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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A live
varicella
vaccine was used in 11 susceptible children in remission from acute leukemia, ten of whom had been in remission for six months or less, and in 6 children with
neuroblastoma
and retinoblastoma. In the immunological checkup before vaccination, most of them showed a positive reaction in the skin tests with dinitrochlorobenzene, phytohemagglutinin, purified protein derivative, and viral antigens. Leukopenia (three cases, less than 3,000/cu mm) and decreased IgG level (two cases, 380 mg/dl and 445 mg/dl) were observed in the children with leukemia. Anticancer medication was suspended from one week before vaccination to one week after vaccination. The only clinical reaction was a minute rash that appeared three weeks after vaccination in two children with leukemia and that disappeared within three days. Serological responses by complement fixing and neutralizing (NT) tests were detected in all the vaccinated children four weeks after vaccination, and NT antibody was still detected 28 months after vaccination in the two patients tested. Three of the vaccines were exposed to natural
varicella
at home and in the classroom 2 to 18 months after vaccination, but they were free from any
varicella
symptoms.
...
PMID:Application of a live varicella vaccine in children with acute leukemia or other malignant diseases. 20 15
Seventy-four out of 113 sera from patients with infectious hepatitis,
chickenpox
, measles and mumps reacted with both smooth muscle and cytoplasmic filaments in cultured fibroblasts and
neuroblastoma
. Five out of eighty-five control sera also reacted in this way. That the cytoplasmic structures are intermediate filaments was suggested by their rearrangement into coils of perinuclear filaments in colchicine- or vinblastine-treated fibroblasts, but not in cytochalasin B-treated cells. The idenity of these structures was confirmed by the demonstration that the same structures reacted with the post-viral sera and a rabbit and human anti-intermediate filament antibody. Immunoabsorption studies showed that twenty-seven out of thirty-two positive sera were neutralised by skeletin, the intermediate filament protein from smooth muscle. In all but one of the sera, the antibody was IgM. Antibody titres fell in the second specimen in eleven out of fourteen pairs of acute and convalescent sera. The association between viral infections and autoantibodies suggest that production of antibodies suggests that production of antibody to intermediate filaments may be initiated by viruses.
...
PMID:Viral infections and IgM autoantibodies to cytoplasmic intermediate filaments. 38 89
40 PATIENTS WITH METASTATIC
NEUROBLASTOMA
HAVE BEEN Treated by a sequential multichemotherapy made of vincristine, adriamycin and cyclophosphamide. Results of pre-treated complementary investigations are reported and discussed. Criterias are proposed to distinguish four evolutive types and their appreciation is done after three months. The chemotherapy used has no pronounced haematological toxicity, but one
varicella
and two interstitial pneumonias ended with death. Nearly 2/3 of these streated tumors are drug-responders : 15 complete apparent remissions which are lasting in 11 patients since four to eighteen months; and 13 good partial remissions. One third of the patients are drug-non responders. Actuarial survival of the whole group is 67% at 12 months.
...
PMID:[Combined chemotherapy of neuroblastoma. 1st results in 40 children with metastatic form]. 94 21
Human and murine
neuroblastoma
cell lines were infected in vitro with
varicella
-zoster virus (VZV). Infected human
neuroblastoma
cells (IMR-32) supported the synthesis of abundant viral antigens as detected by indirect immunoperoxidase labeling using human serum rich in anti-VZV antibodies and did not survive the infection. In situ hybridization (ISH) with VZV-cloned probes revealed a strong hybridization signal in these infected cells. During cultivation, the virus was released in the culture medium, and viral polypeptides were revealed by Western blotting of infected cells, using either a monoclonal anti-gpI antibody or a rabbit antiserum. All these findings indicate that IMR-32 cells support a productive and lytic infection by VZV, whether infected by cell-free virus or by cocultivation with infected cells. Murine
neuroblastoma
cells (neuro-2A) survived VZV infection and did not produce any infectious virus. No VZV-specific proteins were detected in infected cells either by immunolabeling or by Western blotting. However, viral nucleic acids could be detected by ISH, indicating that mouse
neuroblastoma
cells displayed a nonproductive, nonlytic infection. Infected neuro-2A cells have been examined by ISH using probes corresponding to immediate early (IE) genes 4, 62, and 63 and late (L) gene 31 encoding gpII. A strong hybridization signal was detected when infected cells were probed with a fragment containing the IE genes 62 and 63. Lower levels of hybridization were detected with the other probes, corresponding to IE or L genes. These systems allow comparative molecular analysis of persistent and acute infection of nerve cells by VZV.
