Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0079731 (B-cell lymphoma)
16,671 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 62-year-old woman with chronic lymphatic leukemia (CLL) (RAI stage IV) with multiple organ involvement and diabetes mellitus, three months prior to death presented with a symmetrical sensory neuropathy of the upper extremities with little motor impairment and, two months later, sensory atactic neuropathy of the lower limbs. No cranial nerve or CNS impairment was noted. Clinical diagnosis was predominantly sensory neuropathy, but nerve conduction velocities were normal on upper limbs and moderately abnormal on lower limbs, the latter attributing to long lasting diabetes mellitus. The women died from acute subarachnoid hemorrhage. Autopsy revealed CLL of B-cell type with generalized organ involvement and acute craniospinal subarachnoid hemorrhage from ruptured cerebral aneurysm. There was selective neoplastic infiltration of the dorsal root ganglia and peripheral nerves, particularly the median nerve. Although selective infiltration of peripheral nerves by B-cell lymphoma cells was not associated with myelo-axonal degeneration, the relationship of this case to human neurolymphomatosis is discussed.
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PMID:Human neurolymphomatosis in a patient with chronic lymphatic leukemia. 227 42

Peripheral neuropathy has been associated with monoclonal gammopathy in patients with Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia, myeloma, B-cell lymphoma, and nonmalignant plasma cell dyscrasia. The neuropathy in these patients is heterogeneous and may be demyelinating or axonal, and sensory-motor or pure motor. The cause of neuropathy in many patients is unknown, but there is increasing evidence that in some cases it may be caused by autoantibody activity of M-proteins that bind to peripheral nerve antigens. Significant advances have been made in characterizing the autoantibody activity of M-proteins and correlating antigenic specificity with the type of neuropathy present, in elucidating the effector mechanisms responsible for causing nerve injury, and in understanding the causes for the aberrant immune response. This article reviews the recent advances made in this field and discusses their implications for the clinical evaluation and management of patients with peripheral neuropathy and monoclonal gammopathy.
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PMID:Peripheral neuropathy and anti-MAG antibodies. 245 47

Infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) may affect not only the liver but also various nonhepatic tissues and organs and may combine with many etiologically unrelated diseases and morbid conditions. Numerous nonhepatic manifestations in HCV infection have been previously reported. For some (eg, cryoglobulinemia), the association is well established. For others, such as sialadenitis and lichen planus, the association is probable (but not completely documented) and, for the remainder, the associations are weak. Extrahepatic manifestations may result from immunological mechanisms as well as virus invasion and replication in the affected extrahepatic tissues and organs. Thyroid abnormalities, primarily Hashimoto's disease, and isolated increases of anti-thyroid antibodies (ATPO) appear to be more frequent in chronic hepatitis C than B or D, with high ATPO titers clustering mainly among females. Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) therapy is associated with development of thyroid dysfunction in 5.5-12.9% of patients, usually exposing preexisting subclinical thyroid abnormalities. Mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) is commonly found (36-45%) in patients with chronic HCV infection; however, only in a minority of cases does it become clinically manifested as systemic vasculitis with purpura, neuropathy, or Raynaud's phenomenon. In a number of patients, MC may terminate in non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphoma. Treatment of these lymphoproliferative disorders with IFN-alpha is advocated. Idiopathic thrombocytopenia is now recognized more frequently in association with chronic HCV infection and is usually aggravated by IFN-alpha therapy. Patients with porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) have demonstrated serological markers of HCV infection in 62-82% of cases. The usefulness of IFN-alpha in PCT remains to be demonstrated. Lichen planus has also been found in association with chronic HCV infection, particularly when severe or affecting the oral cavity. Other nonhepatic manifestations have also been reported in HCV infection such as diabetes, corneal ulceration, uveitis, and sialadenitis. These manifestations deserve further study and documentation. Finally, markers of autoimmunity occur with high frequency in chronic HCV infection; however, combination with the classical syndrome of autoimmune hepatitis is rare. In the presence of various autoantibodies, the clinical features of chronic hepatitis C do not appear to be modified and, contrary to general perception, IFN-alpha therapy within randomized controlled trials should not be withheld since the response rate to IFN-alpha does not appear to differ in the presence or absence of low titers of these markers.
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PMID:Nonhepatic manifestations and combined diseases in HCV infection. 901 79

