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)

A 72-year-old man who had worked as a coal worker for 28 years and as a tunnel construction worker for 18 years was admitted because of fever, dyspnea, and appetite loss. Pneumoconiosis had been diagnosed when he was 64 years old and myelodysplastic syndrome at 71 years of age. After admission, the patient was treated with antibiotics and anti-fungal drugs but did not respond. Respiratory failure gradually worsened and he died. Autopsy specimens revealed that the cause of death was exacerbation of respiratory failure due to pulmonary proteinosis rather than pulmonary infection. This is a case of pulmonary proteinosis complicated with pneumoconiosis and myelodysplastic syndrome which, to our knowledge, is rare. We also considered the possibility that defective pulmonary macrophage function due to myelodysplastic syndrome and long-term silica inhalation played a part in the development of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis in this case.
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PMID:[A case of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis complicated with pneumoconiosis and myelodysplastic syndrome]. 1172 94

Pneumoconiosis is the most common occupational disease of the respiratory system. The aim of this paper is presentation of case of pneumoconiosis coexisting with myelodysplastic syndrome in a former coal miner occupationally exposed to coal dust. In a mineral coal miner, aged 56 year, with a 15-year duration of work underneath, suffering from pneumoconiosis, pancytopenia was detected. He was admitted to the hospital, where myelodysplastic syndrome was diagnosed. The patient's condition was gradually worsening, even though chemotherapy was applied, he died from thrombocytopenia manifested by bleeding from the digestive tract in a relatively short time since diagnosis. The presented case seems to be interesting not only in view of possible development of pneumoconiosis as a result of occupational exposure to coal dust, typical in this case, but also in view of the occurrence of clonal disease of blood several years after cessation of exposure.
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PMID:[Coexistence of pneumoconiosis with myelodysplastic syndrome in a coal miner occupationally exposed to coal dust]. 1599 3