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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Discovery of an enlarged spleen in a child requires steps to identify the etiology. One hundred and seventy-eight patients seen over a four-year period (1985-1988) at the Cocody Teaching Hospital were reviewed. The incidence of splenic enlargement among pediatric inpatients was 1.6%. Males (n = 106) were more often affected than females (n = 72). Slightly over half the children (54.49%) were 0 to 5 years of age. The main clinical presenting features were fever (90%), anemia (72%), a decline in general health (36.50%), enlargement of the liver (33.50%), jaundice (26.50%), and enlarged lymph nodes (7%). Type II of Hackett's classification accounted for most cases (61.80%), followed by Type III (14%). Main etiologies included malaria (53%), salmonella infections (15%), sickle cell anemia (14%), schistosomiasis (9%), AIDS (3%), and
thalassemia
(2%). Malignancies (leukemia,
lymphoma
) were relatively infrequent. More than one etiology was found in 13 cases. The distribution of etiologies by age group was determined and a strategy for investigating children with splenic enlargement in tropical countries was developed.
...
PMID:[Etiology of splenomegaly in children in the tropics. 178 cases reviewed at the university hospital center of Abidjan-Cocody (Ivory Coast)]. 131 90
Melioidosis is an infection of humans and animals caused by a gram-negative motile bacillus, Pseudomonas pseudomallei. Forty-nine patients with melioidosis complicating diabetes mellitus, collagen vascular disorders, leukemia/
lymphoma
, and other hematologic malignancies are described. Twenty-nine of these patients had disseminated/septicemic infection, two developed toxic shock syndrome, and one with AIDS experienced recrudescent melioidosis. Patients with disseminated melioidosis often have a variety of defects in cellular immunity both in vitro and in vivo. In humans with recrudescent melioidosis, cellular immunity can be transferred by a transfer factor and by levamisole, a cellular immunopotentiating agent. The results of the treatment of our patients with disseminated/septicemic melioidosis with antimicrobial agents in combination have been successful. In recent years, four cases of fungal arteritis due to Pythium species and one case of keratitis due to Pythium were seen. Almost all patients with fungal arteritis had
thalassemia
; all presented with pain in the lower extremities and gangrenous lesions of the toes. Pythium species, an aquatic Phycomycetes, was identified in these cases as a human pathogen on the basis of clinical features, pathologic findings, and--of greatest importance--the isolation of the etiologic fungi. These five cases with remarkably similar presentations exhibited certain similarities with and differences from cases of mucormycosis, entomophthoromycosis, and peniciliosis.
...
PMID:Tropical disease in the immunocompromised host: melioidosis and pythiosis. 260 81
Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) is observed in people suffering from severe anemia of prolonged duration and appears to be a compensatory mechanism for disturbed medullary hematopoiesis. The hemoglobinopathies (such as
thalassemia
, spherocytosis, and sickle cell disease), neoplastic diseases such as leukemia and
lymphoma
, and others, including myelofibrosis and osteitis fibrosa cystica, are associated with EMH. These diseases and their resultant anemia have in common the ability to stimulate erythropoietin production, which in turn may stimulate hematopoiesis in organs of mesenchymal origin. The liver and spleen are the most common sites of EMH; however, other sites, including the falx cerebri, thoracic cavity, retroperitoneal area and pelvis have been reported. When present, intrathoracic EMH is most frequently associated with
thalassemia
. Spinal cord compression and hemothorax have also been reported as complications of intrathoracic EMH.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic intrathoracic extramedullary hematopoiesis: a report of three cases. 262 Nov 1
Various kinds of lesions exist which should be discriminate from malignant or premalignant or borderline lesions. If there were a morphologic technical procedure on detection of malignant transformation of the cells at the initiation stage, before the lesion would develop a definitely identical with malignant lesion, such method must be most highly applicable for pathologists. DNA diagnosis has realized a warning of diagnosis of certain diseases or genetical maldevelopment prior to develop their clinical manifestation. Gene analysis has introduced in ++phragmatical screening test for certain diseases such as diabetes mellitus,
thalassemia
, T-cell leukemia or
lymphoma
, neuroblastoma, muscular dystrophy of Duchenne or Becker type, Ph' chromosome and so on. Immunohistochemical technology has provided an intracellular oncogene detection in some neoplastic malignancies such as n-myc in neuroblastoma. Amplification of c-erb B2 (also referred as neu and HER-2/neu) has indicated a higher malignant mammary carcinoma with poor-prognosis, even their size small and early stage. Oncogene analysis is expected to be available sperimposing on pathological morphology.
