Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (lymphopenia)
4,859 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumor involvement of the bone marrow in patients with Hodgkin's disease may be suspected in the presence of other manifestations of advanced disease such as fever, lymphopenia, hypoalbuminemia, mixed cellular histologic type, or Stage III or IV disease by other clinical parameters. It occurs more frequently in the older age groups. When anemia, leucopenia, and/or thrombocytopenia are present and are unrelated to recent bone marrow suppressant chemotherapy, marrow involvement is likely to be present. Bone marrow examination, done by multiple trephine biopsies, provides an adequate sampling of tissue and results in a high incidence of detection of involvement by Hodgkin's disease. This manifestation of Hodgkin's disease is associated with a relatively short survival. Aggressive combination chemotherapy is necessary to produce a significant remission.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease in the bone marrow. 120 65

Blood findings at diagnosis, in 140 adults with lymphoma, were correlated with bone marrow involvement and survival. An abnormal haemoglobin, leucocyte count or platelet count was found in 57% of patients. Lymphocytopenia occurred in 46%. All patients with thrombocytopenia or neutropenia, 69% with leucopenia and 63% with anaemia had marrow involvement with lymphoma. Marrow involvement in histiocytic and stem cell lymphoma was always associated with anaemia. Marrow involvement in poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma (PDL) was associated with anaemia, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, lymphocytopenia or lymphoma cells in the blood in 93% of patients. Bone marrow involvement was found in only 13% of patients with normal haematological parameters. In the absence of marrow involvement blood abnormalities at diagnosis did not generally correlate with survival. However, among patients with diffuse PDL who had marrow involvement, anaemia, thrombocytopenia and leucopenia adversely affected survival. Lymphocytopenia did not correlate with survival.
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PMID:Significance of haematological parameters in the non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphomas. 125 24

The study deals with the effect of rehabilitative treatment given at a medium altitude mountain resort on peripheral blood count in 54 children radically treated for cancer. Hemopoiesis was studied versus type of tumor, treatment modality and follow-up period. Disorders of hemopoiesis were identified in 45 out of 54 children examined. Rehabilitative treatment under said conditions was shown to improve blood count. A statistically significant increase in RBC, hemoglobin and platelet, leukocyte and lymphocyte counts (p < 0.05) was observed. In 42 out of 45 patients with anemia, thrombocytopenia, leuko- and lymphopenia, the indexes returned to normal.
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PMID:[The effect of a stay under central highlands conditions on the dynamic indices of the peripheral blood in children receiving treatment for cancer]. 130 Jul 26

We studied the effects of Cepharanthin (CEP) on bone marrow suppression induced by chemotherapy in 18 primary lung cancer patients (14 NSCLC, 4 SCLC). NSCLC patients received IP (IFM+CDDP) therapy and SCLC patients received ION (IFM+VCR+ACNU) therapy. For the control, we chose the first course and we administered CEP (1 mg/kg) during the second course. The rate of leukopenia and neutropenia was significantly lower during the CEP course than during the control (p less than 0.01). The recovery rate (at 3 weeks) of leukopenia and neutropenia was significantly higher during the CEP course than during the control (p less than 0.05). But, obvious effects of CEP for lymphopenia and thrombocytopenia were not obtained. Side effects by CEP were not observed in this study. These data suggest that the large dose of CEP contributes to the prevention of leukopenia, especially neutropenia, in patients who receive a sufficient amount of anticancer drugs.
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PMID:[Effects of cepharanthin on leukopenia and thrombocytopenia induced by chemotherapy in lung cancer patients]. 131 1

A noncytopathic bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), BVDV-890, isolated from a yearling heifer that died with extensive internal hemorrhages, was compared for virulence in calves with noncytopathic BVDV-TGAN, isolated from an apparently healthy persistently infected calf. After challenge exposure with BVDV-890, nonimmune calves (n = 7) developed fever > 40 C, diarrhea, leukopenia, lymphopenia, neutropenia, and thrombocytopenia. Most calves (n = 6) died or were euthanatized by 19 days after challenge exposure. Challenge exposure with BVDV-890 did not induce disease in 2 calves that had congenital persistent infection with BVDV or in 3 calves that had neutralizing antibody titer > 4 against BVDV-890. After challenge exposure with BVDV-TGAN, nonimmune calves (n = 7) developed fever > 40 C and, rarely, diarrhea or lymphopenia. All of those calves survived challenge exposure. The average maximal titer of BVDV-890 isolated from serum was 1,000 times that of BVDV-TGAN. In calves infected with BVDV-890, the average maximal percentages of lymphocytes and platelets associated with virus were greater than those found in calves infected with BVDV-TGAN. Additional findings of epidemiologic significance were prolonged shedding of virus and delayed production of viral-neutralizing antibody in 1 calf challenge-exposed with BVDV-890. Also, after production of neutralizing antibody, mutant virus that was refractory to neutralization was isolated from calves challenge-exposed with BVDV-TGAN.
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PMID:Differences in virulence between two noncytopathic bovine viral diarrhea viruses in calves. 133 41

