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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A double-blind phase II trial compared zalcitabine (0.03 mg/kg/day) in combination with zidovudine (720 mg/m2/day) and zidovudine monotherapy in 250 clinically stable, previously zidovudine-treated, human immunodeficiency virus-infected children. The combination was well-tolerated except for an increased incidence of
neutropenia
(14%) compared with that in children receiving monotherapy (5%). No differences were noted for time to first AIDS-defining illness or death, neuropsychologic status, or weight Z scores. In patients in the combination arm, the
CD4
cell count decline was slower (13% per year) than in patients receiving monotherapy (25% per year) (P = .03), and quantitative peripheral blood mononuclear cell virus load remained lower at all time points (P = .08). Deaths were fewer in patients receiving combination therapy (4) compared with those in patients receiving monotherapy (10) (P = .083). Thus, administration of zidovudine with zalcitabine to children with prior zidovudine treatment did not result in a significant increase in toxicity compared with that resulting from zidovudine monotherapy and demonstrated improvement in immunologic and virologic surrogate markers.
...
PMID:Evaluation of pharmacokinetics, safety, tolerance, and activity of combination of zalcitabine and zidovudine in stable, zidovudine-treated pediatric patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol 190 Team. 912 64
A 70-year-old woman presented with bilateral anterior uveitis. She was on a gluten-free diet because of a celiac disease which had been diagnosed 3 months before. An anterior chamber aspirate contained a majority of large granular lymphocytes (LGL). The investigation of a chronic
neutropenia
led to the diagnosis of an otherwise typical T-LGL leukemia. This seems to be the first report of a CD3+
CD4
- CD8+ T-LGL leukemia causing anterior uveitis through infiltration of leukemic cells, and the second report of an intriguing association of celiac disease with T-LGL leukemia.
...
PMID:[Large granular T-cell lymphocytic leukemia disclosed by bilateral uveitis: association with celiac disease]. 916 77
Inflammatory changes following infection are central to the clinical manifestation of disease. However, information regarding such changes in animal disease is limited. In canine parvovirus infected puppies we measured the levels of acute phase proteins and changes in leukocyte phenotypes and cell trafficking by flow cytometry. These parameters correlated with conventional assessment of clinical disease in a vaccine efficacy study. Seropositive (CPV-2) 6-week-old puppies given three doses of a CPV-2 containing vaccine developed significant antibody titers and remained healthy after experimental infection with CPV-2b. Unvaccinated controls developed clinical signs and shed virus. Importantly, acute phase proteins became elevated, and lymphopenia,
neutropenia
and modulation of neutrophil-
CD4
were detected in controls but not in vaccinates.
...
PMID:Canine parvovirus vaccine elicits protection from the inflammatory and clinical consequences of the disease. 917 74
A 33-year-old male was admitted because of severe
neutropenia
(55/microliter) in 1985. A diagnosis of autoimmune
neutropenia
was not made. CD4+ T-lymphocyte count was 128/microliter and
CD4
/CD8, 0.1, though the titers of immunoglobulins were in normal range. Nine times examinations of CD4+ T-lymphocyte count resulted in 5 times lower counts than 300/microliter between 1985 and 1993. His HIV (type 1 and type 2) studies were negative. He suffered from EB virus infection in 1987. The titers of VCA-IgG and EA-IgG had been elevated for half a year after that. He was operated polyp-like tumors in bilateral nasal cavities on February in 1994. The diagnosis was Burkitt's lymphoma that was also demonstrated by in situ hybridization using EB virus RNA. He was treated with a modification of COPBLAM III, but he died on June in 1994. Autopsy revealed tumor cell infiltrations in multiple organs. We suspect that he developed Burkitt's lymphoma 82 months later, when he had complicated EB virus infection in condition of idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia caused by unknown origin.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia terminating in Burkitt's lymphoma]. 926 64