...
PMID:[Detection of early stage cancer: pathological aspect with special reference to differential diagnosis]. 317 85
Sera collected in New York in 1984 from 77 patients with homozygous beta-
thalassemia
were assayed for antibodies to HTLV-III by ELISA and Western blot techniques. Eight (12%) of the 66 hypertransfused thalassemics were seropositive. Retrospective sera of these eight individuals were examined by radioimmune precipitation (RIP), and assays for neutralization of virus infectivity were performed. With seroconversion, antibodies to viral envelope proteins appeared first and were correlated with development of neutralizing antibody. Affinity purified gp120, the major envelope glycoprotein of HTLV-III, blocked viral infectivity and absorbed neutralizing antibody activity from a positive serum. Neutralizing antibody titers mirrored antibody titers to gp120 by RIP. Antibody to gp120 sometimes occurred in the absence of neutralizing antibody, although the reverse was not true. One
thalassemia
patient who exhibited antibody to gp120 for 3 yr post-seroconversion failed to develop neutralizing antibody, acquired the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome with central nervous system involvement and
lymphoma
, and subsequently died. In contrast, all other seropositive thalassemics possessed neutralizing antibodies, and were asymptomatic or exhibited only lymphadenopathy. These results indicate that gp120 elicits neutralizing antibodies in the course of natural infection with HTLV-III. The relationship seen here between neutralizing antibody and better clinical outcome needs to be verified by additional studies.
...
PMID:HTLV-III neutralizing antibody development in transfusion-dependent seropositive patients with beta-thalassemia. 349 68
The radiological due to extensive extramedullary haematopoiesis taking place in the posterior mediastinum in two patients are described, and the literature is reviewed. Characteristic features are a polycyclic or spindle-shaped configuration of the mass, with bilateral paravertebral localisation in the caudal and middle third of the thorax. There is absence of inflammatory or neoplastic changes in the neighbouring skeleton, but in
thalassaemia
there may be changes in the paravertebral portion of the ribs. Computer tomographically, the combination of a solid paravertebral tumour, with adjacent rib changes, is characteristic of
thalassaemia
with extramedullary haematopoiesis. In the absence of other skeletal changes, computed tomography is valuable for differential diagnosis.
Lymphomas
occur considerably more often and may appear identical but, because of the well know fat content of myolipoma, the scan shows contrast values between -15 and + 40 HU. Because of their high vascularity, there is a marked increase in density following intravenous contrast medium.
...