A subset of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients develop persistent CD8 hyperlymphocytosis and a Sjogren's syndrome-like syndrome associated with multivisceral CD8 T-cell infiltration, known as the diffuse infiltrative lymphocytosis syndrome (DILS). Patients with DILS tend to have higher CD4 cell counts, fewer opportunistic infections, and longer survival times than other HIV-infected patients. Peripheral nerve involvement in DILS has been poorly documented. We studied 12 HIV-infected patients with CD8 hyperlymphocytosis, DILS, and clinical signs of peripheral neuropathy. Two of 4 patients who were HLA typed were HLA-DR5 and 1 was HLA-DR6. All patients had the sicca syndrome and multivisceral involvement. The neuropathy was acute or subacute, always painful, and symmetrical in 8 cases. Electrophysiology was consistent with axonal neuropathy in 10 of 12 patients. Nerve biopsy showed marked angiocentric CD8 infiltrates without mural necrosis (12 of 12), and abundant expression of HIV p24 protein in macrophages (12 of 12). The HIV genome was detected by polymerase chain reaction in nerve homogenates. Zidovudine therapy was associated with improvement in 6 of 6 patients and steroid therapy was beneficial in 4 of 5 patients. No T-cell lymphoma was observed during follow-up, but 2 patients developed a primary B-cell lymphoma. We conclude that DILS neuropathy represents HIV-associated neuropathy, characterized by marked CD8 infiltration and abundant HIV in nerve, that improves with zidovudine or steroid therapy, and probably reflects a systemic host-determined and antigen-driven response to HIV.
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PMID:Peripheral neuropathy in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients with the diffuse infiltrative lymphocytosis syndrome. 912

We describe a patient with a clinical disorder that resembled vasculitic neuropathy in which peripheral nerves were successively affected over several months, but without systemic involvement. An initial muscle biopsy near the involved nerves showed signs of nonspecific inflammation around the muscle and nerve fibers. Immunosuppressive treatment resulted in a dramatic reduction in pain, but relapses of the disease eventually occurred, and the patient died 22 months after onset of the first symptoms. Pathologically, a malignant non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphoma, restricted to the intra- and extradural peripheral nervous system, was found. The demonstration by Southern blotting of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement confirmed the monoclonal nature of the lymphomatous cells. In situ hybridization tests for Epstein-Barr and herpes virus subtypes were negative. Our case underlines i) how difficult diagnosis can be despite extensive investigations, ii) the usefulness of immunosuppressive treatment in the early stage of the disease, iii) the importance of immunostaining and genome analysis for distinguishing between different types of human neurolymphomatosis, and iv) the fact that the initial inflammatory process in the muscle biopsy may be interpreted either as a paraneoplastic effect of the lymphoma or as a viral inflammatory neuromyopathy that triggers the development of the malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Clinicopathological and molecular biological studies in a patient with neurolymphomatosis. 1100

The striking association between hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) has conducted to the hypothesis that HCV plays a major role in the production of MC. MC is a systemic vasculitis characterized by the presence in the serum of cryoprecipitable immunoglobulins (Ig), with rheumatoid factor (RF) activity. HCV which is both a hepatotropic and lymphotropic virus, has been proposed as a causative agent of MC, and is responsible for clinic manifestations such as glomerulonephritis, vasculitis, neuropathy. Because MC evolves frequently into B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), chronic HCV infection has been proposed as an aetiologic factor in B-cell lymphoma. Several controlled trials have demonstrated that combined therapy with interferon and ribavirin is beneficial in chronic hepatitis C with and without MC. Several studies have also suggested that interferon alpha or association of corticosteroids and or ribavirin to the interferon alpha regimen can attenuate the clinical manifestations of MC and considerably reduce CG production. Different situations can be encountered which may modify treatment strategies: patients may be asymptomatic carriers of cryoglobulins but may have chronic hepatitis according to usual criteria, in some cases, cryoglobulinemic patients have no active liver disease, with normal alanine amino transferase and mild liver lesions at liver biopsy, but severe manifestations of MC, in other patients, active liver disease and MC related symptoms are both present.
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PMID:Mixed cryoglobulinemia and hepatitis C virus infection. 1131 37