...
PMID:Acute and persistent varicella-zoster virus infection of human and murine neuroblastoma cell lines. 216 72
During six-month period, 102 consecutive episodes of fever in 68 children (ranging from 1 month to 14 years of age) with malignant diseases were prospectively evaluated. Sixty-five had acute lymphoblastic leukemia, nine had acute myeloblastic leukemia, nine had malignant lymphoma (four Hodgkin and five non-Hodgkin), five had chronic myeloid leukemia, four had rhabdomyosarcoma, three had CNS tumors, two had
neuroblastoma
, one had Wilms, and four had other malignant tumors. Forty cases (39.2%) showed severe neutropenia (500 neutrophil/m3) during the episode. S. aureus, E. coli, and S. pyogenes were in 53% of the 75 microbiologic isolates. Twenty-two percent of the viral studies were positive. Mycologic studies were all negative, except one case with C. Albicans. Pneumonia (33 cases), cellulitis (15 cases), pharyngitis (12 cases), and
varicella
(11 cases) were the most common final diagnosis. Seventy-one percent of the episodes were etiologically documented (by bacterial isolate, characteristic serology, and/or typical clinic picture); 19% of the febrile episodes were probable infections, and 10% were fever of uncertain cause. Ninety percent of the cases responded well to therapy, and mortality of this series was 7%. Gentamicin, Carbenicillin, and Methicilin were the more common antibiotics employed. We conclude that in our population 1) infection is a frequent cause of morbidity in children with malignant diseases; 2) the most common cause of the febrile episodes is bacterial infection; 3) S. aureus, E. coli and S. pyrogenes are the most frequent bacterial isolates, and P. aeruginosa is infrequent; 4)viral infections are relatively frequent in this group of children; and 5) with adequate management, the mortality is low.
...
PMID:Infections in children with malignant disease in Argentina. 722 35
Varicella
-zoster virus (VZV) ORF61 encodes a phosphoprotein that transactivates VZV promoters. Transfection of cells with cosmid DNAs, including a cosmid with a large deletion in ORF61, resulted in a VZV ORF61 deletion mutant that was impaired for growth in vitro and could be partially complemented by growth in
neuroblastoma
or osteosarcoma cell lines. Cells infected with the VZV ORF61 deletion mutant expressed normal levels of an immediate-early VZV protein, but had reduced levels of a late protein and showed abnormal syncytia. Carboxy terminal truncation mutants of VZV ORF61 protein have a transrepressing phenotype and inhibit the infectivity of cotransfected wild-type viral DNA. Transfection of cells with cosmid DNAs, including a cosmid with stop codons that should result in an ORF61 truncation mutant expressing a transrepressing protein that retains the RING finger domain, resulted in a viral genome which reverted back to the wild-type sequence. BAL-31 exonuclease was used to produce deletions at the site of the stop codons in ORF61 of the cosmid, resulting in loss of the RING finger domain. Transfection of tissue culture cells with the ORF61 BAL-31 deletion mutants and other cosmid DNAs yielded viable viruses. Thus, while deletion mutants lacking the RING finger domain of ORF61 replicate in cell culture, a mutant with stop codons that retains this domain could not be propagated and reverted to wild-type virus.
...
