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)

The Tc-99m sulfur colloid liver-spleen scintigrams of nine patients with Felty's syndrome (a triad of rheumatoid arthritis, splenomegaly, and neutropenia) were reviewed. The characteristic scintigraphic findings include (1) moderate or severe splenomegaly, (2) the reversal of liver-to-spleen uptake ratio despite normal liver function tests, and (3) virtually no visualization of the bone marrow uptake and no pulmonary radiocolloid sequestration. In a late stage of cirrhosis of the liver, moderate-to-severe splenomegaly with the reversal of liver-to-spleen uptake ratio almost always accompanies abnormal liver function, and sometimes there may be associated pulmonary radiocolloid uptake. It was therefore concluded that in a proper clinical setting, a radiocolloid scintigraph may differentiate between Felty's syndrome and cirrhosis of the liver in a late stage.
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PMID:Radiocolloid scintigraphy in Felty's syndrome. 348 13

21 patients, 18 with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and 3 with prolymphocytic leukaemia (PLL), all B-lymphocyte origin and with progressive disease, were treated with a regime of low-dose splenic irradiation (SI). All patients experienced a rapid relief of disease-related symptoms. Following SI the total lymphocyte count (TLC) was markedly reduced in 18 patients. Partial to complete regression of splenomegaly occurred in 9 patients. Pre-existing anaemia of production failure type improved in 6 patients and as a result the haemoglobin rose to normal or near normal levels. SI caused the loss of T-, B- and Null-lymphocytes, but the loss of B-lymphocytes predominated. CLL/PLL became quiescent for long periods in 9 patients (CLL = 8; PLL = 1) but remained progressive in the other 9, all CLL. SI had no demonstrable effects on TLC, splenomegaly or anaemia in the 3 remaining patients (2 CLL, 1 PLL). The treatment was well tolerated by all, and side effects were almost absent. Transient reduction of neutrophils and platelets occurred commonly. No patient with initially normal neutrophil and platelet counts developed irreversible neutropenia or thrombocytopenia. In view of these effects, the ease of administration and the lack of side effects, further evaluation of low-dose SI, particularly in comparison with other regimes, seems worthwhile.
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PMID:A preliminary study of low-dose splenic irradiation for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic and prolymphocytic leukaemias. 348 79

The authors have studied the case of a female patient with rheumatoid polyarthritis, who developed a lymphocytic proliferation in the blood, the marrow, and the liver, associated with a neutropenia. Several similar cases have been recently reported in the literature. The cellular proliferation is made of large granulous lymphocytes and the study of membrane markers enables to find the following homogeneous phenotype: E rosette+, CD8+, HNK-1+, FcR+, CD4-luminal diameter "divided by degrees - -, IgS-, HLA class II-. This lymphocytic sub-population produces little interleukin-2, responds weakly to mitogens (PHA, CON A, PWM), and inhibits the response of normal lymphocytes to the same mitogens. These lymphocytes have a weak natural killer activity but, on the contrary, develop a very strong cytotoxic activity which is antibody-dependent. Clinically, splenomegaly, anemia and infections are frequent and hepatomegaly or thrombopenia more rare. Adenopathies are never present. The evolution is chronic in nature and not very aggressive, although the lymphocytic proliferation is monoclonal in origin, as demonstrated in molecular biology studies. The neutropenia might be secondary to an inhibiting effect of lymphocytes on the granular precursors of the bone marrow. There is a definite association between this lympho-proliferative syndrome and rheumatoid polyarthritis, and this association appears to be different from the Felty's syndrome.
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PMID:[Characterization of chronic lymphocytic proliferation in a female patient having rheumatoid polyarthritis with neutropenia]. 361 55

