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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated a method for the assessment of the phagocytic and bactericidal activity of human peripheral neutrophils against Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I, which is a modified version of the
acridine
orange staining technique originally described by Smith and Rommel (1977). The modification consisted of the use of free leukocyte suspensions rather than coverglass adhered leukocytes in order to avoid two main problems: the inefficient neutrophil adherence to glass that can be observed in specimens from patients with certain functional phagocyte defects, and the risk of selecting among neutrophils. An additional advantage of the modified procedure is that it permits a uniform bacteria: phagocyte ratio in different cell samples. The method was tested on 25 healthy adults and on four children with functional phagocytic defects (chronic granulomatous disease of infancy, Chediak-Higashi syndrome, and Rothmund-Thomson syndrome associated to persistent
neutropenia
and low chemotactic response). The neutrophils of all four patients showed a low bactericidal activity, with percent values of intracellular killed bacteria below the mean +/- 2 SD range observed in the healthy population at all incubation times tested (5, 15 and 30 min). A significant reduction in phagocytosis index and in % killed unopsonized S. aureus was observed in relation to bacteria treated with a pool of normal human serum. These results demonstrate the high sensitivity of the method, which could be used to determine intrinsic and extrinsic functional alterations in human neutrophils.
...
PMID:Evaluation of a fluorochrome assay for assessing the bactericidal activity of neutrophils in human phagocyte dysfunctions. 247 Aug 24
Neutrophil-mediated oxidative stress on the rat mesenteric microcirculation was studied in the experimental model of endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) by using an intravital fluorescent technique and luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (ChL) analysis. Leukocytes sticking to the venules were visualized by the injection of
acridine
orange, a fluorochrome tracer which shows high affinity to white cells. Endotoxin (E coli, O-111B4, Difco, USA) was infused intravenously at a dose of 2 mg/kg/hr. After starting the infusion of endotoxin, the number of sticking cells were gradually increased on the venular endothelium followed by a transient
neutropenia
. In order to investigate the distribution of infused endotoxin in the microvasculature, FITC-labeled endotoxin (Sigma, USA) was used. After administration of FITC-endotoxin, multiple patches of fluorescence along the venular walls were observed, while no fluorescent conjugates were found at the sticking neutrophils and along the arteriolar walls. ChL activities of neutrophils were also dramatically elevated, which may reflect the enhanced ability to generate oxyradical species. To investigate the inhibitory effects of heparin sodium and gabexate mesilate which was a synthetic protease inhibitor on locomotive and metabolic changes of neutrophils induced by endotoxemia, both agents were administered prior to endotoxin infusion. Gabexate mesilate attenuated these changes, but heparin sodium did not show any improving effects. It was concluded that endotoxin primarily affects the venular endothelial cells, resulting in the activation of neutrophils. Gabexate mesilate was more likely to attenuate neutrophil-mediated oxidative stress on microvasculature in endotoxin-induced DIC than heparin sodium.
...
PMID:Microcirculatory disturbances in endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation. The effects of heparin and gabexate mesilate on locomotive and metabolic changes of neutrophils. 314 69
Neutrophil-mediated oxidative stress on the rat mesenteric microcirculation was studied in the experimental model of endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) by using an intravital fluorescent microscope equipped with a Silicon Intensifier Target Image Tube camera and luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (ChL) analysis. Leukocytes adhering to the venules were visualized by the injection of
acridine
orange, a fluorochrome tracer which shows high affinity to white cells. Endotoxin (E. coli, O-111 B4) was administered intravenously at a dose of 2 mg/kg/hour. After starting the infusion of endotoxin, the number of adherent cells gradually increased in the venular endothelium and was followed by a transient
neutropenia
. ChL activities from neutrophils were also significantly elevated, which may reflect the enhanced ability to generate oxygen-radicals. To elucidate the role of 5-lipoxygenase products in the locomotive and metabolic changes of neutrophils, the effects of AA-861, a specific inhibitor of 5-lipoxygenase was tested. In addition prednisolone and indomethacin were evaluated. AA-861 and prednisolone reduced
neutropenia
, leukocyte adhesion to the venular walls and ChL activities from neutrophils. It was concluded that 5-lipoxygenase may modulate neutrophil-mediated oxidative stress on microvasculature in endotoxin-induced DIC.
