Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (splenomegaly)
9,873 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alcohol-related disturbances are seen against the three blood cell systems. They appear after important alcohol consumption within few days and are independent from the existence of liver cirrhosis with splenomegaly. They are promptly and completely reversible after interruption of alcohol supply. Disturbances in erythropoiesis are manifested in bone marrow with megaloblasts, ring sideroblasts, and vacuoles in cytoplasma and nucleus of nucleated red cells. They are caused by folate deficiency and by perturbations of iron utilization, which is perhaps connected with impaired heme synthesis following pyridoxal phosphate deficiency. Serum iron generally increases during alcohol consumption and decreases in the following alcohol-free period. The anemia may be macrocytic and normochromic or dimorphic with hypochromic microcytes. Anemias of hard alcohol drinkers are observed also as consequence of bleeding or hemolysis of different causes. The lability against infections of drinkers is associated with changes in granulopoiesis. The most important findings are granulocytopenia, vacuoles in the immature marrow cells, perturbations in granulopoietic maturation, and decrease of marrow response. Frequently, alcohol drinkers demonstrate thrombocytopenia which is caused by ineffective thrombopoiesis and by shortened life span of platelets as direct effect of ethanol. Functional impairments of thrombocytes have been published, too.
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PMID:[Alcohol-related disturbances in haematopoiesis (author's transl)]. 64 97

The most common haematological abnormalities in alcoholism are raised mean corpuscular volume of the erythrocytes and thrombocytopenia. The etiology is multifactorial including malnutrition with folate deficiency, a direct toxic influence of alcohol and sequestration in an enlarged spleen. Sideroblastic anaemia caused by interference of alcohol with the metabolism of pyridoxine is common and so is haemolytic anaemia caused by hypersplenism and megaloblastic anaemia. Leucopenia can be seen and is probably caused by a direct toxic effect of alcohol on the bone marrow. Other potentially toxic changes are impaired chemotaxis, motility and adherence of the granulocytes and impaired blast-transformation of the lymphocytes. In the bone marrow, vacuolized precursors of myelo- and erythropoiesis are seen. The bone marrow may be hypocellular. Other changes in the bone marrow are increased but ineffective erythropoiesis with defective iron metabolism, vacuolized pro-erythroblasts, multinucleated erythroblasts, megaloblasts and iron-containing plasma cells.
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PMID:[Hematological abnormalities in alcoholism]. 150 2

Thrombocytopenia in hospitalized alcoholics may be caused by splenomegaly, folate deficiency, and, most frequently, a direct toxic effect of alcohol on production, survival time, and function of platelets. Platelet count begins to rise after 2 to 5 days' abstinence from alcohol. The condition is generally benign, and clinically significant hemorrhage is rare.
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PMID:Severe thrombocytopenia secondary to alcohol use. 202 Jun 51

We have analysed 139 consecutive cases (71 males and 68 females) of nutritional megaloblastic anaemia over a period of four and a half years. The majority of these patients belonged to the low socio-economic class and many of them were strict vegetarians. Sixty one percent were in the second and third decades of life. At the time of presentation, 46% had mild hepatomegaly, 42% fever, 34% mild splenomegaly and 20% bleeding manifestations. Of 102 cases in whom the biochemical parameters were available, vitamin B12 deficiency was detected in 76%, folate deficiency in 6.8%, combined B12 and folate deficiency in 8.8%; the remaining 7.8% had normal vitamin levels at presentation. All 139 patients had severe anaemia, 80.5% had thrombocytopenia and 43.8% had neutropenia as well as thrombocytopenia. It appears that during progression (in terms of duration) of megaloblastosis, anaemia is followed by thrombocytopenia and then neutropenia. Infection and bleeding in these patients may be aggravated by impaired functions of neutrophils and platelets, respectively.
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PMID:Pancytopenia in nutritional megaloblastic anaemia. A study from north-west India. 263 48

Transient granulocytopenia and lymphopenia may occur in acute alcoholics without splenomegaly, cirrhosis, infection, and megaloblastic anemia due to folate deficiency. The bone marrow in granulocytopenic patients is frequently hypocellular with few mature granulocytes, and the functional marrow granulocyte reserve is reduced. These findings suggest a depressed granulopoietic activity in these patients. The mechanism by which alcohol suppresses granulopoiesis remains unclear. Direct toxicity of alcohol on granulopoietic stem cells and increased individual susceptibility to the toxic effect of alcohol may be important factors. Alcohol also causes functional impairment of granulocytes (adherence, motility, and chemotaxis), macrophages (motility and phagocytosis), and lymphocytes (blastogenic transformation and development of delayed dermal hypersensitivity reaction), probably by perturbation of the cell membrane resulting in an increased intracellular cyclic AMP level.
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PMID:Effects of alcohol on granulocytes and lymphocytes. 737 52

Imerslund-Najman-Grasbeck disease is a rare inherited megaloblastic anaemia secondary to a selective malabsorption of vitamin B12 by ileal enterocytes. The authors report on a 4 year-old tunisian girl who presented as visceral infantile leishmaniasis because of huge splenomegaly and major anaemia. The diagnosis of Imerslund disease was performed on the basis of the association of typical megaloblastic cells in the marrow, permanent proteinuria and favourable outcome under parenteral B12 administration. In addition, ther were no folate deficiency, no anti-intrinsic factor antibodies and no intrinsic factor deficiency. The outcome of the disease is always favourable if parenteral administration of vitamin B12 maintained.
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PMID:[Imerslund-Najman-Grasbeck anemia. Apropos of a case]. 801 68

