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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Haemopoietic dysplasia is a condition which often precedes the development of acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia. Before this event, however, patients are at risk from severe infections even in the absence of neutropenia. This paper describes 3 patients with haemopoietic dysplasias in whom neutrophil microbicidal activity was deficient in vitro. The important abnormality appeared to be defective release of myeloperoxidase into the phagocytic vacuole. Two of these patients suffered from numerous baterial infections.
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PMID:Neutrophil function and diagnosis of pre-leukaemic states. 22 35

A case of a child affected by Shwachman's syndrome with a chronic diarrhea, cyclic neutropenia and bone defects is described. The child died at the age of eight months from an acute cardiac failure which showed analytical alterations compatible to an acute myocardial infarction. Pathologic study showed a pancreatic lipomatous hypoplasia, myocardial fibrosis and chondrometaphyseal dysplasia. Main hypothesis that relate pancreatic pathology and development of myocardial fibrosis are discussed, although there is a lack of definitive evidence for confirming such relation.
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PMID:[Myocardial fibrosis in Shwachman's syndrome (author's transl)]. 48 46

T-gamma-lymphoproliferative disorder, a syndrome of T-cell lymphocytosis with neutropenia has been described in patients with various autoimmune disorders, especially rheumatoid arthritis. We report a case of T-gamma-lymphoproliferative disorder occurring in a 42-year-old white woman with a long history of dermatitis herpetiformis and subsequent development of Coomb's positive autoimmune hemolytic anemia and polymyositis. The peripheral blood lymphocytes showed the T-suppressor cell phenotype (CD2-, CD3-, CD8-, and CD4-). DNA analysis of the peripheral blood lymphocytes revealed a T-cell receptor beta-chain gene rearrangement and an immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangement. The patient's course was marked by numerous bouts of infection. The unique factor in this patient was the development of a plasma cell dyscrasia and amyloidosis prior to death.
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PMID:T-gamma-lymphoproliferative disorder arising in a background of autoimmune disease and terminating in plasma cell dyscrasia with primary amyloidosis. 189 15

Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is frequently associated with monocytosis in the blood and myelomonocytic dysplasia in the bone marrow. In two groups of patients with MDS, all subtypes excluding CMML, the authors demonstrated that monocytosis was present in 15% of the patients in group I according to the haemogram at the time when the diagnosis was established and in 19% in group II where it was required that at least in half the haemograms throughout the course of the disease there were more than 10% monocytes. No difference was found in the prognosis of patients with monocytosis, as compared with patients with monocytopenia as regards the life span and frequency of transformation into AL. The cytogenetic and cultivation findings did not differ either. In some instances, in particular in patients with RA and RAS significant monocytosis was not associated with the expected proliferation of monocytoid cells in bone marrow. The authors assume that proliferation and differentiation of germ cells in the monocytic series is easier than in the granulocytic series and that monocytosis can be considered a manifestation of substituted neutropenia. The work indicates the difficulties associated with the differential diagnosis of RA, RAS and RAEB with monocytosis, MDS with a dominating change of the type of myelomonocytic dysplasia and CMML proper.
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PMID:[Monocytosis and myelomonocytic dysplasia in myelodysplastic syndrome]. 213 57

Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV; formerly, feline T-lymphotropic lentivirus) is a typical lentivirus resembling human and simian immunodeficiency viruses in morphologic features, protein structure, and reverse transcriptase enzyme. It is antigenically dissimilar, however. The virus is tropic for primary and permanent feline T-lymphoblastoid cells and Crandell feline kidney cells. The virus did not grow in other permanent feline non-lymphoblastoid cells that were tested, or in lymphoid and non-lymphoid cells from man, dogs, mice, and sheep. During short-term inoculation studies in cats, the feline immunodeficiency-like syndrome found in nature was not experimentally induced, but a distinct primary phase of infection was observed. Fever and neutropenia were observed 4 to 5 weeks after inoculation; fever lasted several days, and neutropenia persisted from 1 to 9 weeks. Generalized lymphadenopathy that persisted for 2 to 9 months appeared at the same time. Antibodies to FIV appeared 2 weeks after inoculation and then plateaued. Virus was reisolated from the blood of all infected cats within 4 to 5 weeks after inoculation and persisted indefinitely in the face of humoral antibody response. Virus was recovered from blood, plasma, CSF and saliva, but not from colostrum or milk. Contact transmission was achieved slowly in one colony of naturally infected cats, but not between experimentally infected and susceptible specific-pathogen-free cats kept together for periods as long as 4 to 14 months. The infection was transmitted readily, however, by parenteral inoculation with blood, plasma, or infective cell culture fluids. In utero and lactogenic transmission were not observed in kittens born to naturally or experimentally infected queens. Lymphadenopathy observed during the initial stage of FIV infection was ascribed to lymphoid hyperplasia and follicular dysplasia. A myeloproliferative disorder was observed in 1 cat with experimentally induced infection.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of experimentally induced feline immunodeficiency virus infection in cats. 245 96