...
PMID:5-lipoxygenase inhibitor (AA-861) attenuates neutrophil-mediated oxidative stress on the venular endothelium in endotoxemia. 338 68
Studies of neutrophil kinetics in neutropenic individuals, as well as clinical observations of variability in the occurrence of infection among patients with
neutropenia
, have suggested that blood neutrophil counts may not uniformly reflect the effective delivery of neutrophils to extravascular tissues where the cells perform their principal host defense functions. To evaluate this possibility we developed a sensitive, reproducible method of measuring the extravascular delivery of neutrophils to a normal mucosal site of neutrophil turnover. This method is based upon the quantification of neutrophils recoverable from saline mouth wash specimens. Twenty-five mL specimens, obtained in a controlled manner from neutropenic patients and normal subjects, were centrifuged and the sediments resuspended in 1.0 mL Hank's buffer with 2 micrograms
acridine
orange, incubated at 37 degrees C for 15 minutes, and then examined in a hemocytometer chamber by fluorescence microscopy. Neutrophils could be clearly distinguished by their characteristic fluorescence and were counted. With this method as few as 1,500 neutrophils were detected reliably in mouth wash specimens. Mucosal neutrophil counts varied less than 10% with repeated sampling of individual subjects over 5-day periods and were consistently greater than 1.3 X 10(5)/specimen in non-neutropenic individuals. Although profound
neutropenia
was generally reflected by lower than normal oral mucosal neutrophil counts, these counts were significantly higher in individuals with chronic severe
neutropenia
(blood neutrophils less than 300/mm3) than in patients with acute
neutropenia
of comparable severity that had developed following chemotherapy. Also, in individuals recovering from profound
neutropenia
, neutrophils usually reappeared earlier in mouth wash specimens than in blood, and oral mucosal neutrophil counts attained recovery levels more rapidly than did blood counts. This phenomenon was particularly evident in an individual with cyclic
neutropenia
. Moreover, mucosal neutrophils could occasionally be detected in profoundly neutropenic patients when neutrophils were not present in blood samples. These findings indicate that mucosal neutrophil counts in individuals with
neutropenia
provide information about the delivery of neutrophils to tissues that may not be apparent from blood neutrophil counts alone.
...
PMID:Assessing the delivery of neutrophils to tissues in neutropenia. 395 27
m-AMSA, an
acridine
dye derivative, has been utilized in 36 patients with advanced hematologic malignancies. In 22 patients with lymphoma receiving 120 mg/m2 every 3 weeks, 10(45%) have achieved remissions. Eight of these remissions have been partial. The median duration of remission in patients with lymphoma was 3 months (range 1-12+ months). In 11 patients with acute leukemia receiving m-AMSA, 40 mg/m2 t.i.d. for 5 days, three (27%) have achieved remissions. Two of the three remissions have been complete. All three remissions in patients with leukemia were sustained for 1 month. Two patients with myeloma and one patient with chronic lymphocytic leukemia failed to respond. The major toxicity of m-AMSA has been myelosuppression. The dose-limiting toxic effect in patients with lymphoma was
neutropenia
. Nausea and vomiting, alopecia, phlebitis, and hepatic dysfunction have been noted in a minority of patients. Phlebitis appeared to be prevented with heparin administration after m-AMSA infusion. One fatal arrhythmia occurred, apparently related to therapy. m-AMSA appears active in advanced leukemia and lymphoma. Further studies are merited, particularly in combination with known effective agents, in order to improve upon remission duration.
