Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alpha Heavy Chain Disease has generally been described in the Mediterranean area in young people with a diffuse gastrointestinal lymphoma and malabsorption. We describe a patient from the United States with polypoid lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract and a prolonged clinical course, who had the characteristic alpha heavy chain disease protein. He did not have malabsorption, and the gastrointestinal tract, though containing multiple discrete lymphomatous polyps had little plasmacytic reaction. Lymphosarcoma cell leukemia developed late in the course and the malignant cells had the characteristics of B lymphocytes but did not contain alpha heavy chains. The data support the contention that the lymphoma in this form of alpha heavy chain disease may involve B lymphocytes but that the abnormal protein may be produced by other cells. Polypoid varieties of gastrointestinal lymphoma in North America must now be considered part of the spectrum of alpha heavy chain disease and the diagnostic protein searched for diligently.
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PMID:New presentation of alpha heavy chain disease: North American polypoid gastrointestinal lymphoma. Clinical and cellular studies. 41

A 20-year-old Persian man with Middle Eastern lymphoma is described, and 84 additional cases from the literature are reviewed. Basically, the disease is a malignant lymphoma which involves the upper small intestine (duodenum and proximal jejunum). It is associated with clubbing of the fingers, abdominal pain, weight loss, diarrhea, vomiting, and malabsorption, and frequently occurs in a younger age group than "Western Hemisphere" intestinal lymphoma. Some patients also have alpha heavy chain disease. The sex ratio is equal, and the disease occurs only in Middle Eastern and North African Moslems and Jews. Upper gastrointestinal radiographs are frequently diagnostic, and per oral small intestinal biopsy is nearly always diagnostic. Pathologically, the following features are characteristic for Middle Eastern lymphoma: partial or total villous atrophy with only mildly abnormal surface epithelium, sparsity of crypts, lymphatic dilatation, and infiltration of lamina propria by pleomorphic mononuclear cells which pepetrate the muscularis mucosa. The etiology and pathogenesis of this disease are unknown, but several hypotheses are discussed. Treatment by a variety of modalities is far from satisfactory, and the prognosis is much poorer than that observed in patients with the "Western" form of intestinal lymphoma. Other differences between Middle Eastern lymphoma and Western lymphoma are described in detail,
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PMID:Middle Eastern intestinal lymphoma: report of a case and review of the literature. 78 12

Primary intestinal lymphoma in young adults is a disease that occurs mainly in underprivileged populations. There is evidence that in some cases this disease evolves from a benign lymphoplasmocytic infiltration of the gut with alpha heavy chain. More studies are needed on the effect of environmental and genetic factors on the evolution of this disease. The role of oncogenic viruses in the development of intestinal lymphoma with malabsorption is an open question. Regional studies on the entity of intestinal lymphoma with malabsorption and its relationship to childhood lymphoma in the same populations are warranted.
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PMID:Primary intestinal lymphoma and its relation to alpha heavy chain disease. 81 Jan 50

Two patients with alpha heavy chain disease are described. In the first patient, treatment with cyclophosphamide, prednisone and doxycycline was associated with a 28 month-long remission and the disappearance of the paraprotein and lymphoplasmocytic infiltration of the intestine. Shortly afterwards, a retroperitoneal immunoblastic lymphoma was found associated with an immunoglobulin G-kappa-paraproteinemia, and gamma heavy and kappa-light chains in the urine; the intestinal biopsy specimen was normal. In the other patient, the alpha chain only appeared two years after the malabsorption syndrome. The fact that in the first, apparently cured patient, a tumor of different anatomic site and secretory capacity appeared, suggests the existence of a B-cell neoplasia of different clone from that which gave rise tothe original disease. In the second patient, it is probable that only the increase in the mass of neoplastic cells led to the detection of the protein abnormality, or alternatively the antigenic-oncogenic stimulus led to the abnormal secretion only after two years.
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PMID:The evolution of alpha heavy chain disease. 81 98

Nine cases of Mediterranean lymphoma with alpha heavy chain disease are described. All patients were young, aged between 11 and 22 years. Neither sex predominated in the series. The clinical presentation of the disease was either gastrointestinal, with chronic diarrhea and malabsorption, or neoplastic, with tumors frequently associated with either obstructive or perforative complications. Finger clubbing and retardation of physical growth (height and weight) and secondary sexual maturation were usually evident. The laboratory manifestations of the malabsorption syndrome were scant and generally not specific. The intestinal lesions predominated in the beginning of the small bowel, and their gross appearance varied from one case to another: diffuse thickening of the intestinal wall, alone or associated with tumors, or isolated segmentary tumors. Massive mesenteric lymph node enlargement was present in all cases; in some cases hepatic, splenic, or extra-abdominal lymph node spread was noted. Histologically, these lesions demonstrated a varied cellular morphology, but seemed to belong constantly to the B-lymphocytic line. The secretion and excretion by these cells of an abnormal IgA (devoid of light chains), which was revealed by immunoelectrophorectic study of the patients' sera, was the main biochemical abnormality of the disease. This disease presents several problems: 1) its relationship with other intestinal lymphomas; 2) the nature and the degree of malignancy of the intestinal cellular infiltrates; and 3) its identification as a clinicopathologic entity, with the possibility that infectious and genetic factors are significant in its etiology and pathogenesis.
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PMID:Mediterranean lymphomas with alpha heavy chain monoclonal gammopathy. 82 21

