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

Conditioned media (CM) from a human lung adenocarcinoma cell line expressing interleukins 1 and 6 (IL-1, IL-6), granulocyte (G), macrophage (M), and GM colony-stimulating factors (G, M, GM-CSF) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) were used to stimulate growth of bone marrow (BM) cells from 18 persons with leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome, or lymphoma. The objective was to increase numbers of analyzable metaphases and to enhance the likelihood of detecting cytogenetic abnormalities. Although more mitotic cells were observed with CM, the detection rate of cytogenetic abnormalities decreased in 12 of 18 cases. These data indicate that use of CM for cytogenetic analyses may favor growth of normal versus leukemia cells and mask cytogenetic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Use of conditioned media in cell culture can mask cytogenetic abnormalities in acute leukemia. 233 74

Sarcoidosis has been observed in association with numerous blood dyscrasias including lymphoma, leukemia, and multiple myeloma. This report describes a patient with sarcoidosis and a refractory anemia whose bone marrow karyotype showed deletion of the long arm of chromosome 5, consistent with a myelodysplastic syndrome. Concurrent sarcoidosis and myelodysplasia may relate to the continued availability of cytokines as a consequence of repeated macrophage, T-cell, and B-cell interactions, with evolution to the 5q- abnormality. This association may merit specific attention in the future approach to the diagnostic evaluation in certain patients with sarcoidosis.
...
PMID:Development of 5q- myelodysplasia in a patient with sarcoidosis. 236 16

Seven cases of miliary tuberculosis in patients with hematologic disease were analyzed clinicopathologically. Mean age of the patients was 65 years, and the hematologic diseases were CML, AML, ALL, MDS and malignant lymphoma. Diabetes mellitus was present as a complication in three patients. Miliary tuberculosis was found in 5 cases during the first admission to our hospital owing to hematologic problems. In 4 of 6 cases, fever had started more than two months before admission, consequently, the tuberculosis probably began about that time. After admission, chemotherapy was administered in 5 cases, and steroid in 6 cases for hematologic disease. The mean total quantity of steroid administered was 2,134 mg of prednisolone and average treatment duration was 69 days. The chest roentgenographic shadow was so atypical that miliary tuberculosis was suspected in only one case. The initial chest roentgenogram showed hilar and mediastinal lymph node swelling as well as the shadow of pulmonary tuberculosis in two cases. It was thought that the hilar and mediastinal lymph node swelling could be explained by primary complex, although the patients were of advanced age, or by "secondary complex" reported by Terplan, K in 1940. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was made in two patients before their death by smear of aspirated fluid of cervical lymph node and by bone marrow cell block in one patients, and by pathological examination of mediastinal lymph node biopsy in the other patients. Tubercles were found from bone marrow cell block in 2 out of 5 patients and from bone marrow biopsy in 1 out of 3 patients, but the positive results were reported in 2 patients following death. Smears of sputum, gastric juice, urine, spinal fluid and pleural effusion were negative in all cases. One patient diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis also had pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. This case was treated with antituberculosis drugs for 20 days without improvement. Another patient diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis improved under treatment with antituberculosis drugs, but died of cytomegalovirus pneumonia. Autopsy in 5 cases revealed non-reactive miliary tuberculosis, and pulmonary hemorrhage probably due to DIC was present as a complication in two cases. In these cases, severe immunosuppression, which is a major precipitating factor of miliary tuberculosis, is thought to be induced by hematologic disease itself, chemotherapy, steroid or other underlying disease such as diabetes mellitus. Miliary tuberculosis in such compromised host is cryptic and progresses rapidly. Consequently, early diagnosis is very important. Retrospectively, the unexplained pyrexia was most important to suspect tuberculosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinicopathological study of miliary tuberculosis in patients with hematologic disease]. 237 32

Two patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) and malignant tumours are reported. The first patient developed myelogenous leukaemia soon after the myelodysplastic syndrome has been diagnosed. The undifferentiated gastric lymphoma found in the second patient suggests that an increased risk of gastrointestinal malignancies in CVID could partly be due to lymphomas. We hypothesize that the tissue- or site-specific risk of lymphomas and gastrointestinal cancer can be explained by an increased chromosomal or genomic instability with a higher mutation rate and genomic disorganization, and that this instability could be related to viral carcinogenesis. The primary immunodeficiency per se may not be responsible for the cancer susceptibility in CVID patients.
...
PMID:Common variable immunodeficiency and malignancy: a report of two cases and possible explanation for the association. 237 21

