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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cobra venom factor (CVF)-induced systemic activation of the complement system in the rat has been shown to result in the development of acute lung microvascular injury and appearance in lungs and plasma of lipid peroxidation products. The pathogenesis of these events is dependent on complement and neutrophils and is sensitive to pretreatment of experimental animals with
iron
chelators or scavengers of hydroxyl radical. In order to further analyze the role of complement in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury in rats after systemic complement activation, two different CVFs have been employed in the present study. One was the previously used CVFn isolated from Naja n. naja venom, whereas the other factor, CVFh, was isolated from Naja h. haje venom. Both factors have been shown to activate the alternative complement pathway by forming a potent C3 convertase but differ with respect to their ability to bind and activate C5. CVFn but not CVFh activates C5 and distant complement components. When equal doses of C3-activating activity of CVFn or CVFh were injected intravenously into rats, CVFh-treated rats failed to develop acute lung injury, whereas CVFn-treated animals showed pronounced increases in lung vascular permeability. Similarly, in isolated blood perfused rat lungs neither the lung injury nor pulmonary hypertension caused by CVFn were found after injection of CVFh. In addition, CVFh-treated animals failed to show transient
neutropenia
or appearance in plasma of C5-derived chemotactic activity, although the extent of C3 conversion in vivo was identical to that seen in CVFn-treated rats. Morphologic examination of the lungs of the experimental animals revealed no signs of injury in CVFh-treated rats, whereas the lungs from CVFn-treated animals revealed interstitial and alveolar edema, as well as plugging of pulmonary capillaries with neutrophils, blebbing and/or destruction of vascular endothelial cells, fibrin deposition, and hemorrhage. These studies provide evidence that activation of the complement system involving C3 but not extending further in the complement sequence is not sufficient to bring about acute injury of the lung microvasculature and that the activation sequence must at least also involve C5.
...
PMID:Activation of C5 by cobra venom factor is required in neutrophil-mediated lung injury in the rat. 366 79
Experimental studies of rats have provided significant evidence that intravascular complement activation after i.v. injection of cobra venom factor (CVF) or thermal injury of skin can result in acute lung injury. This has been determined by morphological changes in lung and increases in lung vascular permeability. Systemic complement activation is associated with an early appearance of C5-derived chemotactic activity in the circulation coincident with the development of transient
neutropenia
, followed by extensive granulocytosis and sequestration of neutrophils in lung interstitial capillaries. The acute pulmonary injury depends on availability of complement and neutrophils. Depletion of either complement or blood neutrophils before CVF injection or thermal injury will prevent development of lung injury. Interventional studies with catalase, scavengers of hydroxyl radical OH., and
iron
chelators have revealed that the acute pulmonary injury is related to production of oxygen-derived free radicals by activated neutrophils. OH. appears to be the key mediator involved in the acute lung microvascular injury.
...
PMID:Systemic complement activation and acute lung injury. 394 Sep 2
Hematologic abnormalities were defined in 31 rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) with simian acquired immune deficiency syndrome (SAIDS). Animals manifested anemia (hypochromic/microcytic), severe
neutropenia
and progressive lymphopenia, monocytosis and occasional thrombocytopenia. Bone marrow studies showed erythroid hyperplasia with a marked left shift and adequate megakaryocytes. Two animals showed profound hypoplasia of all hematopoietic elements. Most animals were
iron
deficient, but the course of the anemia suggested additional factors. There was no evidence of immune hemolysis. The pathogenesis of these abnormalities is not clear and will require further study. This reproducible disease will allow studies to elucidate the mechanisms of viral-induced hematologic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Hematologic abnormalities in simian acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 395 29
Marrow hypoplasia is described in CBA/H mice that drank water containing 300 mg/liter cadmium chloride for 12 months. This was characterized by a significant reduction of the totipotent stem cells (CFU-s), granulocyte-monocyte progenitor cells (GM-CFUc), and erythroid progenitor cells (CFU-e). The bone marrow cellularity and the proliferative capacity of GM-CFUc in vitro were decreased. The animals reflected these marrow alterations by demonstrating an anemia with reticulocytopenia and
neutropenia
. They did not show increased mortality or increased susceptibility to infections; however, their body weight was significantly reduced. In addition, iron deficiency was demonstrated in the cadmium-treated mice. The animals had a hypochromia of the peripheral red cells and diminished marrow
iron
stores. Thus, the anemia of cadmium toxicity is probably the combined result of bone marrow hypoplasia and iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Long-term oral cadmium produces bone marrow hypoplasia in mice. 397 72
During one year, 55 bone marrow biopsies from 49 patients with CDC-defined acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) were studied. Eighty-three percent were normocellular or hypercellular; 17% were hypocellular. Marrow plasma cells were increased in 83% of patients, most showing polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. Forty percent of patients showed peripheral
neutropenia
, 29% thrombocytopenia, and 79% lymphopenia with markedly reduced T4+ lymphocytes. Eighty-five percent of patients were anemic, with
iron
studies showing a pattern consistent with the anemia of chronic disease. Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI) grew from ten (20%) biopsies, four with granuloma and six without granuloma (five of these six also showed marrow hypocellularity). Small poorly formed granuloma (70-150 micron) were seen in eight (16%) patients (four AFB-culture positive, 4 negative). Three of four granuloma-positive, culture-negative cases eventually grew MAI from autopsy material. Five (10%) patients had lymphoplasmacytic aggregates; later, one developed lymphoma, another, markedly atypical lymphoid hyperplasia. Two additional patients showed marrow B-cell lymphomas. Of these findings, only marrow MAI meets the CDC definition of AIDS. However, in this series, small ill-defined granulomas, lymphoplasmacytic aggregates, and B-cell lymphomas also were found. The authors conclude that these latter findings, when seen in high-risk patients, particularly those with lymphopenia, anemia, and/or hypergammaglobulinemia, also strongly suggest the diagnosis of AIDS.
