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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 5-year-old child presented with
pneumonia
and agranulocytosis. A Wright-stained peripheral blood smear showed only cells which had the morphological appearance of lymphocytes, plus a few monocytes and eosinophils. A bone marrow aspirate smear showed a complete lack of recognizable
granulocyte
precursors. However, the admission CBC and differential performed by automated flow cytochemistry (Technicon Instruments Corporation H-6000) measured 32% granulocytes as determined by peroxidase activity. Cytochemical stains on the blood and marrow smears revealed that many of the cells that had the morphological appearance of lymphocytes were positive for myeloperoxidase activity. Special studies on these cells revealed them to be abnormal, intermediate granulocytes with azurophilic, peroxidase-containing primary granules, but with few secondary granules and limited lactoferrin activity. Over 28 days the child recovered, first with granulocytic hyperplasia in the marrow and then a return of the peripheral blood to normal. This is the first case report of an episode of transient "agranulocytosis" which in reality was a maturation arrest.
...
PMID:Transient granulocyte maturation arrest: discovery by flow cytometry of a variant form of agranulocytosis. 403 47
The air crescent sign is regarded as an important diagnostic finding in invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA). This study examined the incidence, clinical importance, and natural history of air crescents in 25 patients with acute leukemia and IPA. Twelve (50%) of the patients had cavities (ten with an air crescent) that appeared an average of 15 days after the initial infiltrate. The diagnostic utility of the air crescent sign was relatively minor; cavities developed after the diagnosis was established in 50% of cases and after therapy was started in 75% of cases. In each case, the
pneumonia
improved at the time of cavitation. In six patients (50%), the cavities resolved over 2-8 months. Three patients (25%), however, experienced massive hemoptysis. Air crescent formation, previously shown to be dependent on
granulocyte
recovery, was associated with improved survival (67%) compared with the group without cavitation (8%). In the latter group, the
pneumonia
in ten (77%) of 13 patients progressed to diffuse disease. In patients with leukemia, the diagnostic value of the air crescent sign is limited by cavities that develop relatively late, as the infection improves after white blood cell recovery; cavities that do not occur in patients who remain neutropenic; and associated hemorrhage, at times life-threatening, that obscures the air crescent. The diagnosis of IPA should not await observation of air crescents in these patients.
...
PMID:Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis and acute leukemia. Limitations in the diagnostic utility of the air crescent sign. 405 47
Pseudomonas
pneumonia
was produced in dogs with radiation-induced leukopenia. Treatment of this infection with either gentamicin alone or gentamicin plus daily
granulocyte
transfusion was compared in a randomized controlled trail. The dogs receiving granulocytes plus gentamicin survived significantly longer than those treated with gentamicin alone (P < 0.05). The Pseudomonas immunotype which was inoculated into the dogs were recovered at autopsy from none of the
granulocyte
-transfused dogs, whereas seven or eight of the dogs treated with gentamicin alone had the inoculated Pseudomonas immunotype in the area of induced
pneumonia
at autopsy. As measured by the limulus test, the
granulocyte
-transfused dogs also did not have endotoxemia as frequently as the dogs given only gentamicin (P < 0.05). This controlled study establishes that transfused granulocytes can favorably alter the course of experimental Pseudomonas
pneumonia
and suggests that
granulocyte
transfusion may be a useful therapy in serious bacterial infections of leukopenic subjects.
...
PMID:Granulocyte transfusion therapy of experimental Pseudomonas pneumonia. 421 40
Eight recipients of marrow transplants with cytomegalovirus (CMV)
pneumonia
diagnosed by open lung biopsy were treated with doses of human leukocyte interferon of 2 X 10(4)--6.4 X 10(5) units/kg per day to evaluate its toxicity after marrow transplant and its effectiveness against CMV infection. All eight patients died from
pneumonia
, and virus was still present in lung tissue from seven patients cultured after death. Interferon doses of less than or equal to 1.6 X 10(5) units/kg per day did not affect the circulating
granulocyte
count. Patients treated with higher doses had a decrease in circulating
granulocyte
count, but study of granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming cells in culture showed no evidence of toxicity to
granulocyte
progenitor cells. The effect on in vitro lymphocyte function was variable. Antibody production was not impaired. Interferon was not effective against established CMV infection. However, there was less hematologic toxicity than was anticipated, and the prophylactic use of interferon after marrow transplant is feasible.
...
PMID:Toxicity and efficacy of human leukocyte interferon for treatment of cytomegalovirus pneumonia after marrow transplantation. 615 55
It has been suggested that C3 breakdown by
granulocyte
-neutral proteases in pleural empyemas may be related to a decreased inhibitor potential for these enzymes. In the present study it was shown that in 17 infected pleural effusions, high proteolytic activity on 125I-labeled C3 (16.3% +/- 4.4%) correlated with low functional levels of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1-PI), as determined by trypsin-inhibitory capacity (56.2 +/- 20.1 IU/ml; rs = -0.97, P less than .001), whereas in 18 sterile pleural effusions there was no such correlation (125I-labeled C3 cleavage, 2.2% +/- .2%; trypsin-inhibitory capacity, 192.6 +/- 26.7 IU/ml). However, alpha 1-PI and alpha 2-macroglobulin protein concentrations in infected and sterile effusions (as measured by immunodiffusion) were similar. Fifteen strains of three bacterial species--Streptococcus pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Proteus mirabilis--isolated from patients with
pneumonia
or empyema inactivated the elastase-inhibitory capacity of alpha 1-PI in vitro. These results show that in empyemas functional levels of alpha 1-PI were too low to inactivate granulocyte elastase and that some bacterial species may contribute to the low inhibitor potential of infected pleural fluid by direct alpha 1-PI inactivation.
...