Various data support the pathogenetic significance of serum IgM autoantibodies against glycolipid GM1 in patients with multifocal motor neuropathy. Although some patients with this neuropathy have an extraneural lymphoma, IgM anti-GM1 glycolipid autoantibodies have not been investigated in these cases. We found IgM anti-GM1 autoantibody in the serum of a 52-year-old man who developed multifocal motor neuropathy that was associated with an extraneural diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. An autopsy showed severe widespread demyelination without lymphoma cell infiltration in the peripheral nerves. Immunofluorescent flow cytometry and thin-layer chromatographic immunostaining demonstrated that most of the anti-GM1 antibody in the serum was monoclonal IgM of lambda type, which was also demonstrable in secretory form on lymphoma cells. The antibody showed affinity for the Galbeta1-3GalNAc terminal disaccharide of glycolipids GM1 and GD1b, which both are widespread in peripheral nerve myelin. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay demonstrated that this antibody was much more abundant in lymphoma cell culture supernatant than in normal lymphocyte culture supernatant. Thus, our patient's B-cell lymphoma cells produced a monoclonal IgM lambda autoantibody against this terminal disaccharide residue. This antibody bound to glycolipids GM1 and GD1b in peripheral motor nerve myelin, presumably initiating formation of destructive immune complexes that caused multifocal motor neuropathy.
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PMID:Multifocal motor neuropathy caused by a B-cell lymphoma producing a monoclonal IgM autoantibody against peripheral nerve myelin glycolipids GM1 and GD1b. 1461 62

Neurolymphomatosis is a rare manifestation of progressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. A 44-yr-old man with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma presented with unilateral progressive peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy after the 7th cycle of R-CHOP (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) therapy. No pathology in the nervous system was evident by computerized tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head, spinal axis and plexuses and by repeated analysis of cerebrospinal fluid. However, the hybrid modality of positron emission tomography (PET) of fluorinated deoxyglucose (FDG) combined with CT scan (PET-CT) showed unilateral involvement of both the brachial and lumbosacral nervous plexuses. A complete recovery of neurological manifestations and normalization of PET-CT followed intensive chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation. The diagnosis and localization of neurolymphomatosis may be supported by PET-CT imaging.
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PMID:PET-CT imaging of combined brachial and lumbosacral neurolymphomatosis. 1561 9

Vogt-Kaganayi-Harada (VKH) syndrome is a rare autoimmune disease characterized by panuveitis, neuropathy and aseptic meningitis. Most patients require long-term treatment with steroids and immunosuppressants. Patients may develop concurrent autoimmune diseases, especially endocrinopathies. Secondary malignancies are rare associations. We report a Chinese man with VKH syndrome presenting with multiple cranial nerve palsy and bilateral pan-uveitis, who developed disseminated high-grade B cell lymphoma after 3-year treatment with azathioprine. This is the first report of systemic non-Hodgkin lymphoma in patients with VKH syndrome. The carcinogenic properties of azathioprine on an abnormally expanded but non-clonal lymphoid system may play a role in the pathogenesis.
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PMID:High-grade lymphoma after azathioprine treatment for Vogt-Kaganayi-Harada syndrome. 1562 16

Histological lesions due to Lyme Borreliosis are not specific and are generally characterized by a lymphocytic and plasma cell infiltrate around blood vessels. Nevertheless, the presence of plasmocytes in cutaneous annular lesions will suggest a diagnosis of Erythema migrans. The presence of tick mouthparts in an insect bite lesion is also evocative of a tick bite. If the diagnosis of lymphocytoma cutis is based on histology, only pathological clinical and biological findings will rule out a Centro follicular cutaneous B cell lymphoma. Plasma cells and ectatic vessels of cutaneous sclerous lesions may suggest acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans. Articular lesions are characterized by non-specific hypertrophic synovitis and peripheral nervous lesions by axonal neuropathy. Moreover, in situ characterization of spirochetes by silver stains or immunohistochemistry is not available in routine.
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PMID:[Histopathology of lyme borreliosis]. 1799 49


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