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)

A 20-year-old male developed both coccygeal and leg pain and followed by rectocystic disturbance. Disc herniation between L5 and S was suspected and laminectomy was performed. At surgery, an easily curretable tumor occupied the epidural space from L5 to the end of the sacrum. In part, the tumor spread out of the vertebral canal and invaded the surrounding muscle tissue. This muscle tissue and part of the lamina were checked histologically. Initial blood analysis revealed 5% blast-like cells, but failed to confirm them as leukemic cells. Histologically, the tumor cells had round or oval nuclei with large nucleoli and scanty cytoplasm without granulocytic differentiation. Malignant lymphoma or Ewing's sarcoma was initially suspected, but the definite diagnosis was uncertain. Immunohistochemical staining with the PAP method and enzyme histochemistry revealed that the tumor cells were positive for lysozyme and naphthol ASD chloracetate esterase. Thus, granulocytic sarcoma was finally diagnosed. Electron microscopic findings supported this diagnosis. Subsequent karyotyping of bone marrow cells revealed 8; 21 translocation, thus the final diagnosis of this patient was myelodysplastic syndrome, refractory anemia with excess blast cells in transformation or acute myelogenous leukemia, M2, by the FAB classification.
...
PMID:A case of epidural granulocytic sarcoma preceding acute leukemia. 209 94

Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a stem cell disease which, on a clinical level, progresses from the release from growth control of normally differentiated cells (a preleukemic state) to an acute leukemia. On a molecular level, the evolution of CML to acute leukemia is a multistep process. We propose that an early step, at the stem cell level, is acquisition of the ability for gene movement, which allows subsequent submicroscopic and chromosomal rearrangements that cause changes in the growth characteristics and regulation of the stem cell. A specific platelet DNA polymerase (PDP - reverse transcriptase) may play a role in gene movement. The characteristic reciprocal translocation of chromosomes #9 and #22, causing the activation of the c-abl oncogene, appears to be responsible for the uncontrolled cellular growth. Yet, other growth factors (e.g., platelet derived growth factor) and activated oncogenes (e.g., c-sis) must be responsible for the stimulation, progression, and variability seen during the course of the disease. Because CML is a progressive disease with clinically definable stages, CML appears to be a model system for the study of the molecular basis of the progression of preleukemia to leukemia specifically, and preneoplasia to aggressive neoplasia in general.
...
PMID:Implications of retroviral and oncogene activity in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 243 4

Secondary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (sPAP) is a complication of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). A 60-year-old woman was diagnosed with MDS with excess blasts-1. Fifty-four months after the initial diagnosis, treatment with azacitidine was initiated. Seventy-three months after the diagnosis, a bone marrow examination revealed increased myeloblasts, at which time computed tomography showed diffuse ground-glass opacities and interlobular septal thickening in the bilateral lower lung fields. A lung biopsy revealed the presence of PAP; therefore, the clinical diagnosis of MDS/sPAP was confirmed. Careful attention should be paid to the development of sPAP in MDS patients with pulmonary lesions during azacitidine treatment.
...
PMID:Secondary Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis Following Treatment with Azacitidine for Myelodysplastic Syndrome. 3187 40