PMID:Low levels of functional of alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor in the promotion of C3-cleavage by granulocyte-neutral proteases in pleural empyema. 620 92
Forty-six noninfected patients undergoing induction chemotherapy for acute nonlymphocytic leukemia were randomized to receive (25 patients) or not to receive (21 control patients) prophylactic
granulocyte
transfusions when their
granulocyte
count fell below 0.5 X 10(9)/L. Septicemia was less frequent in the patients who received transfusions (two in 25 patients) than in the control patients (five in 21 patients), but this difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.28). Moreover,
pneumonia
was more frequent among the transfused patients (12 in 25 patients versus two in 21 patients, p = 0.01). There were no significant differences between the two groups in the frequency of other documented infections, the achievement or duration of remission, or survival. Recipients of prophylactic
granulocyte
transfusions had a higher prevalence of cytomegalovirus infections (13 in 21 patients versus five in 19 patients, p = 0.03). These results suggest that prophylactic
granulocyte
transfusions have no statistically significant effect on the frequency of septicemia or other infections, do not enhance remission rates or survival, and are associated with an increased risk for pulmonary complications and cytomegalovirus infections.
...
PMID:Prophylactic granulocyte transfusions during chemotherapy of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 626 39
During a 5 1/2-year period, 34 of 829 episodes of granulocytopenia during which broad spectrum antibiotics were being administered for fever and/or infections were complicated by the development of new pulmonary infiltrates. In 12 patients the infiltrates were due to fungal
pneumonia
, while in 6 patients the infiltrates were due to a variety of other causes. In the remaining 16 cases the etiology of the infiltrates was not determined. Time to development of infiltrate, radiographic appearance of the infiltrate, patient temperature and absolute
granulocyte
count failed to predict the etiology of the infiltrate. Conversely, development of the infiltrate or its radiographic progression in the absence of bone marrow recovery correlated significantly with the diagnosis of fungal
pneumonia
. While empiric alterations of antibiotics at the time that the infiltrate appeared were not associated with improved survival, the early use of amphotericin B was associated with a significant decrease in fatal fungal
pneumonia
. We suggest that the diagnostic and therapeutic approach to the febrile, granulocytopenic patient who develops a new pulmonary infiltrate while receiving broad spectrum antibiotic therapy may be guided by the state of marrow recovery at the time of infiltrate appearance. Patients developing an infiltrate coincident with
granulocyte
recovery may be managed conservatively while patients whose infiltrate develops or progresses in the absence of
granulocyte
recovery should be considered to be at high risk for fungal
pneumonia
and if possible undergo a diagnostic lung biopsy and/or empiric antifungal therapy.
...
PMID:New pulmonary infiltrates in granulocytopenic cancer patients being treated with antibiotics. 633 73
Thirty-five noninfected patients undergoing induction chemotherapy for acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) were randomized to either receive (19 patients) or not receive (16 control patients) prophylactic
granulocyte
transfusions (PGT) when their
granulocyte
count fell below 0.5 X 10(9)/1. Both groups received identical anti-infectious and supportive care except for
granulocyte
transfusions. The authors found a nonstatistically significant decrease of the infection rate in the prophylactic group. However, the bacteriologically documented infections and septicemia incidence was significantly higher in the control than in the prophylactic group (P less than 0.05). In the control group they observed in 8 of 16 cases life-threatening infections in contrast with only 1 case in the prophylactic group (P less than 0.01). A significant reduction of deaths due to infectious causes in the prophylactic versus control group were also found (P less than 0.05). The authors did not find an increase of
pneumonia
or pulmonary infiltrates in the patients belonging to prophylactic in comparison to control group.
...
PMID:A controlled trial of prophylactic granulocyte transfusions during induction chemotherapy for acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 637 55
Two children with legionellosis complicating a relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia are reported. A 5-year-old boy with
pneumonia
had Legionella pneumophila cultured from a tracheal aspirate following a rapid deterioration in his respiratory status and intubation. This child had severe and irreversible granulocytopenia and died in spite of therapy with erythromycin and rifampin added five days later. Combination antimicrobial therapy is suggested for immunosuppressed children with legionellosis if resolution of neutropenia is not readily anticipated. Culture of Legionella sp from respiratory tract secretions or sputum, as reported for the first time in the pediatric literature, should be attempted in all children in whom this infection is suspected. A 13-year-old boy with
pneumonia
recovered in spite of therapy with antimicrobial agents not proven to be effective against the legionellae. Clinical improvement coincided with increase in absolute
granulocyte
count. A retrospective diagnosis was made when seroconversion to Legionella micdadei (less than 1:16 to 1:1,024) was determined during a survey of unselected sera from 255 hospitalized children. This is the first documented case of Pittsburgh pneumonia described in a child.
...
PMID:Legionellosis in children with leukemia in relapse. 658 11
Patients with hematologic malignancies were randomly assigned to receive cefuroxime (group A) or tobramycin plus ampicillin (Group B) during 86 febrile episodes. In both regimens carbenicillin was added during neutropenia (71% of all episodes: groups C and D). The most common type of infection was
pneumonia
(48% alone; 72% with other sites involved), which accounted for a high fatality rate (15%); the highest rate occurred during septicemia with
pneumonia
(50%). The overall response rate to initial therapy was 63% without significant differences among the four regimens. The worst prognosis was observed in neutropenic patients without
granulocyte
recovery. When initial and cross-over trials were combined, there were favorable outcomes in 90% of all cases. Cefuroxime alone seems to be as effective as tobramycin plus ampicillin in the treatment of infections in hematologic malignancies. No side effects could be attributed to the cefuroxime-containing regimens.
...
PMID:Empiric therapy of infections in hematologic malignancies: a prospective, randomized trial. 667 35
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