A clinical AIDS case definition is needed for surveillance in countries where the CDC case definition is not practical. To derive such a definition, we compared 110 HIV-seropositive and 135 randomly selected HIV-seronegative adult medical-ward inpatients in Brazil. Multivariate analysis of clinical signs and symptoms and simple diagnoses resulted in a discriminant function with sensitivity of 89% and specificity of 96% in predicting for AIDS. These data were the empirical basis for a clinical definition of AIDS in adults drafted in a Caracas, Venezuela, workshop sponsored by the Pan American Health Organization. The revised "Caracas" definition presented here requires a positive HIV serology, the absence of cancer or other cause of immunosuppression, plus > or = 10 cumulative points, as follows: Kaposi's sarcoma (10 points); extrapulmonary/noncavitary pulmonary tuberculosis (10); oral candidiasis or hairy leukoplakia (5); cavitary pulmonary/unspecified tuberculosis (5); herpes zoster < 60 years of age (5); CNS dysfunction (5); diarrhea > or = 1 month (2); fever > or = 1 month (2); cachexia or > 10% weight loss (2); asthenia > or = 1 month (2); persistent dermatitis (2); anemia, lymphopenia, or thrombocytopenia (2); persistent cough or any pneumonia except TB (2); and lymphadenopathy > or = 1 cm at > or = 2 noninguinal sites for > or = 1 month (2). This definition has a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 100% (91% without HIV serology) when applied to the Brazilian patients in this study. The Caracas definition has been adopted by Brazil, Honduras, and Surinam, and is in validation elsewhere. The use of a reasonably sensitive and specific case definition commensurate with available diagnostic resources should facilitate AIDS surveillance in developing countries.
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PMID:A simplified surveillance case definition of AIDS derived from empirical clinical data. The Clinical AIDS Study Group, and the Working Group on AIDS case definition. 145 32

The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an inherited disease involving defects of platelets (small size, severe thrombocytopenia due to accelerated destruction) and T lymphocytes (progressive immunodeficiency, lymphopenia). The best-characterized molecular defect is the deficiency and, in some cases, abnormal forms of the T-lymphocyte surface mucin molecule CD43; deficiency of the platelet surface mucin GPIb was observed previously in two of four patients. Neither of these defects is primary, since CD43 and GPIb are encoded by autosomal genes and the disease is X-linked. This study uses cellular biological approaches to explore the possibility that destruction of structurally defective WAS platelets, mimicked experimentally by sonication of normal platelets, plays a role by releasing protease and generating other cellular defects. We show that a protease of normal platelets, identified as Ca(2+)-dependent neutral protease (calpain), which is known to cleave platelet GPIb, also specifically cleaves CD43 on the surface of neighboring desialylated T lymphocytes. The identification of the CD43 cleaving protease was based on its requirement for Ca2+ and inhibition by leupeptin, but not by diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP). The approximate site of CD43 cleavage was identified by the use of a rabbit antibody. Sensitivity of GPIb to calpain is shown to be sialylation-independent and that of CD43 to be sialylation-dependent, and these findings are explained in terms of molecular structures. These and previous findings are incorporated into a putative mechanism, which explains most of the defects in the WAS. The mechanism suggests that the primary defective molecule in the WAS is unlikely to be a surface glycoprotein, but rather a cytoplasmic molecule with a function in cytoskeletal interactions and/or calcium ion regulation and calpain activation.
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PMID:Effect of platelet calpain on normal T-lymphocyte CD43: hypothesis of events in the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. 155 70

Thirty-five children diagnosed of AIDS were studied in order to evaluate toxicity and efficacy of oral Zidovudine treatment (AZT), as well as to analyze the clinical, biochemical, immunological and virological evolution of HIV infection throughout the treatment. Patients (19 males and 16 females) were studied from April 1988 to May 1990 with a mean follow-up time of 13.5 months (SD = 6.7 months). The mean age of the group was 4.68 years. The means of acquisition of this disease was 71.45 vertical and 28.6% via hemo-derivatives. Tolerance has been good with the main toxicity being hematological (28.5% anemia and/or neutropenia), 23% of which required blood supplements. The presence of neurological involvement and thrombopenia were observed in the incidence of greater toxicity. No influence on weight during AXT treatment was observed and hepatosplenomegalia and adenopathies were not modified. Bacterial and opportunistic infections were observed in 97.1% and 20% of patients, respectively. Neurological evolution was irregular and the improvement observed in some patients was mild and transitory. Three patients died during the follow-up from intercurrent infectious process. A progressive increase in MCV and a tendency towards leucopenia and lymphopenia (mainly in hemo-derivative infected patients) was observed. Neither significant immunological nor virological changes were observed during the treatment (except the tendency to diminish basal hypergammaglobulinemia). The results of this study were compared to other pediatric series treated with AZT.
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PMID:[Long-term follow-up study of 35 children with ADS treated with zidovudine (AZT)]. 157 12