Zidovudine is approved for administration in doses given every 4 hours. Less frequent dosing has been used in many clinical trials, but the toxicity and efficacy of such regimens have not been formally compared with the approved regimen. In this multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, the safety, tolerance and efficacy of 600 mg of zidovudine given daily in two or six divided doses were compared. Three hundred and twenty patients with a
CD4
lymphocyte count < 250 cells/mm3 (mean, 104 cells/mm3) or a prior AIDS-defining illness were treated with zidovudine 100 mg every 4 hours (regimen A) or 300 mg every 12 hours (regimen B). Eighty-eight patients (56%) and 94 patients (58%), assigned to regimens A and B, respectively, completed the planned 48 weeks of treatment. Serious anemia (hemoglobin < or = 7.5 g/dl) occurred in 13% and 7% of patients treated with regimens A and B, respectively (difference, 6%, 95% confidence interval [CI], 2, 12%; p = .13). The mean duration of treatment and the frequency of
neutropenia
and symptomatic complaints including nausea and headache were similar in the two treatment groups. The number of patients experiencing a new opportunistic infection (18% versus 20% for regimens A and B, respectively), and the number of deaths (five in each group) did not differ significantly between groups. The effect of treatment on
CD4
lymphocyte counts and HIV p24 antigenemia also was similar for both regimens. Zidovudine given at the more convenient dose of 300 mg twice daily has similar safety, and tolerance and appears to have similar efficacy to the currently approved regimen. Use of this regimen should help simplify the treatment of HIV disease.
...
PMID:A comparative trial of zidovudine administered every four versus every twelve hours for the treatment of advanced HIV disease. 929 87
The short-term effects of stavudine (d4T) plus lamivudine (3TC) were evaluated among 48 human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients for whom zidovudine therapy had failed or who could not tolerate zidovudine. Patients were followed for 8 weeks after initiation of open-label d4T plus 3TC. Four patients discontinued therapy, because of
neutropenia
(1), hepatitis (1), or neuropathy (2). Reduction in virus load was -0.86 (+0.3 to -3.4) log10 copies/mL and
CD4
cell increase was 30 (-100 to +290) cells/mm3. Virologic response was associated with a higher
CD4
cell count, no prior exposure to d4T and 3TC, and no previous AIDS-defining illness. Virus load reduction for patients naive to 3TC and d4T was -1.47 (-0.14 to -3.37) log10 copies/mL. Short-term use of d4T plus 3TC is safe, well-tolerated, and associated with virologic and substantial immunologic benefits. Further evaluation of d4T and 3TC in combination is warranted.
...
PMID:Stavudine plus lamivudine in advanced human immunodeficiency virus disease: a short-term pilot study. 935 13
Multilineage hematopoietic defects occur in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and affect therapy of the disease and of associated opportunistic infections and neoplasms. Anemia and
neutropenia
are common in HIV patients, and can occur as a result of HIV-related myelosuppression or complications or may be secondary effects of antiretroviral or other agents used in management of the disease. With the advent of combination drug therapy for the treatment of HIV infection and prophylaxis and treatment of infectious complications, myelosuppression is frequently encountered and may be treated with synthetic hematopoietic growth factors. Erythropoietin has been shown to increase mean hematocrit levels and to reduce transfusion requirements in anemic HIV-infected patients receiving zidovudine. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor have been shown to increase neutrophil counts in patients with AIDS-related bone marrow failure and those receiving zidovudine, interferon-alpha, or ganciclovir. Although recent research using interleukin-2 (IL-2) has shown that use of this cytokine in AIDS patients can lead to increases in
CD4
cell counts that appear to be functional, further study is needed to determine whether cytokines can play a role other than palliation in HIV-infected patients.
...
