Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Many chemotherapeutic agents function by damaging the DNA of rapidly dividing cells, leading to side effects in the bone marrow, including anemia and leukopenia during chemotherapy and the development of secondary leukemias in the years following recovery from the original disease. We have created an animal model of alkylation-based chemotherapy, in nontumor-bearing rats, to investigate the effect of niacin deficiency on the side effects of chemotherapy [2 x 2 design, niacin-deficient (ND) vs. pair-fed (PF) control, and ethylnitrosourea (ENU) vs. vehicle control (C)]. Weanling Long-Evans rats were fed ND diet or PF niacin replete diet for 4 wk. ENU or C treatment started after 1 wk of feeding and consisted of 12 doses delivered by gavage, every other day. At 4 wk postweaning, niacin deficiency and ENU treatment ended, the rats were fed a high-quality control diet (AIN-93M) and the recovery of blood variables was monitored. ND alone decreased growth rate and caused anemia and neutrophilia. ENU treatment alone caused anemia, lymphopenia, neutropenia and an increase in circulating reticulocytes. In combination, ND and ENU treatment synergistically decreased hematocrit. ND prevented the ENU-induced increase in reticulocyte numbers observed in control rats. ND also increased the severity of ENU-induced lymphopenia. A combination of ND and ENU abolished the neutrophilia caused by ND alone. In summary, ND significantly increased the susceptibility of young Long-Evans rats to ENU-induced bone marrow suppression, suggesting that niacin-deficient cancer patients may benefit from supplementation.
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PMID:Niacin deficiency in rats increases the severity of ethylnitrosourea-induced anemia and leukopenia. 1080 5

This paper outlines the impact of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) used as a single modality therapy in 17 patients with secondary autoimmune neutropenia (S-AIN) who had been treated a multiple number of times previously. Fifteen of these patients had demonstrable antineutrophil antibodies and two had cellular S-AIN with haemopoietic inhibitory T-cells present in the marrow. Prior to treatment, all had had problems with infection. All patients responded within 7 days of commencement of treatment. Provided G-CSF neutrophil counts were maintained above 1 x 109/l, no further infections occurred. This was achievable by using G-CSF administered as infrequently as once every 8 days. Eight of the 17 patients remained on G-CSF, although five switched to the glycosylated form because of side-effects. None have developed osteoporosis despite 47.29 patient years of total experience with G-CSF. In conclusion both glycosylated and nonglycosylated G-CSF can be used effectively in treating AIN on a long-term basis.
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PMID:Clinical experience with the use of rhG-CSF in secondary autoimmune neutropenia. 1198 54

A 63-year-old woman had previously been admitted to another hospital due to fever, abdominal pain and diarrhea. She was treated with fasting, antibiotics and G-CSF administration because of the coexistence of neutropenia, and the symptoms improved. However, discontinuation of G-CSF administration resulted in a recurrence of the neutropenia accompanied with enterocolitis. After admission to our hospital, a diagnosis for idiopathic AIN was performed as she tested positive in both granulocyte immunofluorescence and granulocyte agglutination tests. Administration of corticosteroid following G-CSF resulted in a continuous increase in the neutrophil count and the disappearance of anti-neutrophil autoantibodies.
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PMID:[Successful treatment with G-CSF and corticosteroid of adult idiopathic autoimmune neutropenia presenting as recurrent enterocolitis]. 1250 86

Chronic neutropenia is a decrease in circulating neutrophils in the peripheral blood lasting over 6 months. Values need to be refered with the age and race. In children aged 2 weeks to 12 months reffered values are above 1000/03BCL. There are congenital and aquired reasons of neutropenia in infancy. The most common type of chronic neutropenia in infants is chronic, benign neutropenia (AIN). Authors present ten infants between three and six months with chronic, benign neutropenia. The reason of ordering laboratory tests at outpatient clinic were benign upper respiratory tract infections (four cases), pallor (four cases) and on parental demand (one case). In one infant neutropenia was observed during treatment of pneumonia at a district hospital.
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PMID:[Neutropenia in infancy - sometimes chronic and benign - own experiences]. 1930 28

Primary autoimmune neutropenia (P-AIN) is an extremely rare disease. The most effective treatment for primary P-AIN is a granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; however, no curative treatment has been reported. We herein report a case of an adult P-AIN patient with a relatively mild medical history (irrespective of the severe neutropenia) who showed a sustained hematological response over seventeen months after the initiation of treatment with subcutaneous Alemtuzumab.
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PMID:Refractory Adult Primary Autoimmune Neutropenia that Responded to Alemtuzumab. 2730 25

The autoimmune cytopenias are a related group of disorders in which differentiated hematopoietic cells are destroyed by the immune system. Single lineage disease is characterized by the production of autoantibodies against red cells (autoimmune hemolytic anemia [AIHA]), platelets (autoimmune thrombocytopenia [ITP]) and neutrophils (autoimmune neutropenia [AIN]) whereas multilineage disease may include various combinations of these conditions. Central to the genesis of this disease is the breakdown of central and/or peripheral tolerance, and the subsequent production of autoantibodies by both tissue and circulating self-reactive B lymphocytes with support from T helper lymphocytes. These disorders are classified as primary (idiopathic) or secondary, the latter associated with an underlying malignancy, systemic autoimmune disease, infectious disease or a specific drug. Non-specific immunosuppression with corticosteroids remains the first-line therapy for many of these disorders, and although associated with high response rates, is compromised by significant toxicity and high relapse rates. Management of patients with chronic refractory autoimmune cytopenias who have failed first-line and second-line (cytotoxic immunosuppressant therapy and or splenectomy) is particularly complex, with definitive treatment in select patients requiring hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Given the toxicity concerns of non-selective immunosuppressants, development of therapeutic regimens that avoid steroids has progressed rapidly in recent decades. [Full article available at http://rimed.org/rimedicaljournal-2016-12.asp].
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PMID:Autoimmune Cytopenias: Diagnosis & Management. 2790 98