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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (
splenomegaly
)
9,873
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
(1) Cholinesterase activity was investigated in some human lymphatic organs (palatine tonsil, 'normal' spleen, 'bilharzial' spleen, thymus, lymph node and appendix) using GOMORI'S modification of KOELLE and FRIEDENWALD'S thiocholine iodide method, hydrolyzing acetylthiocholine iodide and butyrylthiocholine iodide. (a) Acetyl- and butyrylcholinesterases seemed to be different enzymes; but when they have the same pattern of activity, the latter generally offers a weaker reaction. (b) All the lymphatic follicles of the tonsil, those found in the cortex of the cervical lymph nodes as well as those present in the appendix, were stainable with both acetyl- and butyrylcholinesterase. (c) Acetylcholinesterase activity was not demonstrated in the Malpighian bodies of the 'normal' spleen, but the reaction was strongly present in the blood vessels (including the central arterioles) as well as in the capsule and the different components of the trabecular system. (d) In 'bilharzial'
splenomegaly
a relatively strong activity started to appear in the Malpighian corpuscles, manifested as a brownish precipitate in their centres. Also some patchy positive areas began to make their appearance in the tissue of the red pulp and had a particular arrangement around the Malpighian corpuscules, in such a way as to 'wall them off' from the tissue of the red pulp. (e) In the thymus no
acetylcholinesterase
activity was encountered, except in Hassal's corpuscles and in the trabeculae between the thymic lobules. (2) The data obtained in this work were discussed in relation to previous works in other laboratories and it seems that a species difference exists. (3) Cholinesterases may be present in the lymphatic tissue in order to get rid of some potentially toxic esters resulting from the necrobiotic phenomena accompanying the high mitotic activity found especially in the germinal centres of the lymphoid follicles. (4) There are many unanswered questions about the coexistence of the phosphatases and cholinesterases in the same places; their concomitant association in the lymphatic tissue may represent a special case within the framework of a more general mechanism.
...
PMID:Cholinesterase activity in some human lymphatic organs. 95 94
Thirty patients suffering from active intestinal S. mansoni infection, were classified into 3 groups. The first group: 13 cases with early active intestinal schistosomiasis without hepatosplenomegaly. The second group: 11 cases with hepatosplenomegaly and the third group: 6 cases with
splenomegaly
and ascites. Also 10 normal individuals were included as a normal control group. Histopathological examination of rectal mucosa showed hyperaemia with extravasation of blood in early cases and granulomatous lesions in the second group with hepatosplenomegaly. The structural changes were severe in the late ascitic group. In this group the rectal mucosal glands showed distorted irregular tubular branching in addition to the granulomatous and the fibrous reactions. Histochemical studies including periodic acid schiff, alkaline phosphatase and acetyl cholinestrase reactions were done. Using the periodic acid shiff stain, the goblet cells showed strong reaction for neutral mucin in cases of group I (early cases) and group II (late hepatosplenomegalic cases). In group III (late ascitic cases) the goblet cells were faintly stained. A notable difference was observed between the lightly and heavily infected patients of this group. No alkaline phosphatase reactivity could be identified in rectal crypts of patients and controls. Alkaline phosphatase reactivity was sharply localised in S. mansoni egg shell. There was obvious decrease in the acetyl
cholinesterase
stained nerve fibres in the rectal mucosa of all studied patients. The decrease was more in chronic and heavily infected cases rather than in the acute and lightly infected ones.
...