PMID:Cytokine use in the management of HIV disease. 938 9
To study the incidence of, the factors associated with, and the effect on survival of anemia in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected persons, we analyzed data from the longitudinal medical record reviews of 32,867 HIV-infected persons who received medical care from January 1990 through August 1996 in clinics, hospitals, and private medical practices in nine United States cities. We calculated the 1-year incidence of anemia (a hemoglobin level of <10 g/dL or a physician diagnosis of anemia); the adjusted odds ratios showing excess risk of anemia associated with demographic factors, prescribed therapies, and concurrent diseases; the risk of death for patients who developed anemia compared with risk for patients who did not develop anemia; and, of patients who did develop anemia, the risk of death for those who did not recover from anemia compared with the risk for those who did recover. The 1-year incidence of anemia was 36.9% for persons with one or more acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining opportunistic illnesses (clinical AIDS), 12.1% for patients with a
CD4
count of less than 200 cells/micron or
CD4
percentage of <14 but not clinical AIDS (immunologic AIDS), and 3.2% for persons without clinical or immunologic AIDS. Of anemia diagnoses, 22% were identified by physicians as drug related. Incidence of anemia was associated with clinical AIDS, immunologic AIDS,
neutropenia
, thrombocytopenia, bacterial septicemia, black race, female sex, prescription of zidovudine, fluconazole, and ganciclovir, and lack of prescription of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. The increased risk of death associated with anemia differed by first
CD4
count: for patients with a
CD4
count of >/=200 cells/microL at the beginning of the survival analysis, the risk of death was 148% (99% confidence interval [CI], 114 to 188) greater for those who developed anemia; for patients whose first
CD4
count was <200 cells/microL, the risk of death was 56% (99% CI, 43 to 71) greater for those in whom anemia developed. For persons in whom anemia developed, the risk of death was 170% (99% CI, 132 to 203) greater for persons who did not recover from anemia compared with those who did recover. Anemia is a frequent complication of HIV infection, and its incidence is associated with progression of HIV disease, prescription of certain chemotherapeutics, black race, and female sex. Anemia, particularly anemia that does not resolve, is associated with shorter survival of HIV-infected patients.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of anemia in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected persons: results from the multistate adult and adolescent spectrum of HIV disease surveillance project. 941 98
This study was carried out in 60 AIDS patients who presented toxoplasma encephalitis in Martinique (French West Indies). Diagnosis was based on a combination of fever, neurologic signs, and characteristic CT-scan images in patients with positive HIV serology. There were 46 males and 14 females with a mean age of 40 years. The mode of transmission was heterosexual in most cases (68.3%). The incidence of drug-related transmission was low (6.7%). Neurotoxoplasmosis was the most frequent presenting symptom of AIDS (53.3%) followed by esophageal candidosis (20%) and pneumocystosis (10%). Clinical symptoms were headache (56.5%), fever (48.3%), hemiparesia (36.6%), and confusion (36.6%). CT-scan showed most lesions to be multiple (70%), hypodense (89%), and subject to contrast uptake (93%). Mean lymphocyte level was 1128/mm3 with 88
CD4
/mm3 and a
CD4
-to-CD8 ratio of 0.14. Conventional treatment using a combination of pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine led to skin rash and
neutropenia
and had to be discontinued in 30% of cases. Clinical symptoms and mean survival (327 days) were the same as comparable findings from Europe and North America.
...
PMID:[Cerebral toxoplasmosis and AIDS in Martinique]. 951 53
A 54-year-old woman presented with a severe autoimmune anemia, thrombocytopenia,
neutropenia
(Evans' syndrome), and CD8+ lymphocytosis, without signs of lymphadenopathy or splenomegaly. A diagnosis of T cell large granular lymphocyte (T-LGL) leukemia was made, based on cytomorphology, the typical CD3+/
CD4
-/CD8+/CD16+/CD56-/CD57-/HLA-DR(+/-) immunophenotype of the lymphocytosis (9 x 10(9)/l), and biallelic clonally rearranged T cell receptor beta (TCR beta) genes. Clonality of the TCR alphabeta+ T-LGL was also demonstrated with a panel of antibodies against variable domains of TCR beta chains, which showed single Vbeta7.1 expression on the CD3+ T-lymphocytes. After treatment failure with corticosteroids, splenectomy, and cyclophosphamide, respectively, a complete clinical remission was induced and sustained with cyclosporin A. Vbeta7.1/CD8/CD3 triple immunofluorescence stainings appeared to be valuable for titrating the cyclosporin A dosage by monitoring the T-LGL cells during treatment.
...
PMID:Induction of clinical remission in T-large granular lymphocyte leukemia with cyclosporin A, monitored by use of immunophenotyping with Vbeta antibodies. 951 76
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