PMID:[Extramedullary haematopoiesis as a cause of a paravertebral mass in the thorax (author's transl)]. 621 30
Marrow transplantation is effective treatment for a number of haematological diseases in patients under the age of 50 who have an HLA-identical sibling donor. It is generally successful when used early in the treatment of aplastic anaemia. It is the only treatment that offers long-term disease-free survival for patients with acute leukaemia who have relapsed at least once, with 10-30 per cent apparent cures. Although still somewhat controversial, it appears also to be the treatment of choice for patients with acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia in first chemotherapy induced remission and for those with chronic myelogenous leukaemia in the chronic phase since approximately 50-60 per cent of these patients are surviving after marrow transplantation in complete remission, apparently cured. Marrow grafting is the only effective treatment for many patients with inherited immunological-deficiency diseases and certain genetic storage diseases. It is being explored for the therapy of patients with
lymphoma
, Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, small-cell lung cancer, testicular cancer, ovarian cancer and genetic disorders of haematopoiesis. Cures of congenital Fanconi anaemia, Blackfan-Diamond anaemia, osteopetrosis, and paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria have been achieved by marrow grafting. Genetic disorders associated with haemolytic anaemia and cyclic neutropenia have been cured by marrow grafting in animals. Target disorders for marrow transplantation in humans are
thalassaemia
major and sickle cell disease, and, indeed, a first successful transplant for treatment of
thalassaemia
major has recently been described (Thomas et al, 1982). Marrow transplantation has been limited by the fact that many patients do not have HLA-identical siblings and very few have monozygotic twins. The Seattle team has now explored the use of less well-matched family member donors in more than 80 patients with leukaemia. These donors share one HLA haplotype genetically with the patient and are phenotypically identical at two of the three major HLA loci on the other HLA haplotype (Clift et al, 1979). Overall, the post-transplant survival appears more a reflection of the type and stage of the leukaemia than of the marrow donor. Patients with leukaemia grafted in relapse have a projected survival of 20-30 per cent and those transplanted in remission of 50 per cent. The incidence and severity of GVHD may not be significantly different from that of patients given HLA-identical sibling marrow grafts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Application of bone marrow transplantation in leukaemia and aplastic anaemia. 635 79
Bone marrow transplantation in childhood is an established treatment modality for aplastic anemia, the acute and chronic leukemias, and severe combined immune deficiency. Recently, experience with this treatment has also been favorable with small numbers of children who have Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, several types of inherited storage diseases, Fanconi's anemia,
thalassemia
, infantile malignant osteopetrosis, and selected cases of
lymphoma
and other solid tumors. The psychosocial impact and financial costs of bone marrow transplantation can be substantial. Multi-institutional, prospective, randomized trials that would compare transplantation and conventional therapy are necessary to establish the indications and precise timing for this procedure. Further development of monoclonal antibodies, a better understanding of the histocompatibility antigen systems, and improvement in pretransplantation conditioning regimens should increase the spectrum of effectiveness for bone marrow transplantation in the coming years.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for diseases of childhood. 636 12
A review of the hospital course of 82 splenectomies in children performed in the past 15 years has been carried out. Three indications have been identified: therapeutic, diagnostic, and traumatic.
Thalassemia
was identified as the commonest indication. Comparisons of the spleens removed showed that those from
thalassaemia
patients were the biggest, while those removed for idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP),
lymphoma
staging, and trauma, were small. Twenty-eight per cent of patients had accessory spleens. Intrathoracic complications were frequent in the traumatic cases, whereas wound complications were commoner after splenectomies carried out for haematological reasons. No gallstones were detected. The platelet response to the various indications was studied and compared. There were two postoperative deaths.
...
PMID:Splenectomy in children in Hong Kong. 693 77
In Taiwan, a country with 21 million people, 388 bone marrow transplants (BMTs), 308 allografts and 80 autografts, were performed in 5 BMT centers from November 1983 to October 1993. The commonest indications were leukemia, aplastic anemia,
lymphoma
and
thalassemia
. Campaigns promoting an unrelated marrow donor registry were started in August 1993 and recruited approximately 26,000 volunteers. A peripheral stem cell program is just beginning. The overall results of BMT in Taiwan are comparable to other countries. The complications of BMT are similar to Western series, except that acute GVHD was rarer in one large series; this observation needs further study. A particular indication for allogeneic BMT in Taiwan is
thalassemia
, accounting for 10% of all patients. Disease-free survival after BMT for
thalassemia
is 44%; graft rejection is the major cause of treatment failure. Another important issue is the role of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in BMT, since the prevalence of HBV infection in Taiwan is very high (> 90%). Abnormal liver function is currently the most common complication and might be related to HBV. Among nearly 100 allogeneic BMTs with HBV carriers as either donor or recipient, 2 patients (approximately 2%) died of HBV-related hepatic failure. Whether the HBV status of the donor and recipient is an important prognostic factor remains to be defined.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in Taiwan: an overview. 792 Feb 98
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