PMID:Varicella-zoster virus ORF61 deletion mutants replicate in cell culture, but a mutant with stop codons in ORF61 reverts to wild-type virus. 965 49
Previous studies have suggested a relationship between reproductive history, pregnancy and birth factors, and the risk of
neuroblastoma
. We conducted a case-control telephone interview study that included a total of 504 children under the age of 19 years with newly diagnosed
neuroblastoma
identified by two national collaborative clinical trials groups, the Children's Cancer Group and the Pediatric Oncology Group. A total of 504 controls, matched to cases on age, were identified by random digit dialing. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate the matched odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) with adjustment for household income, and maternal race and education. In addition, case subgroups defined by age at diagnosis, tumour MYCN oncogene amplification status, and stage were evaluated. A suggestive pattern of increased risk was seen for a greater number of prior pregnancies, history of previous miscarriages and induced abortions, with nearly a twofold increase in risk for two or more prior induced abortions (OR = 1.9, 95% CI [1.0,3.7]). No association was found for the following diseases or conditions during pregnancy: hepatitis, rubella, measles, mumps,
chickenpox
, mononucleosis, vaccinations, morning sickness, pre-eclampsia, bleeding, proteinuria, anaemia, urinary tract infections, heart disease, kidney disease, liver disease and diabetes. A weak association was found for hypertension during pregnancy. Several labour and delivery factors were related to an increased risk, including threatened miscarriage, anaesthetic during labour (specifically epidural) and caesarean delivery. We found associations between premature delivery (<33 weeks: OR = 1.9, 95% CI [0.7,4.8]), very low birthweight (<1500 g: OR = 2.6, 95% CI [0.7,10.3]) and risk of
neuroblastoma
. There was no consistent pattern of increased risk found for most factors within subgroups defined by age at diagnosis, stage or MYCN status.
...
PMID:Association of pregnancy history and birth characteristics with neuroblastoma: a report from the Children's Cancer Group and the Pediatric Oncology Group. 1170 80
Neuroblastoma
is the most common cancer in infants worldwide, but little is known about its etiology. Infectious etiologies involving the immune system have been hypothesized for some childhood cancers, especially leukemia, but the role of infectious agents in
neuroblastoma
has not been fully investigated. The authors used data from a large case-control study conducted by the Children's Oncology Group in the United States and Canada in 1992-1994 to investigate whether there was any relation among day-care attendance, childhood infections, allergies, and
neuroblastoma
. They interviewed mothers of 538 case children and 504 age-matched control children by telephone about several factors, including pregnancy, medical history, lifestyle, and childhood medical conditions and exposures. The results suggested decreased risks associated with day-care attendance (odds ratio (OR) = 0.81, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.56, 1.17), childhood infectious diseases (
chickenpox
, mumps, red measles, and German measles) (OR = 0.60, 95% CI: 0.39, 0.93), and allergies (OR = 0.68, 95% CI: 0.44, 1.07). The authors found reduced
neuroblastoma
risk associated with markers of potential childhood infections. This suggests a possible role of infectious agents in
neuroblastoma
etiology. Future epidemiologic studies should incorporate more direct data on infection.
...
PMID:Day care, childhood infections, and risk of neuroblastoma. 1510 77
A 21-month-old girl with
neuroblastoma
developed chronic verrucous Oka strain
varicella
-zoster infection during chemotherapy. Virus isolated from the patient demonstrated high-level acyclovir resistance, and its thymidine kinase had no in vitro enzymatic activity. After foscarnet therapy, she underwent stem cell transplantation without
varicella
reactivation. This is only the second reported case of resistant
varicella
zoster virus caused by Oka strain virus.
...
PMID:Acyclovir-resistant chronic verrucous vaccine strain varicella in a patient with neuroblastoma. 1877 18
Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS) is a rare condition that has been reported from all parts of the world. It is well recognized as a paraneoplastic syndrome in children with
neuroblastoma
and in adults with small-cell carcinoma of lung and some other cancers. It may also occur in association with various central nervous system infections. We report a case of OMS in a patient with
varicella
zoster virus infection. IgM antibody for
varicella
-zoster virus was detected in the serum and the cerebrospinal fluid. The patient improved after treatment with clonazepam and was asymptomatic at 1-month follow-up.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome caused by varicella-zoster virus. 2108 35
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