LGL leukemia results from a chronic, clonal proliferation of LGL. Chronic neutropenia with recurrent bacterial infection and splenomegaly are common clinical manifestations. Rheumatoid arthritis coexists in some of these patients, who thus resemble patients with Felty syndrome. Other hematologic abnormalities that may occur include pure red-cell aplasia and adult-onset cyclic neutropenia. Lymphoid infiltration of bone marrow, splenic red pulp cords, and hepatic sinusoids is characteristic; lymph node and skin involvement are rare. Multiple serologic abnormalities are frequently present, including positive tests for rheumatoid factor and/or antinuclear antibody, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, and circulating immune complexes. Antineutrophil and antiplatelet antibodies are often present. Leukemic LGL exhibit phenotypic heterogeneity; the most common phenotype in our patients is CD2+, CD3+, CD8+, HNK-1+, CD16-. Despite markedly increased numbers of LGL, functional activity of the cells is usually decreased. The mechanism of cytopenias is uncertain: in pure red-cell aplasia, it appears to be due to suppressive effect on erythropoiesis by abnormal LGL, but in patients with chronic neutropenia it may be antibody-mediated. Although most patients appear to have a relatively benign clinical course, mortality from infections and progressive lymphoproliferation is substantial. Optimal therapy remains undefined. Some preliminary evidence suggests that LGL leukemia may be associated with infection with a retrovirus similar to HTLV-I. Although relatively rare, LGL leukemia is of interest because a better understanding of this disease process may contribute to our knowledge of autoimmune diseases, the immunoregulatory functions of LGL, and the mechanisms controlling normal hematopoiesis.
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PMID:Large granular lymphocyte leukemia. Report of 38 cases and review of the literature. 362 48

This study examines the role of plasma lactoferrin in the assessment of neutropenia. In particular, we have studied lactoferrin as an inhibitor of granulopoiesis and as an indicator of the size of the total blood granulocyte pool (TBGP). Plasma lactoferrin concentration was determined in a heterogeneous group of 30 patients with neutropenia. Serial plasma lactoferrin levels in a patient with cyclic neutropenia correlated with the cycles of the neutrophil count. Patients with splenomegaly had a grossly elevated lactoferrin:neutrophil ratio. Most chronic idiopathic neutropenia patients had no real clinical problems and a normal plasma lactoferrin level. The results provide further evidence to support the concept that plasma lactoferrin indicates the size of the TBGP and the lactoferrin: neutrophil ratio indicates the degree of granulocyte margination. There was no evidence to suggest that lactoferrin acting as a feedback inhibitor of granulopoiesis caused neutropenia in these patients.
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PMID:Plasma lactoferrin in patients with neutropenia. 363 17

Two patients with rare localizations of extrapulmonary tuberculosis are presented. In a 55-year-old man admitted with septic fever and a low neutrophil count, ultrasonography of the spleen revealed splenomegaly with numerous hypodense foci. Fine needle biopsy of one of the foci disclosed tuberculosis. Persistent splenogenic neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, despite tuberculostatic therapy, required splenectomy which confirmed the initial diagnosis. At laparotomy no other abdominal foci of tuberculosis were found. In a second 57-year-old man admitted for ascites and weight loss, a biopsy specimen of the liver showed normal liver parenchyma but, by chance, peritoneal tuberculosis. Tuberculostatic therapy brought about cure.
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PMID:[Rare abdominal manifestations of tuberculosis: isolated splenic tuberculosis and peritoneal tuberculosis]. 370 7

A 38-year-old man with Graves' disease taking propylthiouracil (PTU) for 6 years developed neutropenia and marked splenomegaly. After subtotal thyroidectomy with discontinuance of PTU the patient remained asymptomatic for the last two and half years. The serum obtained during the period of neutropenia demonstrated opsonic activity to neutrophils of the patient as well as of normal volunteers. This opsonic antineutrophil activity was located in the IgG fraction of the serum. Furthermore, PTU at the concentration (0.1-1.0 micrograms/ml) attainable in the patient's serum significantly stimulated [3H] thymidine incorporation in the patient's lymphocytes. These findings indicate that the patient developed autoimmune neutropenia by producing opsonic antineutrophil antibodies in association with the PTU therapy.
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PMID:Graves' disease with neutropenia and marked splenomegaly: autoimmune neutropenia due to propylthiouracil. 384 26

