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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Following extensive bowel resection, a young woman experienced severe malnutrition; subsequent administration of parenteral nutrition precipitated the copper deficiency syndrome. This consisted of hypocupremia, subnormal
ceruloplasmin
levels, anemia, and severe
neutropenia
. The bone marrow was megaloblastic, vacuolated, and sideroblastic; granulocytic maturation was not observed beyond the myelocyte stage. Copper sulfate therapy was followed by a marked reticulocytosis, increase in hematocrit, and recovery of neutrophils. Additional studies indicated that both serum and urinary erythropoietin values were low; serum activity increased after copper supplementation. Abnormal granulopoiesis was demonstrated using the in vitro granulocyte colony assay. The patient's granulcoytic stem cells were normal on two occasions; however, mixing studies showed that culture of the patient's copper-deficient marrow with her copper-deficient serum yielded significantly reduced numbers of granulocyte colonies. Thus, copper appears to be a necessary element for normal hematopoiesis; lack of this trace element may result in ineffective erythropoiesis and granulopoiesis.
...
PMID:Observations on the anemia and neutropenia of human copper deficiency. 30 69
We present a patient who developed severe anemia and
neutropenia
after receiving parenteral nutrition for 2.5 years. The serum levels of copper and
ceruloplasmin
were low, and the bone marrow showed the presence of ringed sideroblasts and vacuolated immature cells. The administration of copper chloride by bolus injection led to a rapid improvement in anemia and
neutropenia
. The number of progenitor cells (colony-forming unit-granulocyte-macrophage and erythrocyte) present before the copper supplementation was well preserved. It is therefore suggested that copper enzymes play an important role in the maturation of hematopoietic cells.
...
PMID:Anemia and neutropenia in a case of copper deficiency: role of copper in normal hematopoiesis. 151 34
Three adult cases in which copper deficiency developed during long-term total parenteral nutrition (TPN) without copper supplementation have been described, together with a brief review of the literature. All three patients were suffering from malabsorption when TPN was instituted, and overt symptoms of copper deficiency developed an average of 5.8 months after the start of TPN. Clinically, leukopenia with
neutropenia
and low plasma levels of copper and
ceruloplasmin
were seen in all cases. The dosage of copper administration in these cases was 0.3 to 7.2 mg of copper/day, or 5.3 to 133 micrograms of copper/kg/day, with total doses of 7 to 176 mg of copper.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency during total parenteral nutrition: clinical analysis of three cases. 250 79
Serum concentrations of copper and
ceruloplasmin
were measured in 24 very low birthweight babies. They were high in those weighing less than 1000 g, and critically ill or receiving intravenous nutrition, and normal in those with bone disease,
neutropenia
, or oedema. Care is needed to maintain adequate concentrations without toxicity.
...
PMID:Copper and very low birthweight babies. 312 16
Copper deficiency was found in an adult patient who had received excessive daily oral zinc for 10 mo. The deficiency was characterized by hypochromic-microcytic anemia, leukopenia, and
neutropenia
. Although initially thought to be caused by iron deficiency, the anemia did not respond to oral or intravenous iron. Cessation of zinc tablets and ingestion of an oral copper preparation daily for 2 mo failed to correct the anemia or leukopenia. It was not until shortly after intravenous administration of a cupric chloride solution during a 5-day period, at a total dose of 10 mg, that serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
levels increased and the anemia, leukopenia, and
neutropenia
resolved. These data suggest that the elimination of excess zinc is slow and that, until such elimination occurs, the intestinal absorption of copper is blocked.
...
PMID:Zinc-induced copper deficiency. 333 23
Anemia and
neutropenia
developed in a man who took pharmacologic doses of supplemental zinc. Laboratory investigation showed high zinc level, hypocupremia, low
ceruloplasmin
level, and ringed sideroblasts. All resolved after withdrawal of zinc. Self-administered zinc appears to have caused severe copper deficiency, with secondary anemia and
neutropenia
. Physicians should be aware of this deleterious and completely reversible effect of megadose mineral therapy. Zinc ingestion or exposure should be considered in the differential diagnosis of unexplained anemia, leukopenia, or sideroblastic anemia.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency and sideroblastic anemia associated with zinc ingestion. 340 36
Copper deficiency has been described in premature infants on hyperalimentation. The bony abnormalities are generalized and are usually associated with anemia and
neutropenia
. These changes present with normal serum levels of iron, ascorbic acid, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium, as well as with depressed levels of copper and
ceruloplasmin
. They appear at about three to nine months of age in infants with a low birth weight who are receiving total parenteral nutrition, but can be prevented by greater than normal maintenance levels of copper supplements. Established bone changes improve rapidly after the administration of therapeutic supplements.