A poodle-type dog with bone marrow dyscrasia and macrocytosis was investigated by clinicopathological, cytological and ultrastructural means. Peripheral blood analysis revealed macrocytosis and the presence of nucleated erythroid cells, some with nuclear/cytoplasmic asynchrony. Tendencies towards neutropenia and granulocytic hypersegmentation were observed. Bone marrow examination revealed low normal myeloid to erythroid ratio, the presence of megaloblasts and some giant metamyelocytes. In addition, there were abnormal mitoses, binuclearity and multinuclearity, incomplete nuclear membranes and nuclear clefts, intracytoplasmic parallel-sided membranes and apparent degenerate erythroid cells. Blood biochemical tests indicated normal to high concentrations of serum vitamin B12, serum folate and red cell folate. Transcobalamin I/IIIB12-binding capacity was similar to values for normal dogs, but transcobalamin II-binding capacity appeared high. It was concluded that the condition had similarities to both congenital dyserythropoietic disorders and true megaloblastic conditions, but until further investigations are reported it might be wise to refer to it as "bone marrow dyscrasia" in poodles.
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PMID:Investigations of bone marrow dyscrasia in a poodle with macrocytosis. 258 46

The bone marrow of an 11-year-old girl with cyclic neutropenia was examined by electron microscopy. In the nonneutropenic phase, mature polymorphonuclear neutrophils had numerous bundles of filamentous inclusions in both cytoplasms and nucleus. Primary granules were slightly increased in number. Similar filament-like inclusions also have been reported in some cases of hemopoietic dysplasia; however, our case showed no abnormality in chromosomes, no thrombocytopenia, and no leukemic change.
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PMID:Unusual inclusions in mature polymorphonuclear neutrophils of cyclic neutropenia. 282 25

A 34-year-old woman presented with pancytopenia, profound neutropenia and repeated infections. A bone marrow specimen revealed hypercellularity with trilineage dysplasia and bizarre granulocytic morphology identical to that of the rarely reported myelokathexis. Investigations revealed defects in platelet and neutrophil functions and markedly reduced colony-to-cluster ratio in bone marrow culture. She required treatment with antibiotics, surgical intervention for a gangrenous abdominal wall, and eventually underwent a successful allogeneic bone marrow transplant from her sister. This case suggests that myelokathexis is an unusual form of myelodysplasia with a relatively benign course and presenting at a young age.
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PMID:A myelokathexis-like variant of myelodysplasia. 291 1

Bernard-Soulier syndrome is an inherited bleeding abnormality characterized by thrombocytopenia with large platelets and deficiency of the platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex. We have identified a young female with an acquired Bernard-Soulier-like platelet defect and a coexisting primary myelodysplastic disorder. Abnormal bruising had developed at age 5. A normal platelet count with some giant platelets was noted at age 7. At age 9 she developed a large haematoma following surgery. Laboratory investigation revealed thrombocytopenia and large platelets. Platelet membrane glycoprotein analysis showed a marked deficiency of the components of the GP Ib-IX complex (approximately equal to 25% of normal). Flow cytometry revealed two populations of platelets: a predominant population of large platelets lacking the GP Ib-IX complex and a minor population of normal-sized platelets with normal GP Ib-IX expression. The patient developed progressive anaemia, more severe thrombocytopenia and neutropenia, and circulating blast cells were seen. A bone marrow showed gross hypercellularity with marked dysplasia of all three lineages and increased blasts. Marrow cytogenetic studies showed the presence of monosomy 7 in all metaphases, with an additional trisomy 21 in 10%. Peripheral blood cells were normal 46XX. The above data are consistent with an acquired myelodysplastic syndrome associated with a Bernard-Soulier-like platelet defect.
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PMID:An acquired Bernard-Soulier-like platelet defect associated with juvenile myelodysplastic syndrome. 334 99

Neutropenia is a life-threatening sequel of hematological disorders and a dominant factor limiting the dosage of cytotoxic chemotherapy. The role of the neutrophil is of such importance in defence against microbial invasion that measures that modify the behaviour of residual hemopoietic tissue to promote a modest increase in neutrophils, can confer considerable benefit by reducing the frequency and severity of infection. Such a change can be mediated in bone marrow depression by diversion of more progeny of immature precursors into the neutrophil series, or by enhancement of the stimulatory drive operating on neutrophil production. The former effect can be achieved by hypertransfusion of red cells to reduce the demand on the limited precursor population for cells of the erythroid series. The latter effect can be achieved by administration of lithium carbonate. Neutropenia caused by autoimmune injury to the neutrophil series can also be successfully modified by measures which suppress the underlying immune dyscrasia or the function of the reticulo-endothelial system. Corticosteroid administration and splenectomy can be helpful in certain specific types of neutropenia. Administration of cyclophosphamide and azathioprine has both mutagenic and marrow suppressive potential, but can induce remissions in severe chronic isolated neutropenia and in systemic lupus erythematosis.
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PMID:New concepts in management of neutropenia. 385 79


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