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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diamond Blackfan anemia is a rare
congenital hypoplastic anemia
that usually presents early in infancy. Congenital anomalies, in particular of the head and upper limbs, are present in about 25% of reported patients. The disease is characterized by a moderate to severe macrocytic anemia, occasional
neutropenia
or thrombocytosis, a normocellular bone marrow with erythroid hypoplasia, and an increased risk of developing leukemia. Recent genetic studies have led to the identification of mutations in the ribosomal protein RPS19 in approximately 25% of sporadic and familial cases, a second gene on chromosome 8p, and evidence for an additional locus (or loci). The pathogenesis is unknown. The majority of patients respond to prednisone, and often erythropoiesis can be maintained with low doses of the drug. Both remissions and increased resistance to steroid treatment can occur. Patients who do not respond to treatment are usually transfusion dependent, although responses to high dose steroid, androgen, and interleukin-3 have been observed. Bone marrow transplantation can be curative.
...
PMID:Diamond-Blackfan anemia. 1069 94
Congenital bone marrow failure syndromes are rare diseases characterised by a reduction of mature blood cells (erythrocytes, platelets, neutrophils). Examples of such disorders include congenital aplastic anemia (Fanconi anemia),
congenital hypoplastic anemia
(Diamond-Blackfan anemia), congenital neutropenias (Kostmann syndrome, cyclic
neutropenia
, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome and others), and congenital thrombocytopenias (TAR syndrome, amegacaryocytic thrombocytopenia). In Germany the prevalence of congenital bone marrow failure syndromes can be estimated to be 10/1,000,000 children and adolescents. Although rare, these diseases contributed significantly to the current knowledge on normal haematopoiesis. The documentation of rare diseases by patient registries and the cooperation of clinical centres within networks are most important for the resolution of such disorders. In the following, congenital
neutropenia
will be presented as an example: Until the 1980s congenital
neutropenia
could only be classified clinically. Few cases had been reported in the literature. All subtypes were therefore collected under the general term "congenital neutropenia". The establishment of an international network of experts and the long-term documentation of the courses of disease in a common database allowed for statistically workable data in response to therapy, secondary diagnoses and the long-term prognosis. A close cooperation with scientists finally led to the characterisation of genetically different disorders with common pathomechanisms.
...
PMID:[Congenital bone marrow failure syndromes. The last 20 years by the example of congenital neutropenia]. 1802 80