PMID:Histochemical studies on rectal mucosa in active intestinal schistosomiasis. 190 99
A three-month oral subacute toxicity study of mofezolac (N-22), a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent, was performed using dose levels of 6, 20, 60 and 200 mg/kg in rats, and recovery was also assessed one month after withdrawal. 1. Toxic signs caused by N-22 administration, observed only in the 200 mg/kg group, were as follows: soiling around the mouth and/or nose, piloerection, anemia, diarrhea, emaciation and decreased spontaneous locomotor activity. Nine males and thirteen females in the 200 mg/kg group excreted bloody diarrhea and died of general exhaustion between weeks four and thirteen of study. 2. In the 200 mg/kg group, decrease in food consumption and suppression of body weight gain were noted in males from about week four and in females from about week six after initiation of administration, and increase in water consumption was noted in males from about week seven. 3. Urinary examination revealed a decline in urinary pH in males of the 20 mg/kg and above groups and elevation of urobilinogen levels in males of the 60 and 200 mg/kg groups. 4. Hematological examination showed decreases in erythrocyte count (RBC), hematocrit value (Ht) and hemoglobin concentration (Hb) and increase in reticulocyte rate in both sexes of the 200 mg/kg group and an increase in neutrophil rate in males of the 200 mg/kg group. 5. Biochemical examination demonstrated a decrease in chloride (Cl-) in males receiving the 20 mg/kg or above doses and a decrease in calcium (Ca++) in males of the 60 and 200 mg/kg groups. Moreover, there were decreases in
cholinesterase
(ChE) activity, total protein (TP) and albumin (Alb) values, as well as increases in blood urea nitrogen (BUN), uric acid (UA) and potassium (K+) in both sexes of the 200 mg/kg group, along with elevations in GOT and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities in females of the 200 mg/kg group. 6. The absolute and/or relative organ weights for liver, kidneys, spleen and adrenals were increased in the 200 mg/kg group. 7. On pathological examination, perforating ulceration in the jejunum and ileum, turbid ascites, adhesion and inflammatory changes in capsules of the abdominal organs,
splenomegaly
, mesenteric lymph node hyperplasia and inflammatory changes in the thoracic cavity were observed in dead animals of the 200 mg/kg group. Similar pathological changes were observed in a few survival cases of the 200 mg/kg group. 8. After a one month recovery period, the above-mentioned changes had mostly recovered, indicating that they were reversible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Three-month oral subacute toxicity study of mofezolac (N-22) in rats]. 223 86
To examine the pathogenesis of thrombocytopenia associated with liver cirrhosis, the platelet count, spleen size and serum
cholinesterase
levels were measured together with plasma concentration of beta-thromboglobulin, fibrinopeptide A and serum albumin in 38 patients with histologically proven, severe but stable liver cirrhosis. The spleen size contributed most significantly to thrombocytopenia in this disorder and the serum
cholinesterase
level also correlated with the platelet count, both in decompensated and compensated liver cirrhosis. Plasma beta-thromboglobulin, serum fibrinopeptide A levels and serum albumin did not correlate with the platelet count. These findings indicate that disseminated intravascular coagulation is not likely to be the cause of thrombocytopenia in liver cirrhosis.
Splenomegaly
as well as the diminished protein synthetic activity of the liver participates in the pathogenesis of the thrombocytopenia in this disease.
...
PMID:Thrombocytopenia in liver cirrhosis. 261 53
Essential thrombocythemia (ET) in an 11-year-old dog was characterized by persistently high platelet counts (range, 4.19 X 10(6)/microliters to 4.95 X 10(6)/microliters, abnormal platelet morphology, marked megakaryocytic hyperplasia in the bone marrow, absence of circulating megakaryoblasts, and history of
splenomegaly
and gastrointestinal bleeding. Increased numbers of megakaryocytes and megakaryoblasts (15% to 20%) in the bone marrow were confirmed by a positive
acetylcholinesterase
reaction. Another significant finding was the presence of a basophilia in blood (4,836/microliters) and bone marrow. The marked persistent thrombocytosis, absence of reactive (secondary) thrombocytosis, abnormal platelet morphology, and quantitative and qualitative changes in the megakaryocytic series in the bone marrow suggested the presence of a myeloproliferative disease. Cytochemical and ultrastructural findings aided in the diagnosis of ET. The dog was treated with radiophosphorus. The results was a rapid decline in the numbers of megakaryoblasts and megakaryocytes in the bone marrow and platelets and basophils in the peripheral blood. The dog died unexpectedly of acute necrotizing pancreatitis and diabetes mellitus before a complete remission was achieved.
...
PMID:Probable essential thrombocythemia in a dog. 271 60
A daily dose of 3 x 10(6) or 6 x 10(6) units of alpha-interferon was given during two 4- to 6-month periods to a 65-yr-old male patient with hairy cell leukemia, reducing
splenomegaly
and decreasing the number of hairy cells. Liver biopsy specimens taken during treatment revealed predominantly decreased hairy cell infiltration in the dilated sinusoids and enlarged or vacuolar nuclei of hepatocytes, compared with those in the liver before treatment. The ultrastructure of hepatocytes in specimens taken during treatment showed cytoplasmic vacuoles, weakly stained glycogen particles, and conspicuously decreased endoplasmic reticulum. Liver tests revealed decreased serum
cholinesterase
and total cholesterol levels in the early stage of treatment, low levels of total protein and albumin during treatment, and a very low value in the [13C]aminopyrine breath test. No clinical reports have been made on the decreased microsomal function during treatment with interferon. alpha-Interferon damaged the endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes, although it was effective for the reduction of hairy cells in the liver of hairy cell leukemia.
...