We measured the levels of adenosine deaminase (ADA) and immunosuppressive acid protein (IAP) in 10 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 5 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 8 with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), 7 with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), 5 with malignant lymphoma (ML), 3 with multiple myeloma (MM) and one with adult T cell leukemia. On admission, the level of IAP was abnormally high in all cases of AML and ALL 50% of CML cases, 71.4% of MDS cases, 60% of ML cases and none of MM cases. ADA was elevated in all cases of ALL, 77.8% of AML and CML cases, 57.1% of MDS cases, 60% of ML cases and 33.3% of MM cases. In 7 patients with AML, the level of IAP returned to normal when they achieved complete remission. On the other hand, the level of ADA had already returned to normal even during induction therapy. ADA showed a positive correlation with the absolute number of peripheral blasts and lactic dehydrogenase both in AML and ALL. These results suggest that ADA indicates the activity of leukemia and IAP indicates the immunocompetence of the host.
...
PMID:[Combination assay of IAP and ADA in hematologic malignancies]. 238 Oct 93

Cytogenetic studies of 91 consecutive patients with therapy-related myelodysplasia or overt acute nonlymphocytic leukemia disclosed characteristic defects of chromosome 7 in 48 cases and of chromosome 5 in 21 cases. The chromosome 5 abnormalities were consistently present in all abnormal mitoses at the time of diagnosis, as were the chromosome 7 abnormalities in 45 of the 48 patients. Various abnormalities, primarily of the short arm of chromosome 17, were observed in 13 cases, abnormalities of the long arm of chromosome 21 were observed in 12 cases, and rearrangements of 11q23 were seen in nine cases. Thirteen patients presented a normal karyotype. Previous therapy with alkylating agents, the presence of an initial myelodysplastic phase, and abnormalities of chromosome 7 or 5 were interdependent. Patients with 11q23 rearrangement typically developed overt leukemia of FAB types M4 or M5a without myelodysplasia and with a short latent period. Evaluated by Cox regression analysis, complete remission of the primary malignancy and a malignant lymphoma as primary tumor were the two most important and independent prognostic factors indicating a longer survival (P = .008). In addition, the platelet count at diagnosis was a significant prognostic factor (P = .01). For the subgroup of 62 patients with myelodysplasia, the number of chromosome aberrations, the percentage of blasts in the bone marrow, and the hemoglobin level were other significant and independent prognostic factors (P = .05, .05, and .004, respectively). The most important predictive factor for a favorable response to intensive antileukemic chemotherapy in overt leukemia was the absence of a preceding myelodysplastic phase (P = .0014).
...
PMID:Chromosome aberrations and prognostic factors in therapy-related myelodysplasia and acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 240 Aug 4

In order to better understand the patho-physiologic role of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), we estimated its serum levels in healthy persons and patients with various disorders, using a newly developed enzyme immunoassay (Motojima et al). In 49 of 56 normal healthy persons (88%), the levels were beneath the sensitivity of the assay (less than 30 pg/mL), while in the remaining seven healthy persons, the levels ranged from 33 to 163 pg/mL. On the other hand, nine of 11 patients (82%) with idiopathic aplastic anemia (AA), one patient with Fanconi's anemia, six of 12 patients (50%) with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), five of 12 patients (42%) with acute leukemia without any blast cells in the blood (M4: one, M5: one, L1: one, and L2: two), six of 18 patients (33%) with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), one of two patients with chronic lymphoid leukemia (CLL), two of four patients with lung cancer, one patient with cyclic neutropenia, two of seven patients with malignant lymphoma, and four patients with acute infection had G-CSF levels ranging from 46 pg/mL to greater than 2,000 pg/mL. Interestingly, a reverse correlation between blood neutrophil count and serum G-CSF level was clearly demonstrated for aplastic anemia (r = -.8169, P less than .01). Moreover, it was found that the G-CSF level rose during the neutropenic phase of cyclic neutropenia and after chemotherapy or bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in three patients with leukemia; also high G-CSF levels were positively correlated to blood neutrophil counts in some cases of infectious disorders and lung cancer. The cellular sources and the mechanisms for production and secretion of circulating G-CSF were not investigated in this study, but the data presented here strongly indicate that G-CSF plays an important role as a circulating neutrophilopoietin.
...
PMID:Serum granulocyte colony-stimulating factor levels in healthy volunteers and patients with various disorders as estimated by enzyme immunoassay. 246 34