From 1987 to 1989, 7 patients were diagnosed as having a primary lymphoma of the small bowel. The patients, 5 men and 2 women aged 14-66 years (average: 45), were studied by means of small bowel enema and CT. Using small bowel enema, our findings were: masses related to a loop, stenosis, mucosal patterns with thick, irregular, and nodular folds, and bowel walls thickening. In nearly all cases CT showed not only small bowel lesions but also mesenteric lymphadenopathy. Five of seven patients had lymphomas, 1 had IP-SID lymphoma (immunoproliferative small intestinal disease related lymphoma), and 1 had IPSID associated with a late prelymphomatous stage. The diagnosis of IPSID is very important in patients with malabsorption syndrome, which may or may not be related to alpha heavy chain disease, because IPSID may evolve into lymphoma but its prelymphomatous stage can be treated and cured. We have therefore reported the different features seen with enteroclysis and CT, comparing the results obtained in the various forms of lymphoma of the small bowel. The importance is stressed of an accurate diagnosis of IPSID forms, however uncommon in our Country.
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PMID:[Primary lymphoma of the small intestine: clinico-radiological correlations]. 202 38

A small adolescent with alpha heavy chain disease presenting as malabsorption and evolving to immunoblastic lymphoma is reported. The pathological evolution is documented by serial endoscopy and small intestinal biopsy. Clinical and pathological remission was obtained by the use of COMP combination chemotherapy.
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PMID:Clinical and pathological evolution of alpha chain disease to immunoblastic lymphoma and response to COMP chemotherapy. 335 36

Primary small intestinal lymphoma (PSIL) represents a heterogenous group of disorders with variable clinical and pathologic features and a characteristic age, socioeconomic, and geographic distribution. In developed countries, PSIL usually occurs as a localized ileal tumor, shows a bimodal age distribution, and most frequently presents with abdominal pain and obstructive symptoms. Histologically, most of these tumors are diffuse histiocytic, lymphocytic, or undifferentiated lymphomas. Other variants of PSIL, collectively referred to as immunoproliferative small intestinal disease, occur most often among young patients of poor socioeconomic status in Third World countries, mostly in the Middle East and Mediterranean area. They are characterized by involvement of long loops of the upper small intestine and commonly present with abdominal pain, diarrhea, malabsorption, and clubbing of the fingers. A subgroup of these patients shows a serological abnormality with the appearance of part of the alpha heavy chain of IgA in the serum. Histologically, the lesion appears as a dense diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate of the mucosa of the upper jejenum or duodenum. A form of malignant lymphoma of true histiocytic origin complicates long-standing celiac disease. The contrasting clinical, epidemiological, histopathological, and immunological features of these variants of PSIL raise interesting questions about the pathogenesis of small bowel lymphoma.
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PMID:Primary lymphomas of the small intestine: east-west contrast. 395 68

Gastrointestinal lymphoma, uncommon in the West, is far more prevalent in developing countries where it falls into two groups: 'Western'-type lymphomas, similar to those seen in developed countries, and the so-called Mediterranean-type lymphoma. It is now accepted that Mediterranean lymphoma represents, in the majority if not in all cases, the late stage of alpha heavy chain disease (alpha-HCD). This disease is characterized by abnormal secretion of an immunoglobulin fragment; alpha-HCD and Mediterranean lymphoma constitute two ends of a spectrum of pathology now classified as immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID). IPSID is associated predominantly with poor socioeconomic conditions; patients present with progressive malabsorption in the second and third decades of life. Diagnosis is established by small bowel biopsy, with or without high serum levels of the alpha heavy chain protein. Treatment consists of an initial staging laparotomy, with debulking of lymphomatous deposits if appropriate, followed by chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Overall prognosis is poor but the recent use of doxorubicin-based chemotherapy offers some hope for the future.
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PMID:Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease: Mediterranean lymphoma and alpha heavy chain disease. 831 11

Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID) was recently added to the growing list of infectious pathogen-associated human lymphomas. Molecular and immunohistochemical studies demonstrated an association with Campylobacter jejuni. IPSID is a variant of the B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), which involves mainly the proximal small intestine resulting in malabsorption, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. Geographically, IPSID is most prevalent in the Middle East and Africa. IPSID lymphomas reveal excessive plasma cell differentiation and produce truncated alpha heavy chain proteins lacking the light chains as well as the first constant domain. The corresponding mRNA lacks the variable heavy chain (V(H)) and the constant heavy chain 1 (C(H)1) sequences and contains deletions as well as insertions of unknown origin. The encoding gene sequence reveals a deletion of V region and parts of C(H)1 domain. Cytogenetic studies demonstrated clonal rearrangements involving predominantly the heavy and light chain genes, including t(9;14) translocation involving the PAX5 gene. Early-stage IPSID responds to antibiotics (30%-70% complete remission). Most untreated IPSID patients progress to lymphoplasmacytic and immunoblastic lymphoma invading the intestinal wall and mesenteric lymph nodes, and may metastasize to a distant organ. IPSID lymphoma shares clinical, morphologic, and molecular features with MALT lymphoma, lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma, and plasma cell neoplasms.
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PMID:Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID): a model for mature B-cell neoplasms. 1554 84


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