Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This paper presents changes in the bone marrow of patients with malaria; it is based primarily on observations of bone marrows of 89 Gambian children with P. falciparum malaria and includes a review of the literature. Erythroid hyperplasia with dyserythropoiesis was found to be more common in patients with severe anemia and low grade parasitemia than in those with acute malaria. The dyserythropoietic changes are illustrated both with light photomicropraphs and with electron micrographs. The significance of the dyserythropoiesis and possible causes are discussed. Other changes in these patients with acute malaria include lymphocytosis in the bone marrow and reactive lymphocytes, monocytosis and mild neutrophilia in the peripheral blood. Giant metamyelocytes were also commonly seen in bone marrow of patients but were thought to be part of dysmyelopoiesis and not due to B12 or folate deficiency. Phagocytosis of erythrocytes, parasitized cells and nucleated cells was more commonly seen in macrophages in acute malaria, while phagocytosis of small particles such as merozoites was observed in neutrophils. Megakaryocytes were found to be increased in number in patients with acute malaria; a proportion of these cells had rounded nuclei, probably indicating accelerated platelet turnover.
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PMID:Hematopoiesis in human malaria. 225 20

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) characterized by multilineage cytopenias and dysplasia but lacking an increase in blasts, with no Auer rods or monocytosis, do not exactly fit any of the categories of the French-American-British (FAB) classification of MDS and are often diagnosed as refractory anemia (RA), refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS), or 'unclassifiable' MDS. It has been suggested that these 'unclassifiable' cases form a distinct subset with a clinical behavior more like that of refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) than that of RA or RARS, but few studies have been undertaken that characterize this group. We compared the clinical, hematologic, morphologic and cytogenetic features of 18 such patients - for whose disease we propose the designation 'refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia' (RCMD) - to those of 42 patients meeting the FAB criteria for RA or RARS (14 patients) and RAEB (28 patients). Our results show that cytopenias in RCMD are more severe than those in RA or RARS, but are similar to those in RAEB. Erythroid hyperplasia and dyserythropoiesis are the main findings in bone marrow specimens of RA or RARS, but the major features in RCMD are multilineage proliferation and dysplasia, which, except for the lack of increased blasts resemble the findings in RAEB. Only 1/14 patients (7%) with RA or RARS had an abnormal karyotype, whereas RCMD resembled RAEB in terms of the frequency (41 vs 50%, respectively) and type of karyotypic lesions. Abnormalities of chromosomes 5 and 7 (excluding del(5q) as an isolated finding) or complex aberrations were seen only in RCMD and RAEB. in RCMD, the median survival was 24 months, with a 4-year survival rate of48 +/- 13%, intermediate between the findings in RA/RARS (107 months and 77 +/- 12%, respectively) and RAEB (18 months and 27 +/- 9%, respectively). Our data indicate that RCMD is a distinct subset of MDS, with an unfavorable clinical outcome. The designation 'refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia' emphasizes the differences between such cases and the primarily dyserythropoietic, indolent subgroups of MDS, such as RA or RARS.
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PMID:Refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia: further characterization of an 'unclassifiable' myelodysplastic syndrome. 976 15