not well understood; however the meaning of the decrease in the iodination of whatever type is that a PMN anomaly exists directly related to the myeloperoxidase H2O2 halogenation system, or to one of the stages of engulfment and/or metabolic events preceeding it and leading to the production of H2O2. This test, with the alterations we introduced, is suggested as a test for detection of functional PMN abnormalities.
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PMID:Quantitative iodination of human blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 16 86

Of 25 patients with chronic leukemia, there was clinical evidence of peripheral retinal microaneurysm formation in two of eight patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and six of 17 patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. There was no proliferative retinopathy in any of the 25 patients. An elevated leukocyte count seemed necessary for microaneurysm formation in leukemia, although some patients with elevated counts had no microaneurysms. The prolonged leukocytosis of chronic leukemia can produce peripheral capillary dropout, vascular stagnation, microaneurysm formation, and, rarely, peripheral proliferative retinopathy similar to sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Peripheral retinal microaneurysms in chronic leukemia. 105 77

Among 13 Ph-positive cases of chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL), banding studies revealed two with complex rearrangements involving translocation of the long arm of number 22 to another autosome and a segment of that chromosome translocated to the long arm of number 9. In a patient with both CGL and sickle cell anemia, the 3-way rearrangement involved chromosomes 5, 9, and 22; and he also had a second Philadelphia chromosome and two constitutional variants: pericentric inversion of the other number 9 chromosome and satellite polymorphism in the G group. The karyotype of the leukemic cells was interpreted as: 47,XY,inv(9) (p11q13),t(5;9;22)(q13;q34;q11)+del(22)(q11). In the second patient, the complex translocation in the Ph-positive cells involved chromosomes 3, 9, and 22, resulting in a karyotype interpreted as: 46,XX,t(3;9;22)(p21;q34;q11). Several reports indicate that an abnormality of chromosome 9 is not essential for the development of Ph-positive CGL, but the very high frequency of its involvement (including these unusual translocations) suggests that some type of non-random somatic association may exist between 9q and 22q which makes simultaneous breakage likely. Attempts to correlate specific types of pH chromosome rearrangements with the clinical course of CGL must await the identification of more cases and longer follow-up.
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PMID:Two complex translocations in chronic granulocytic leukemia involving chromosomes 22, 9, and a third chromosome. 105 30

Isolated comma or corkscrew-shaped venular segments in the conjunctiva have been felt to be diagnostic of sickle cell disease. External eye examination of a 34-year-old black man with a two-year history of chronic granulocytic leukemia revealed multiple small and medium-sized isolated conjunctival venular segments. Laboratory findings at the time of examination included a white blood cell count of 132,000/mm3 with 87% eosinophils, a hematocrit reading of 30%, and hemoglobin AA. Since whole blood hyperviscosity can be present in chronic granulocytic leukemia as well as sickle cell disease, this may account for the similarly of the conjunctival changes.
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PMID:Comma-shaped venular segments of conjunctiva in chronic granulocytic leukemia. 105 96

Between 1985 and 1989, eight children underwent two successive bone marrow transplantations. The initial disease was chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in three patients, chronic myelocytic leukemia in two, acute M7 nonlymphoblastic leukemia in one, sickle cell anemia in one, and thalassemia major in one. The preparation in view of the second grafting included high-dose chemotherapy in all patients, associated with antithymocytic globulin transfusion and total nodal irradiation in three patients. Hematological recovery was similar after both graftings. Infectious complications were not more common following the second graft than after the first one. On the other hand, the rates of rejection and graft-versus-host disease were lower, probably due to a more intensive immunosuppressive therapy. The prognosis of chronic leukemia relapsing after a first graft does not seem to be improved by a second attempt.
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PMID:Second bone marrow transplantation in eight children. 146 68

