Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032463 (polycythemia vera)
3,374 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 57-year-old male who had suffered from polycythemia vera (PV) and had been treated with pipobroman, carbazilquinon and busulfan for ten years presented with fever. CBC revealed anemia and thrombocytopenia without an increase of leukemic blasts (WBC, 7,700/microliters, RBC 294 x 10(4)/microliters, Hb 9.1 g/dl, Plt 1.5 x 10(4)/microliters). Bone marrow aspiration resulted in dry tap. Bone marrow biopsy showed hyperplastic marrow with fibrosis and no increase in leukemic blasts. Eleven days later the patient became leukemic and he died of DIC. Blast cells showed a high nucleo-cytoplasmic ratio, basophilic cytoplasm and cytoplasmic blebs. Cytochemical and immunophenotype analysis of the blast cells showed the following results; myeloperoxidase (-), chloroacetate esterase (-), Sudan black (-), acid phosphatase (+), acetate esterase (+), PAS (+), HLA-DR (+) and GPIIb/IIIa (+). Platelet peroxidase reaction on electron microscopy was positive in perinuclear spaces and endoplasmic reticulum. A diagnosis of megakaryoblastic transformation of PV was made. Although acute myelogenous leukemia has been shown to develop occasionally in the course of PV, acute megakaryoblastic leukemia with DIC following PV is a very rare condition.
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PMID:[Megakaryoblastic transformation associated with disseminated intravascular coagulation in the course of polycythemia vera: a case report]. 160 15

Uptake, replication, and transneuronal passage of a swine neurotropic herpesvirus (pseudorabies virus, PRV) was evaluated in the rat CNS. PRV was localized in neural circuits innervating the tongue, stomach, esophagus and eye with light microscopic immunohistochemistry. In each instance, the distribution of PRV-immunoreactive neurons was entirely consistent with that observed following injection of cholera toxin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (CT-HRP). Injections of the tongue resulted in retrograde transport of PRV and CT-HRP to hypoglossal motor neurons, while preganglionic neurons in the dorsal motor vagal nucleus or somatic motor neurons in the nucleus ambiguus were labeled following injections of the stomach or esophagus, respectively. At longer times after infection, viral antigens were found in astrocytes adjacent to infected neurons and their efferent axons and second-order neuron labeling became apparent. The distribution of second-order neurons was also entirely dependent upon the site of PRV injection. Following tongue injection, second-order neurons were observed in the trigeminal complex, the brain-stem tegmentum and in monoaminergic cell groups. Injection of the stomach or esophagus led to second-order neuron labeling confined to distinct subdivisions of the neucleus of the solitary tract and monoaminergic cell groups. Comparative quantitative analysis of the number of PRV immunoreactive neurons present in the diencephalon and brain stem following injection of virus into both the eye and stomach musculature of the same animal demonstrated that retrograde transport of PRV from the viscera was more efficient and occurred at a much faster rate than anterograde transport of virus. These data demonstrate projection-specific transport of PRV in the nervous system and provide further insight into the means through which this neurotropic virus infects the nervous system.
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PMID:Neurotropic properties of pseudorabies virus: uptake and transneuronal passage in the rat central nervous system. 216 88

A modified solid-phase enzyme immunoassay (EIA) is described for the visual detection of anti-pseudorabies virus (anti-PRV) antibody in porcine serum. Dots of PRV antigens were adsorbed to nitrocellulose paper (hence the name dot-EIA), and the remaining nonspecifically reactive sites were blocked with bovine serum albumin or skim milk powder. After immersion in test serum, bound antibodies were reacted with a peroxidase-conjugated anti-porcine immunoglobulin G (H & L). Positive reactions were easily visualized as brown dots after enzyme degradation of a substrate containing hydrogen peroxide and diaminobenzidine. The dot-EIA was comparable to the serum neutralization test and the standard microtiter EIA in its ability to detect antibody in the sera of pigs 9 days after experimental infection and 12 days after contact with infected pigs. The sensitivity and specificity of the dot-EIA relative to the serum neutralization test and the standard EIA were determined from the testing of 856 field sera from the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada. In all comparisons, both the relative sensitivity and specificity of the dot-EIA were in the order of 98 to 99%. The dot EIA appears to have potential application as a rapid and economical field test in the diagnosis of PRV infection.
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PMID:Dot-enzyme immunoassay for visual detection of antibodies to pseudorabies virus in swine serum. 300 69