A 23-year-old woman experienced six distinct episodes of severe combined neutropenia and thrombocytopenia. At least one of the episodes was accompanied by hemodialysis-requiring acute renal failure and fragmentation hemolysis (hemolytic uremic syndrome [HUS]). In retrospect, all episodes were probably associated with the ingestion of quinine. Quinine-dependent antibodies to platelets, neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and red blood cells (RBCs) were detected in the patient's serum. By a monoclonal antibody antigen capture assay, the patient's serum contained IgG antibodies, which in the presence, but not absence, of quinine reacted with platelet glycoprotein (GP) complexes Ib/IX and IIb/IIIa, but not Ia/IIa. By immunoprecipitation assay, the serum, after addition of quinine, reacted strongly with an 85-Kd neutrophil membrane protein and weakly with 130- and 60-Kd moieties. Serum adsorbed with RBCs in the presence of quinine continued to react with platelets and neutrophils, and serum that was absorbed with platelets continued to react with neutrophils and RBCs, indicating that the antigenic targets were different on platelets, neutrophils, and RBCs. Since platelets and endothelial cells share some antigens, we tested patient serum for antibodies to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC); no quinine-dependent antibodies to HUVEC were detected. However, her quinine-dependent antibodies not only bound to platelets and neutrophils, but also activated neutrophils. Thus, the patient's serum with quinine aggregated neutrophils, but neither agent alone caused activation. Moreover, the patient's serum with quinine (but not without) augmented the adherence of neutrophils to HUVEC. Treatment of the patient's serum with staphylococcal protein A removed the quinine neutrophil aggregation cofactor, suggesting it was due to IgG. In both neutrophil aggregation and adherence assays, decomplementation of the patient's serum markedly blunted its effect. Furthermore, the patient's serum failed to aggregate formalin-inactivated neutrophils, suggesting neutrophil activation, probably by activated complement, was necessary for aggregation and adhesivity to endothelium. We conclude that our patient's neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, lymphopenia, and anemia were due to quinine-dependent antibodies, and that these antibodies recognized epitopes that were different in the three target cell populations. We further suggest that HUS was likely secondary to the activation and adhesion of neutrophils to endothelium.
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PMID:Characterization of multiple quinine-dependent antibodies in a patient with episodic hemolytic uremic syndrome and immune agranulocytosis. 161 Oct 88

This study examined 1) the effects of infusion of LTB4 and 2) the potential role of LTB4 in the sequelae to endotoxic shock in the rat. Control rats were anesthetized with Ketamine/xylazine and given LTB4 (2 micrograms/kg) bolus i.v. followed by a 1 microgram/kg/min infusion for 10 min. LTB4 induced systemic hypotension and a three-fold increase in circulating band neutrophils which contributed to a 70% increase (P less than 0.05) in the total peripheral neutrophil count. LTB4 did not cause changes in circulating mature (segmented) neutrophils, lymphocytes, platelets, or hematocrits. Pretreatment (1 min) with LY233978, an LTB4 antagonist (10 mg/kg bolus i.v.), inhibited LTB4-induced systemic hypotension (-16.1 +/- 6.1 mmHg [n = 3] vs. -38.8 +/- 5.9 mmHg [n = 4], P less than 0.05). Salmonella enteritidis endotoxin (10 mg/kg bolus i.v.) induced systemic hypotension, hemoconcentration, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia, which was greatest at 5 and 15 min postendotoxin. The leukopenia was characterized by lymphopenia, band neutropenia, and segmented neutropenia. LY233978 (10 mg/kg bolus i.v. immediately before endotoxin administration and followed by an infusion at 0.67 mg/kg/min for 90 min) attenuated endotoxin-induced hemoconcentration at 60 and 90 min postendotoxin (P less than 0.05), and systemic hypotension at 15 min postendotoxin (P less than 0.05). The LTB4-receptor antagonist LY255283 (10 mg/kg bolus i.v., 10 min before endotoxin followed by a 5 mg/kg bolus i.v. 30 min postendotoxin) completely inhibited endotoxin-induced systemic hypotension and partially attenuated endotoxin-induced hemoconcentration from 15 min to 90 min postendotoxin (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of LTB4 receptor antagonists in endotoxic shock in the rat. 166 29


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