We administered recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) to four patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and three patients with non-MDS (two malignant lymphoma and one lung cancer) as a part of a phase II trial and analyzed the effects of rhG-CSF on the neoplastic cells of MDS by performing sequential chromosome analyses on the bone marrow cells. A greater than 3-fold increase in neutrophil count was observed in the MDS patients after rhG-CSF infusions, whereas the number of blasts in the bone marrow did not increase and none of them progressed into the leukemic phase. After rhG-CSF treatment, the bone marrow cells obtained from patients without MDS did not show any particular chromosome abnormalities such as chromosomal breakage. On the contrary, two of the four MDS patients with acquired chromosome abnormalities showed a change in the frequency of marrow cells with clonal abnormalities after rhG-CSF treatment; the proportion of metaphase cells with additional numerical chromosome abnormalities decreased in these two MDS patients. After discontinuation of the treatment, the constitution of marrow cells with chromosome changes reverted to that before treatment. The remaining two MDS patients did not show any particular chromosome changes after the rhG-CSF treatment, indicating that rhG-CSF may not promote the characteristics of dyshematopoiesis in MDS, and act on cells derived from an MDS clone.
...
PMID:Hematologic and cytogenetic findings in myelodysplastic syndromes treated with recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. 248 Sep 43

In this paper we review our experience with HIV-related thrombocytopenic purpura (TP) in 24 patients seen from October, 1985 through April, 1988: the median follow-up was 16 months (range 3-32). All patients belonged to risk groups for AIDS and intravenous drug abusers represented 83% of the entire cohort. The male/female ratio was 4, and most of the patients were Walter Reed stage 3. The mean value of platelets at diagnosis was 33 x 10(9)/liter (range 6-120), and half of the patients had severe thrombocytopenia with hemorrhagic symptoms. Anemia and/or neutropenia were concomitant with TP in 21% and 17% of cases; four cases had pancytopenia. Marrow pictures showed megakaryocytic hyperplasia in 68% of cases; myelodysplasia or hypoplasia were observed in 14% and 18% of patients, respectively; lymphoid aggregates were present in two cases. Antiplatelet antibodies and circulating immune complexes were detected in 40% and 50% of cases, and the mean T4/T8 ratio was 0.9 (range 0.4-1.8). Half of the patients did not require specific therapy due to lack of bleeding; however no spontaneous reversions to normal platelet values occurred. The response to steroids and to immunoglobulins (either high-dose or anti-D) was good but temporary, and required maintenance therapy. The 2-year actuarial risk of evolution into overt AIDS was 30%, with a crude rate of 4 cases over 365 person-months at risk. The events which determined AIDS were opportunistic infections in two cases, Kaposi's sarcoma and malignant lymphoma in the other two. A comparison with the features of idiopathic TP is made and hypotheses regarding the pathogenetic mechanisms are discussed.
...
PMID:HIV-related thrombocytopenic purpura: a study of 24 cases. 249 84

We analyzed infections complicating 140 episodes of severe neutropenia in 86 patients. The underlying diagnosis was acute leukemia in 64, lymphoma in 12 and isolated cases of bone marrow aplasia, agranulocytosis, dysmyelopoiesis and solid tumors. No fever developed in 35 (25%) episodes. No cause for the fever was identified in 40% of the remaining episodes. Clinical evidence of an infection was present in 20%, with positive bacteriologic findings in 27%. Respiratory infection (16%), pneumonia (11%) and sepsis (10%) were the most common infectious processes. Infectious agents isolated were gram negative bacilli (72%), gram positive cocci (19%) and fungi (9%). The association of amikacin and carbenicillin or cephalosporins proved to be superior to gentamycin-penicillin (p less than 0.01). 16 patients died for an overall mortality of 11%. Pneumonia and infection by K pneumoniae or C albicans were associated to a poorer prognosis.
...
PMID:[Infection in severe neutropenia: analysis of 140 episodes]. 251 58


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>