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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (
lymphopenia
)
4,859
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 6-year-old Jewish Iranian girl with
familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
(
FHLH
) is described. The course of the disease fluctuated with partial initial response to antibiotics, steroids, and supportive treatment. Subsequent cytotoxic treatment, including VP-16, Velban (vinblastine sulfate), and methotrexate (MTX) controlled the disease for a few months but the child died with a clinical picture of meningocephalitis 1.5 years later. Benign-looking lymphohistiocytic infiltrates with varying degrees of hemophagocytosis were present in the bone marrow, pleural effusion, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), liver, and brain. Clinical and laboratory evidence of immunologic dysregulation during the disease could be demonstrated. Frequent and intense viral and bacterial infectious diseases were encountered. The laboratory examination most consistently found was the absence of natural killer (NK) cell activity against K562 target cells. The impaired activity of NK cells persisted during all stages of the disease including remission, although NK cell numbers, determined morphologically and immunophenotypically (by Leu-11, Leu-7), were normal. Natural killer activity could not be restored by interferon. Moreover, the interferon system appeared to be intact. Impaired monokin interleukin 1 (IL-I) production by peripheral blood monocytes was found and could not be restored by indomethacin.
Lymphopenia
, a mild decrease in T4 numbers, and subsequently, decreased proliferative response to mitogens was noted. Elevated immunoglobulin levels were found during exacerbations and viral episodes, at times accompanied by the presence of auto-antibodies. The exaggerated fatal lymphohistiocytic response typical for
FHLH
could be attributed to a underlying genetic pathologic dysregulation of the various immunological response pathways.
...
PMID:Immunologic dysregulation in a patient with familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. 244 62
Nineteen children who presented with fever, hepato-splenomegaly, bone marrow and/or hepatic failure, and biopsy evidence of histiocytic proliferations were evaluated for lymphocyte dysfunction and evidence of prior viral infection. Seventeen of the children had erythrophagocytosis consistent with the previously described virus-associated hemophagocytosis syndrome (VAHS) or
Familial erythrophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
(
FEL
). The other two had benign histiocytic proliferations in the central nervous system (CNS) with liver and bone marrow dysfunction. There were two sibling pairs and six patients with known disorders of immune deficiency. The remaining nine cases appeared to be sporadic and idiopathic. Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) was identified in patients by serologic or DNA hybridization studies (15), EBV and cytomegalovirus (CMV) (1), adenovirus plus EBV and CMV (1), or adenovirus and EBV (1). Herpes zoster was associated with reactivation of symptoms in one patient. Immunologic impairment was evidenced by
lymphopenia
in 10 of 19 patients. More extensive evaluations could be done at diagnosis on only some of the children because the histiocytic proliferative syndrome was not recognized or because there were insufficient numbers of lymphocytes in samples obtained. For those who could be evaluated, the following immune deficiencies were found: decreased lymphocyte proliferation to mitogens (4 of 9), absent or markedly decreased natural killer function (5 of 5), and decreased cytotoxic lymphocyte reactivity to allogenic EBV-infected target cells (3 of 3). A new finding reported here is a higher than expected prevalence of HLA types A30, B8, and A1/B8 among the patients tested.
...
PMID:Virus-associated histiocytic proliferations in children. Frequent association with Epstein-Barr virus and congenital or acquired immunodeficiencies. 284 31