The clinical, morphological, immunologic, and cytogenetic features of seven cases of chronic granulated T cell lymphocytosis with neutropenia were studied. The disorder was characterized by moderate blood and bone marrow lymphocytosis, neutropenia, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, splenomegaly, absence of lymphadenopathy, and a chronic, relatively stable clinical course. The proliferative lymphocytes manifested a cytotoxic/suppressor T lymphocyte phenotype. In two of four cases studied, blood lymphocytes showed clonal chromosome abnormalities. One patient treated with pulse steroid therapy had reversal of lymphocytosis and severe neutropenia with subsequent resolution of an intractable infection. The lymphocytosis and neutropenia recurred when steroids were withdrawn. Six of the seven patients were living three months to 17 years from diagnosis; one died at 4.3 years of an unrelated cause. Five of the patients, including the two with lymphocyte chromosome abnormalities, had persistent lymphocytosis and neutropenia from three months to 13 years from diagnosis. In two patients, the disease appears to have undergone spontaneous regression. No differences in clinical presentation or the morphological or immunologic characteristics of the proliferative lymphocytes were apparent between those patients with lymphocyte chromosome abnormalities and persistent disease and those who had a spontaneous regression. The finding of clonal chromosome abnormalities in the blood lymphocytes of two of the patients in this study suggests a neoplastic origin for chronic granulated T cell lymphocytosis with neutropenia. However, apparent spontaneous regression in two patients, one after 11 years, lends support to a chronic reactive or immunoregulatory disorder as the etiology. It is probable that cases of granulated T cell lymphocytosis with neutropenia, although morphologically and immunologically similar, are biologically heterogeneous.
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PMID:Granulated T cell lymphocytosis with neutropenia: malignant or benign chronic lymphoproliferative disorder? 387 60

Monocyte function in rhesus monkeys with simian acquired immune deficiency syndrome (SAIDS) was compared with that in age-matched normal juvenile rhesus monkeys. The functional tests were 1) chemotaxis, 2) phagocytosis of opsonized Candida albicans, 3) killing and/or growth inhibition of Candida albicans, 4) generation of respiratory burst, and 5) monocyte-derived macrophage response (morphology and/or respiratory burst) to stimulating agents such as lymphokines, gamma interferon, endotoxin, and phorbol myristate acetate. The monkeys tested had either clinical SAIDS (alive with lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and lymphopenia or neutropenia) or had terminal SAIDS (moribund due to the disease). Responses of monocytes from 14 monkeys with clinical SAIDS were indistinguishable from those of 9 normal juvenile rhesus monkeys, whereas monocytes from 3 monkeys with terminal SAIDS had enhanced phagocytosis and respiratory burst capacity. Chemotaxis, candidacidal/stasis activity, and response to stimulating agents were normal in these terminal cases. Plasma from the SAIDS monkeys was as capable of opsonizing yeasts and of being able to generate chemotactic factors by endotoxin as was control plasma. SAIDS retrovirus (SRV) was detected by co-cultivation of pure monocyte-derived macrophage cultures with Raji cells, an indicator cell line which forms syncytia in the presence of SRV. Four terminal SAIDS cases and one late-stage clinical SAIDS case were virus-positive when the number of macrophages in the cultures ranged from less than 50 to about 500. Terminal SAIDS monocyte-derived macrophages in culture as long as 17 days produced SRV. These data show that in monkeys with SAIDS the major effector functions of monocytes and macrophages involved in host defense are intact (even up until death). Additionally, some of the monocytes are productively infected, and these infected monocytes are viable and adherent in culture.
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PMID:Monocyte function in rhesus monkeys with simian acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 390 21

Two patients with classic rheumatoid arthritis developed severe neutropenia and increased numbers of large granular lymphocytes in the blood and bone marrow. These lymphocytes exhibited homogeneous surface membrane immunophenotypes of Leu5+, Leu11-, Leu4+, Leu3-, Leu2-, Leu7+ and Leu5+, Leu11+, Leu4+, Leu3-, Leu2+, Leu7-, respectively. In both patients, neutropenia was initially corrected with corticosteroid therapy; long-term improvement followed low-dose oral cyclophosphamide and methotrexate therapies. In these 2 patients and 12 previous patients with rheumatoid arthritis associated with expanded populations of immunophenotypically homogeneous large granular lymphocytes, neutropenia occurred in all 14, thrombocytopenia in 6, anemia in 7, and mild or moderate splenomegaly in 12. In contrast to Felty's syndrome, granular lymphocyte expansions in rheumatoid arthritis usually occur in older patients, may appear simultaneously with arthritis, and are usually associated with normal or elevated blood leukocyte counts. Mild hemocytopenias in these patients can often be managed with observation. Therapy with corticosteroids or immunosuppressive-cytotoxic drugs may be beneficial in more severe cases, but splenectomy is not recommended.
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PMID:Rheumatoid arthritis associated with expanded populations of granular lymphocytes. 394 76


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