A case of plasma cell dyscrasia with polyneuropathy and endocrine disorder is reported. Clinically, polycythemia vera, gynecomastia, pigmentation of the skin, hepatosplenomegaly, renal enlargement and severe polyneuropathy in the lower extremities were recognized. The peculiarity of this case was polycythemia vera that had been present for several years before manifestation of the clinical symptoms. Microscopically, retroperitoneal lymph nodes showed angio-follicular lymphoid hyperplasia and plasma cell infiltration in the interfollicular region. By means of the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method, plasma cells were positive for lambda light chain, IgA and IgG. Severe segmental demyelination and slight axonal atrophy were found in a sural nerve biopsy.
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PMID:Plasma cell dyscrasia with polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M protein, and skin changes: the POEMS syndrome, associated with preceding polycythemia vera. A case report and review of the literature. 306 44

A case of well-documented and -illustrated megakaryoblastic transformation is described in a patient with thrombocythemia passing through a stage of myelofibrosis without features of chronic granulocytic leukemia. Immunocytologic studies with the use of conventional and monoclonal antibodies against platelet membrane glycoproteins and electron microscopic investigations, demonstrating bull's-eye granules and platelet peroxidase positivity, proved the megakaryocytic differentiation of the blast cells. From the onset of the disease as well as during the megakaryoblastic transformation, the Philadelphia (Ph1) karyotype, 46XX t(9:22) (q34:q11), was found in peripheral blood and bone marrow cells as the only clonal abnormality. Southern blot analysis of DNA extracted from the blast cells revealed a rearrangement within the bcr on chromosome 22 similar to findings in chronic granulocytic leukemia. The presentation with excessive small and abnormal megakaryocytes in the initial and subsequent bone marrow and the rapid progressive myelofibrosis and splenomegaly differentiate the Ph1 chromosome-positive thrombocythemia from the chronic myeloproliferation of thrombocythemia in its primary form or associated with polycythemia vera.
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PMID:Philadelphia chromosome-positive thrombocythemia and megakaryoblast leukemia. 347 3

Earlier studies have shown that retinohypothalamic projections terminate extensively within the hypothalamus of the rat. Recently, we identified a light retinal projection to the supraoptic nucleus as well as a larger, well-focused projection resulting in a peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field. In this study, we employed a double labeling method with cholera toxin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (CT-HRP) and pseudorabies virus, a transsynaptic neural tracer, to evaluate retinorecipient neurons in both the supraoptic nucleus and peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field. In addition, we looked for evidence that cells in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field project into the supraoptic nucleus. Three strains of pseudorabies virus were compared. A direct retinosupraoptic nucleus circuit was confirmed with all three strains. Retinorecipient neurons in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field were also confirmed. However, there was a strain-based difference in the identification of these neurons. The wild-type Becker strain labeled cells in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field in a manner paralleling the early, intermediate and late stages of infection of the suprachiasmatic nucleus. This parallel time course suggests that retinal ganglion cells terminate directly on cells in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field. Conversely, the Bartha and PRV-91 strains showed appreciable labeling of peri-supraoptic neurons only at long survival times. This longer time course suggests that these mutant strains label neurons in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field indirectly, after passing through additional neurons. In addition, experiments with monocular injection of CT-HRP and posterior pituitary injection of pseudorabies virus showed retrogradely labeled second-order cells in the peri-supraoptic nucleus amidst the CT-HRP labeled terminal field of the retinohypothalamic tract. These results demonstrate a direct projection from the retina to the supraoptic nucleus and provide evidence for an indirect circuit from the retina to the supraoptic nucleus via neurons located in the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field. The strain-based differences imply that those retinal ganglion cells that project to the peri-supraoptic nucleus terminal field differ from those that project to the suprachiasmatic nucleus. In addition, these results suggest a neuroanatomic basis for photic effects on physiological mechanisms that are not mediated by the circadian timing system.
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PMID:Direct and indirect retinohypothalamic projections to the supraoptic nucleus in the female albino rat. 816 25