PMID:The effect of alpha-interferon on the liver in a patient with hairy cell leukemia: light and electron microscopic studies. 275 86
IL-1 has been shown to stimulate the release of granulocyte-macrophage CSF, granulocyte-CSF, and macrophage-CSF from "accessory cell populations" in vitro, and it stimulates the appearance of colony-stimulating activity in the sera of mice in vivo. This cytokine has also been proposed to act on primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells to stimulate expression of receptors for the CSF. We sought to determine whether IL-1 beta could influence platelet and/or megakaryocytes and their progenitor cells following in vivo administration to normal mice. Our results demonstrated that, although administration of IL-1 beta clearly expands the pool of megakaryocyte-CFU and
acetylcholinesterase
-positive megakaryocytic cells (primarily in the spleen), it causes a transient and dose-dependent reduction of circulating platelets. The associated thrombocytopenia can be abolished by splenectomy before IL-1 beta administration, and is not temporally associated with the development of
splenomegaly
.
...
PMID:Alterations in megakaryocyte and platelet compartments following in vivo IL-1 beta administration to normal mice. 278 31
Cellular glucose-metabolizing enzymes and
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) have been utilized as biochemical markers of mononuclear cell (MNC) leukemia maintained by serial cell transplantation in F344 rats. We have evaluated the sensitivity and reproducibility of these tumor markers in comparison to other diagnostic criteria of leukemia. Weanling rats were injected with 2 X 10(7) leukemic spleen MNC and sampled at 6, 35, 63, and 83 days. At 6 days, the glycolytic enzyme activities from spleen that decreased were believed to be residual activity from injected leukemic MNC. Glycolytic enzyme activities in spleen MNC were normal at 35 days and no changes in blood MNC enzyme activity occurred at 6 days or 35 days. At 63 days, prior to clinical evidence of leukemia, glucose-metabolizing enzymes from spleen MNC changed, and there were decreases in
AChE
from both blood and spleen MNC that progressively decreased at 83 days, when there was depressed body weight,
splenomegaly
, elevated WBC, depressed RBC, hypoglycemia, hyperbilirubinemia, and elevated serum enzyme levels. Separation of leukemic MNC from blood and spleen enhances sensitivity of cellular enzyme responses and provides a reproducible model to study biochemical markers correlated with severity of leukemia.
...
PMID:Biochemical markers for Fischer rat leukemia in a cell transplant model. 347 32
Mononuclear cell (MNC) leukemia was identified in 26-month-old F344 rats by
splenomegaly
, reduced red blood cell counts, and elevated white blood cell counts. Atypical MNC were predominant in spleen and blood with acentric nuclei and red cytoplasmic granules. Pentose shunt, glycolytic, and Krebs cycle enzyme activities were elevated 2- to 11-fold in the enriched MNC fraction (Ficoll-Paque density gradients, 1.077 g/ml) isolated from spleen. A leukemic MNC line was derived from one of the spontaneously leukemic donors and then maintained in vivo by s.c. transfer of 2 X 10(7) spleen cells into 7-8-week-old syngeneic recipients. In these serial transplantation experiments leukemia that was clinically and morphologically indistinguishable from spontaneous leukemia in 104-week-old rats was induced in 22-24-week-old rats. Enhanced enzyme activity in MNC was not essential to maintain the phenotypic expression of Fischer rat leukemia. The pattern of biochemical response in spleen MNC from transplanted cases was the opposite of that previously noted in spontaneously leukemic rats, with 50-70% decreases in the specific activities of pentose shunt enzymes and malate dehydrogenase. Reversal of the expression of these enzymes in MNC may be related to a difference in the growth rate of the tumors or to selective proliferation of the transplanted leukemic cells. In addition
acetylcholinesterase
activity decreased 35-85% in MNC of spleen and blood. Transplantable MNC from F344 rats provide abundant tumorigenic material with a novel biochemical expression that may be useful in the study of chemotherapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:Comparison of the morphology and enzyme activity of mononuclear cells from Fischer 344 rats with either spontaneous or transplanted leukemia. 402 16
Hypersplenism is defined as the association of anemia, leukopenia, or thrombocytopenia with bone marrow hyperplasia and
splenomegaly
. Hypersplenism is common in liver cirrhosis and frequent in patients with portal hypertension. The effects of portacaval shunt are variable; hypersplenism hardly ever improves but rarely develops after surgery. Since the spleen is a major component of the mononuclear phagocyte system, splenectomy reduces antibody synthesis. Although splenectomy abolishes hypersplenism, it may lead to sepsis. Recently, partial splenic embolization, using gelform injected directly into the splenic artery, has been performed in patients with cirrhosis. Partial splenic embolization induces an increase in the number of circulating blood cells. In addition, the levels of albumin, hepaplastintest, cholesterol and
cholinesterase
are increased significantly after treatment. Partial splenic embolization rarely causes problems and may actually be beneficial.
...
PMID:[Hypersplenism in liver cirrhosis]. 811 16
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