A 19 years old male admitted to our hospital with fever, abdominal pain in May 1991. Physical examination revealed anemia, jaundice and marked splenomegaly. Severe pancytopenia with macrocytic hyperchronic anemia was noted along with elevated LDH and reduced serum folate. Blood smear showed nucleated RBCs, but only few microspherocytes. Bone marrow showed erythroid hyperplasia with remarkable megaloblastic changes. Megaloblasts were negative for PAS stain. Chromosome analysis revealed normal karyotype. Erythroleukemia was suspected initially, but his general condition as well as hematological data improved following 10 units of RBC transfusion. Following brief folic acid supplements, numerous microspherocytes became evident, typical osmotic fragility test revealed a pattern for hereditary spherocytosis. These observations led us to the diagnosis of hereditary spherocytosis complicated by megaloblastic anemia due to folate deficiency. As he developed folate deficiency again 10 months later, splenectomy were performed. The anemia improved after splenectomy.
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PMID:[Megaloblastic anemia due to folate deficiency associated with hereditary spherocytosis]. 802 87

We describe a Black female who has suffered for many years from an (often) severe anemia (Hb 5-9 g/dl) with iron deficiency (serum Fe 8 microg/dl; TIBC 462 microg/dl; ferritin 7 ng/ml or less) and folate deficiency. The patient had hypermenorrhea which was appropriately treated resulting in an increase in hemoglobin level but not affecting the Fe deficiency. Splenomegaly was present, perhaps resulting from a clay-eating habit, although this was consistently denied. The patient had an alpha-thalassemia-2 (-3.7 kb) trait and a deletional hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) (type II) which were inherited from her father. Over the last six years the level of Hb F varied between 8.5 and 16% (25-29% in the father), while the G gamma value was also low (15-22% versus 32-34% in the father). Comparable reductions were seen in the relative levels of gamma-mRNA and G gamma-mRNA. These data support results published by Adams et al who showed a severe reduction in Hb F level in another HPFH heterozygote with Fe deficiency; these investigations suggested that a reduction in alpha-globin synthesis resulted in preferential formation of alpha beta dimers rather than alpha gamma dimers. Our data suggest that the decrease of Hb F and G gamma levels is due to a reduction in gamma-mRNA formation, mainly of the G gamma type, rather than through a posttranslational mechanism alone.
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PMID:Persistent iron and folate deficiency in a patient with deletional hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin; the effect on the relative levels of Hb F and G gamma chains and the corresponding mRNAs. 949 48

Iron-deficiency anemia is one of the major problems encountered in renal transplant recipients. The aim of this retrospective study was to reevaluate the causes of anemia among 100 anemic kidney recipients. Patients with serum creatinine levels greater than 2 mg/dL were excluded from the study. Female patients were considered to be anemic if the hemoglobin was <12 g/dL for males, <13 g/dL. Complete blood count, serum creatinine, serum iron, iron-binding capacity, ferritin, transferrin saturation, erythrocyte folate, and serum vitamin B(12) levels were measured in all patients. Mean hemoglobin value was 10.2 +/- 1.4 g/dL for female and 9.9 +/- 1.3 for male patients, mean corpuscular volume (MCV) 91.3 +/- 4.9 fL. We observed normocytic anemia in 60, macrocytic anemia in 30, and microcytic anemia in 10 patients. A low level of serum folate was observed in 9 (15%) and of vitamin B(12) in 5 (8.8%) of 60 patients with normocytic anemia. Folate deficiency was found in 18 (60%) and vitamin B(12) deficiency in 12 (40%) of 30 patients with macrocytic anemia. All patients with microcytic anemia had iron deficiency. Splenomegaly was seen significantly more often in patients with macrocytic than normocytic anemia (P =.008). Folate and vitamin B(12) deficiency were the major causes of nutritional anemia; oral or parenteral supplementation with these vitamins is likely to cure the anemia in the majority of cases.
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PMID:Causes of anemia in renal transplant recipients. 1501 34

Neutropenia is defined as a neutrophil count lower than 1.5g/L, with categorization as mild, moderate, or severe when the count is 1.5-1g/L, 1-0.5g/L, or<0.5g/L, respectively. The main complication is infection, whose risk increases with the depth and duration of the neutropenia. Comprehensive etiological investigations are mandatory to determine the best treatment strategy. Constitutional neutropenia is rarely seen in everyday rheumatology practice. It predominantly affects patients of African descent and is usually moderate and well tolerated. Congenital neutropenia due to genetic abnormalities is severe and chiefly seen in the pediatric population. Most cases of neutropenia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are acquired. Medications are the most common causes, making detailed history-taking crucial. Many medications used to treat RA can induce neutropenia. Folic acid deficiency should be sought routinely in patients taking methotrexate. A less common cause of neutropenia is an RA-related autoimmune reaction. Splenomegaly suggests Felty's syndrome, which is accompanied with large granular lymphocytic (LGL) leukemia in 40% of cases. The treatment depends on the depth of the neutropenia and findings from the etiological workup. A neutrophil count below 0.5g/L, a fever, and the presence of clinical signs indicate a life-threatening condition requiring emergent treatment. In other patients, the first step is immediate discontinuation of any possibly involved drugs, simultaneously with the etiological workup.
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PMID:Management of neutropenia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. 2581 16


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