...
PMID:The bone marrow in AIDS. A histologic, hematologic, and microbiologic study. 403 75
Copper deficiency anemia occurs in some specific situations if supplemental copper is not given: low birth-weight premature infants fed milk only, protracted total parenteral nutrition, chronic diarrhea with severe malnutrition. Severe
neutropenia
precedes the onset of sideroblastic anemia.
Iron
therapy is ineffective. Diagnosis is established by the low serum copper concentrations, the delayed osseous anomalies, and the dramatic response to copper therapy. Low serum vitamin E concentrations may be found in low birth-weight premature infants aged six to ten weeks with hemolytic anemia. In such cases, vitamin E therapy is effective. This condition occurs more often in infants fed milk formulas without supplemental copper and in infants given high doses of
iron
. Whether vitamin E deficiency causes anemia is still an open question. Preventive vitamin E supplementation is only partly effective.
...
PMID:[Rare nutritional deficiency anemia: deficiency of copper and vitamin E]. 630 91
Copper is an essential trace element that is required for a number of enzymes which are necessary for normal metabolic function. Metabolic balance studies have demonstrated that daily copper losses are approximately 1.3 mg/day. In order to remain in copper balance, the average adult male must consume a diet which contains at least 2 mg copper/day. It has been assumed that most diets satisfy this requirement because of the ubiquitous presence of copper in most foodstuffs. Recent studies, however, have shown that dietary copper may often fall below the estimated daily needs. Nevertheless, clinically evident copper deficiency has been documented in only a few situations. Of these disorders. Menkes' syndrome has been most intensively studied. This x-linked abnormality is associated with copper deficiency due to impaired gastrointestinal copper absorption. However, the clinical disorder cannot be corrected readily with copper replacement, thus suggesting that Menkes' syndrome may reflect more than simple copper deficiency. Nutritional copper deficiency appears to be well documented in two situations: (1) the newborn, usually premature, undergoing rapid growth on a diet poor in copper, and (2) the patient maintained on total parenteral nutrition for long periods of time without copper supplementation. In both of these situations, anemia and
neutropenia
are the most striking hematologic abnormalities associated with copper deficiency. Sideroblastic changes as well as nuclear maturation defects observed in erythroid precursors. However, suggest that there is an effect of copper deficiency on the hematopoietic system which cannot be explained solely by defective plasma
iron
transport.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency in humans. 641 May 10
Persistent
neutropenia
and repeated respiratory infections were documented in a girl with glycogen storage disease type Ib. A termino-lateral portacaval shunt resulted in normalisation of the granulocyte counts and disappearance of the recurrent infections. The platelet dysfunction that was apparent before surgery, was also corrected by the shunting procedure. A marked hypochromic anaemia, however, probably caused by a sequestration of
iron
in the spleen and resistant to therapy, remains a persistent feature in this patient.
...
PMID:Haematological findings in type Ib glycogen storage disease before and after portacaval shunt. 657 29
Flurbiprofen, a potent non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and antipyretic agent, was given as an intravenous infusion (2 mg/kg) followed by a bolus injection of 1 mg/kg six hours later. After drug administration body temperature and rumen contractions were slightly depressed, whereas urea values gradually increased; serum sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH) activity, plasma
iron
concentration and the number of circulating lymphocytes were significantly lower. Intravenous injection of endotoxin from Escherichia coli O111B4 (0.1 microgram/kg) caused shivering, fever, inhibition of rumen contractions, changes in heart rate, lymphopenia,
neutropenia
followed by neutrophylic leucocytosis, changes in urea values, hypoferraemia, hypozincaemia and a decline in serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity, whereas gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, glutamic oxalacetic transaminase, lactic dehydrogenase and SDH values were not significantly altered. Pretreatment with flurbiprofen completely abolished the febrile reactions to endotoxin. The endotoxin-induced inhibition of rumen contractions was only delayed. The drug blocked the initial tachycardia to endotoxin but did not prevent the secondary biphasic increase in heart rate. Flurbiprofen failed to modify the endotoxin-induced decrease in both plasma zinc and serum ALP activity whereas the decline in plasma
iron
concentration was delayed. After drug pretreatment the changes in circulating white blood cells were more pronounced. These data demonstrate that most of the haematological, blood biochemical and clinical effects of endotoxin cannot be blocked by flurbiprofen, and that these effects are not due to the increase in body temperature alone. Tolerance induced by repetitive daily intravenous administration of endotoxin resulted in an almost complete abolition of all the effects. However, the plasma
iron
values from tolerant goats were significantly lower than those from non-tolerant animals, which demonstrates that the development of a refractory state can result in modification of this biochemical parameter.
...
PMID:Endotoxin-induced fever and associated haematological and blood biochemical changes in the goat: the effect of repeated administration and the influence of flurbiprofen. 675 96
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
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