In myeloproliferative disorders many complications are caused by circulatory problems due to high leukocyte or platelet numbers and by hyperviscosity. With cytaphereses and mild cytostatics like Azathioprine, these problems are solved quickly and without major side effects. We report about plateletaphereses for polycythemia vera and megacaryocytic myelosis and leukocytaphereses for chronic myelogenous leukemia. In addition, erythrocytaphereses were carried out successfully in a patient with a combination of heterozygous sickle cell anemia and thalassemia minor.
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PMID:[Therapeutic cytapheresis]. 172 27

Florid leuco-erythroblastic blood picture in sickle cell disease (SCD) resembling chronic myeloid leukaemia and secondary dyserythropoietic activity resembling Di Guglielmo's disease in SCD have previously been reported. The aim of this study is to further focus attention on this phenomenon and to report that megaloblastic crisis in SCD can be misdiagnosed as acute leukaemia (erythroleukaemia). The need to do haemoglobin electrophoresis in all suspected cases of acute or chronic leukaemia in people of African ancestry is advocated.
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PMID:Intense leuco-erythroblastic blood picture resembling erythro-leukaemia in sickle cell disease: a case report. 279 50

Classification of platelet disorders has been based on the platelet count. Addition of a second variable, mean platelet volume (MPV), to the routine blood count allows classification of patients into 9 categories: high, low, or normal MPV, and high, low or normal platelet count. We studied 1,244 adult inpatients. 1,134 had both platelet values normal. 11 patients had high MPV and low platelet count: all had hyperdestructive causes. 15 patients had high MPV and normal platelet count: 12 had heterozygous thalassemia, and three had iron deficiency. Seven patients had high MPV and high platelet count: causes included myeloproliferative disorders, inflammation, iron deficiency, and splenectomy, 25 patients had high platelet counts and normal MPV: the causes were inflammation, infection, sickle cell anemia, iron deficiency, or chronic myelogenous leukemia. 52 patients had an MPV that was inappropriately low for the platelet count (high, normal, or low). All had sepsis, splenomegaly, aplastic anemia, chronic renal failure, or a disease being treated with myelosuppressive drugs. High MPV thus appears correlated with myeloproliferative disease or thalassemia; and low MPV, with cytotoxic drugs or marrow hypoplasia. Addition of MPV to the platelet count allows subtler disorders to be detected (when the platelet count is normal), and allows distinction of the cause of thrombocytopenia.
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PMID:Use of mean platelet volume improves detection of platelet disorders. 407 87

The sialic acid content of erythrocytes from healthy individuals of different blood types and of patients with known hematological disorders has been determined. The sialic acid was completely released enzymatically with sialidase and quantitated by the thiobarbituric acid method. The sialic acid content of erythrocytes was constant irrespective of ABO blood type, or anticoagulant used; viz, 0.85-0.92 mumoles/ml of packed erythrocytes or 46-53 X 10(6) sialyl residues per cell. Deviations from these normal values were obtained with erythrocytes from patients with a variety of hematological disorders. Patients with the following disorders have significantly (P less than 0.01) lower sialic acid values compared to erythrocytes from healthy individuals (given in the order of decreasing sialic acid content): sickle cell anemia, acute lymphocytic leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, acute myelomonocytic leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphocytic lymphoma, chronic granulocytic leukemia, acute myelocytic leukemia, leukemia, and Hodgkin disease.
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PMID:Sialic acid content of erythrocytes in normal individuals and patients with certain hematologic disorders. 721 33

This report describes the case of a 63-year-old obese and alcoholic butcher who suffered two episodes of distal oligoarthritis. These episodes were attributed to gout on the basis of response to colchicine and demonstration of hyperuricemia. Given the presence of hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and hyperleukocytosis, a sternal puncture and myelogram were performed and led to diagnosis of chronic myelogenous leukemia. In addition to the classic predisposing factors for gout, sickle cell anemia could be implicated in Black Africa. Longer life expectancy for patients with sickle cell anemia could increase the incidence of gout in Black Africa.
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PMID:[Chronic myeloid leukemia manifesting as gout. Reflections on secondary gout in Black Africa]. 756 98


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