Concentration of malonic dialdehyde (MDA) and activity of antioxidant enzymes G-6-PD, glutation peroxidase (GP), glutation reductase, catalase, superoxide dismutase were measured in red cells of patients with polycythemia vera. Plasmic ions Fe3+ were estimated by means of electron-paramagnetic resonance. MDA concentration and antioxidant enzymes (except GP) in polycythemia red cells were found increased, while the activity of selenium-dependent GP was reduced, the inhibition being greatest in severe iron deficiency. It is suggested that GP activity in red cells depends on both selenium levels in the body and concentrations of non-hematic iron.
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PMID:[Erythremia: the activity of erythrocyte antioxidant enzymes and the association with iron deficiency]. 921 64

We reported a 72-year-old female patient who developed acute leukemia following a long course of polycythemia vera (PV). For 12 years she had been treated with phlebotomy, nimustine, busulfan, hydroxyurea and irradiation on splenomegaly. In November 1995, her peripheral blood smear showed blast of 30%. Bone marrow blasts were microscopically as well as electromicroscopically peroxidase-negative and CD7 and HLA-DR positive. Six months later, the blasts were positive for CD7, CD34 and HLA-DR. On the basis of morphologic, biochemical and immunophenotypic features, the patient was diagnosed acute leukemia, probably arising at a primitive multipotential stem cell level. She failed to respond to the various combination therapy including prednisolone, vincristine, cytarabine, daunorubicin and etoposide. The stem-cell-leukemia transformation in PV occurs rarely and may be refractory to chemotherapy.
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PMID:[CD7+, CD34+, electronmicroscopically peroxidase-negative acute leukemia transformed from polycythemia vera after 12 years follow-up]. 936 71

Dopamine (DA) afferents to the prefrontal cortex (PFC) play an important role in the cognitive functions subserved by this cortical area. Within the PFC, DA terminals synapse onto the distal dendrites of both local circuit neurons and pyramidal projection cells. We have previously demonstrated in the rat PFC that some of the dendrites and spines postsynaptic to DA terminals arise from pyramidal neurons that project to the nucleus accumbens. However, it is not known whether the pyramidal cells that give rise to callosal intercortical connections of the PFC also receive DA synaptic input. To address this question, retrograde tract tracing using an attenuated strain of pseudorabies virus (PRV-Bartha) was combined with immunocytochemistry for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) to identify DA terminals in the PFC. Thirty-six to 40 hours following injection of PRV into the contralateral PFC, numerous callosal projection neurons were extensively labeled throughout their dendritic trees, with no evidence of PRV trans-synaptic passage. In tissue prepared for electron microscopy, labeling for PRV was distributed throughout pyramidal cell somata and extended into distal dendrites and dendritic spines. Some PRV-labeled dendrites and spines received symmetric synaptic input from terminals containing peroxidase labeling for TH. These results demonstrate that DA terminals synapse onto the distal dendrites of callosally projecting PFC neurons and suggest substrates through which DA may modulate interhemispheric cortical communication.
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PMID:Dopamine terminals synapse on callosal projection neurons in the rat prefrontal cortex. 1095 45

Chronic myeloprolifeative diseases (CMPD) are clonal hematopoietic stem cell disorders characterized by excessive proliferation and production of one or more of the myeloid cells and are subclassified according to the predominant cells, such as chronic myelogenous leukemia (CNL), chronic eosinophilic leukemia (CEL), polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia (ET) and chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis (CIMF). This brief review focuses on the characteristic morphology of each clinical entity and the useful cytochemical (including leukocyte alkaline phosphatase, myeloperoxidase, butyrate esterase, chloroacetate esterase and cyanide-resistant peroxidase) and immunohistochemical (including von Willebrand factor/CD61, keratin, tryptase, CD117, CD68 (PGM-1), c-Mpl and bFGF) stains for differential diagnosis.
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PMID:The role of morphology, cytochemistry and immunohistochemistry in the diagnosis of chronic myeloproliferative diseases. 1243 Aug 92


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