...
PMID:m-AMSA: phase II trial in advanced lymphoma and leukemia. 658 46
A number of topoisomerase II-acting drugs have been described, but few demonstrate schedule-dependent anti-tumour activity. The activity of the epipodophyllotoxins etoposide and teniposide and the
acridine
dye derivative amsacrine is clearly schedule-dependent, and this related not only to the observation that the activity of topoisomerase II varies throughout the cell cycle but also to the finding that these drugs are rapidly cleared from the cell following exposure, permitting DNA repair. Etoposide has been most clearly shown to be schedule dependent in clinical studies. The response rates of patients with small-cell lung cancer receiving a 24-h infusion was only 10% as compared with 89% when the same dose was given over 5 days. Pharmacokinetic studies performed in these patients demonstrated that although the total systemic exposure (area under the plasma concentration-time curve, AUC) was the same in both arms of the study, the duration of exposure to low levels of drug (> 1 microgram/ml) was doubled in the 5-day arm. Haematological toxicity was the same in both arms of the study, as was the duration of exposure to higher plasma levels (> 5 micrograms/ml), suggesting that this toxicity may be associated with higher plasma concentrations, whereas anti-tumour activity is related to prolonged exposure to low levels of drug. This was confirmed in a subsequent study, where prolongation of treatment to 8 days compared to 5 days resulted in a similar exposure to low plasma concentrations and no difference in response rates or survival. Haematological toxicity in this study was worse in the 5-day arm, which also had an increase exposure to high levels of drug (> 5 micrograms/ml). More recently, interest has focused on even more prolonged etoposide administration, typically involving small daily doses repeated for 14-21 days. Although this schedule shows high activity in relapsed small-cell lung cancer and lymphoma, it is associated with significant toxicity (around one-third of patients experience grade III/IV leukopenia or
neutropenia
), which may be related to the observation that the etoposide dose delivered per course in these studies is higher than that obtained with standard dosing over 3-5 days. Further randomised studies are required to determine the optimal dose and schedule of etoposide.
...
PMID:Schedule-dependent topoisomerase II-inhibiting drugs. 807 33
Pyrazoloacridine (PZA, NSC366140, PD115934) is an
acridine
derivative currently undergoing clinical evaluation. In preclinical testing, PZA has shown selectivity for solid tumor cell lines, activity in hypoxic, noncycling, and multidrug-resistant cell lines, and synergy with cisplatin in a variety of lung cancer cell lines. In early phase I clinical studies PZA has shown modest activity in ovarian, cervical, and colon cancer. The purpose of the present study was threefold: to determine the maximally tolerated doses of the combination of PZA (3-h infusion) and cisplatin administered with and without Filgrastim (G-CSF) (Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA) every 3 weeks in untreated or minimally pretreated patients, to describe and quantify the clinical toxicities of combination chemotherapy with PZA and cisplatin, and to evaluate the effects of drug sequencing on the toxicity profile and pharmacologic behavior of PZA. The starting doses in this dose-escalation trial were PZA 400 mg/m2 as a 3-h intravenous infusion and cisplatin 50 mg/m2 as a 1 mg/min intravenous infusion. The sequence of drugs was alternated with each successive course in each patient treated. Twenty-one patients with refractory solid tumors received 43 courses of therapy through four dose levels.
Neutropenia
was dose-limiting and defined the maximum tolerated dose of PZA 400 mg/m2 and cisplatin 50 mg/m2 without G-CSF support. With G-CSF support, nausea and vomiting were dose-limiting. The maximum tolerated and recommended doses for further study of this combination are PZA 600 mg/m2 over 3 h and cisplatin 50 mg/m2 followed by G-CSF support. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that sequence does not impact on the pharmacokinetics of PZA when given in combination with cisplatin.
...
PMID:A phase I and pharmacologic study of pyrazoloacridine and cisplatin in patients with advanced cancer. 1279 32