...
PMID:Skeletal changes associated with copper deficiency. 680 88
A 6-month-old full-term infant had severe anemia and
neutropenia
. The patient was being fed cow's milk and a diet of corn flour. Thorough investigation revealed low serum iron concentration, severe hypocupremia, low
ceruloplasmin
, retardation of bone age, and metaphysial irregularities and spurring. Bone marrow aspirate revealed cytoplasmic vacuolization in precursors of the erythroid and myeloid series and ringed sideroblasts. Therapy with oral iron, folic acid, and vitamin C was futile. Administration of copper sulfate resulted in brisk increase in neutrophils and reticulocytes. The child maintained normal levels of hemoglobin, neutrophils, serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
, and serum iron one year after copper therapy was discontinued. The probable role of unrecognized copper deficiency in causing anemia in infants more than 6 months of age is discussed, and the importance of serum copper examination in refractory iron deficiency anemia and
neutropenia
is stressed. To the best of our knowledge, no such case has previously been described in the literature.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency with cow's milk diet. 727 67
Anemia and
neutropenia
caused by copper deficiency is a well-known consequence of long term total parenteral nutrition in the literature. We present 6 bed-ridden elderly patients who developed anemia and
neutropenia
after receiving enteral nutrition for a long time (mean: 3.3 years) In all 6 patients, serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
level were very low, and the mean of their hematological data were as follows: WBC 2,200/microliters, neutrophil 554/microliters, hemoglobin 8.1 g/dl, platelet 260 x 10(3)/microliters, respectively. The bone marrow examination showed cytoplasmic vacuolization of both myeloid and erythroid precursors, and maturation arrest of granulopoiesis. Then, copper sulfate was administrated by enteral tube to 6 patients, and the improvement of anemia and
neutropenia
was observed within a month. A 82-year-old woman who received enteral nutrition for 3.5 years with sever anemia (Hb 3.7 g/dl) and
neutropenia
(neutrophil 350/microliters), showed a marked improvement in hematological data (Hb 8.0 g/dl, neutrophil 4, 092/microliters, respectively) after two months by administering the copper supplementation. The exact cause of the anemia and
neutropenia
in copper deficiency is unclear, but it is suggested that the decreased activity of enzyme containing copper may be related. Hematological abnormalities due to copper deficiency should be cared during long term enteral nutrition with long termed bed-ridden elderly patients.
...
PMID:[Anemia and neutropenia in elderly patients caused by copper deficiency for long-term enteral nutrition]. 782 95
Anemia and
neutropenia
are commonly observed hematologic changes in patients with copper (Cu) deficiency, but thrombocytopenia is rarely found. A-69-year-old patient with postoperative small-bowel obstruction underwent laparotomy three times. Because of persistent obstruction, nasoduodenal suction was continued and total parenteral nutrition was instituted. Fifteen months after the initiation of total parenteral nutrition, the patient gradually developed pancytopenia (red blood cell count 222 x 10(4)/mm3, neutrophil count 1254/mm3, and platelet count 9.2 x 10(4)/mm3). The serum Cu level was 10 micrograms/dL and the serum
ceruloplasmin
level was less than 5 mg/dL. After 2 weeks of Cu supplementation in a daily dose of 20 mumol, the serum Cu level increased to 81 micrograms/dL and the serum
ceruloplasmin
level to 20 mg/dL. Hematologic values showed a dramatic response: red blood cell count increased to 362 x 10(4)/mm3, neutrophil count to 4819/mm3, and platelet count to 22.1 x 10(4)/mm3. The improvement of pancytopenia could be attributed to Cu supplementation. This is the first case report of Cu deficiency with pancytopenia during total parenteral nutrition.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency with pancytopenia during total parenteral nutrition. 820 58
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