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)

Patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) show the Philadelphia (Ph) translocation in more than 95% of the cases. The remaining cases, without the cytogenetic or molecular equivalent of the BCR-ABL rearrangement, are "Philadelphia negative" and may have alternate chromosomal aberrations. Ph negative CML patients are known to have a poor prognosis. We report on a young patient with a hypereosinophilic syndrome in the presence of a clonal translocation t(4;7) with a peripheral leukocytosis, a severe thrombocytopenia, and anemia at first presentation, who developed bone marrow changes typical of CML. Bone marrow function and hypereosinophilia improved only partially and temporarily under therapy. The patient died 10 months after diagnosis of diffuse leukemic embolism and organ infiltration resulting in paraplegia. The case demonstrates that beside "idiopathic" hypereosinophilic syndromes (HES), a proportion of such patients suffer from eosinophilic leukemias. In these cases, karyotype analysis may help to distinguish these states by the identification of clonal chromosomal abnormalities. A karyotype anomaly hitherto not reported can be added to the list of aberrations in hypereosinophilic states associated with myeloproliferative processes.
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PMID:Chronic myeloid leukemia associated hypereosinophilic syndrome with a clonal t(4;7)(q11;q32). 910 34

Extramedullary tumors, also known as granulocytic sarcomas (GS), occur most frequently in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). They may signal the onset of the accelerated phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) or the blastic transformation of a myeloproliferative disorder. Occasionally, a GS may be the presenting sign of undiagnosed AML, and rarely the presenting sign of undiagnosed CML or aleukemic leukemia. Paraplegia due to a spinal cord GS is an extremely rare presentation of undiagnosed leukemia. This is the first case report of paraplegia as the presenting manifestation of extramedullary megakaryoblastic transformation of previously undiagnosed CML. A 53-year-old woman reported back pain for 6 days, rapidly progressing to paraplegia. Physical examination noted a large abdominal mass and flaccid paralysis in both lower extremities. Spinal MRI revealed a T4-T6 vertebral mass causing spinal stenosis and cord compression. Tumor debulking and laminectomy were performed emergently. The tumor consisted of noncohesive blast cells. The CBC revealed a leukocyte count of 238,300/microl and a differential consistent with CML. Reexamination of the patient found that the abdominal mass was a giant spleen. Further immunohistochemical studies of the tumor were consistent with extramedullary acute megakaryoblastic blast transformation of CML. Although extramedullary blast crises herald the accelerated phases in approximately 10% of CML cases, megakaryoblastic blast transformation of CML accounts for less than 3% of these cases. The combination of acute paraplegia and megakaryoblastic transformation in a previously undiagnosed patient with CML is extremely rare and may pose a diagnostic dilemma.
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PMID:Paraplegia as the presenting manifestation of extramedullary megakaryoblastic transformation of previously undiagnosed chronic myelogenous leukemia. 1701 92