Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0085632 (
apathy
)
4,089
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mobilization of stem and progenitor cells into blood, which facilitates the collection of blood-derived autograft and allograft products, can be accomplished with administration of myelosuppressive chemotherapy, hematopoietic growth factors, or both. Autologous donor
indifference
to mobilization attempts has been correlated with prior administration of chemotherapy and radiation therapy. To investigate whether concurrent administration of radiation therapy inhibits mobilization, five daily injections of a potent combination of mobilizing cytokines, 500 U/kg
erythropoietin
(
EPO
) plus 15 microg/kg G-CSF, were administered each morning to Balb/c mice. Each afternoon, a 2 Gy fraction of Co-60 radiation was administered to either the lower limb or the upper or lower hemibody. Each day, mice were necropsied, and blood stem cell mobilization was determined by assaying the number of hematopoietic colony-forming cells in the blood and in the spleen. Unirradiated cytokine-injected mice showed a significant mobilization effect evident as increased colony-forming cells in blood and spleen compared with saline-injected unirradiated controls. The irradiated mice showed markedly inhibited or absent mobilization regardless of the part of the body irradiated. To investigate the mechanism of radiation-induced mobilization inhibition, heparinized plasma was obtained from mice whose lower bodies were irradiated with 2 Gy 18 h previously, and 0.5 ml was injected i.v. into intact mice 10 min before they received 15 microg/kg G-CSF and 500 U/kg
EPO
. Unlike mice that received G-CSF +
EPO
only and showed mobilization of progenitors from marrow to spleen, recipients of plasma from irradiated mice before and after cytokine administration showed significantly reduced mobilization of progenitors. Thus, radiation-induced inhibition of stem cell mobilization is mediated by an unidentified circulating factor.
...
PMID:Concurrent partial body radiation prevents cytokine mobilization of blood progenitor cells: an effect mediated by a circulating factor. 973 65
An 11-year-old mixed breed dog was presented with anorexia,
apathy
and intermittent macrohaematuria, absolute polycythaemia (packed cell volume, 80 per cent; red blood cell, 12.2 x 10(6)/microl) and elevated
erythropoietin
concentrations. A renal mass was detected by ultrasonography and, following total nephrectomy, diagnosed as necrotising pyelonephritis. After surgery, the haematological parameters and
erythropoietin
values returned to normal, suggesting that the pyelonephritis was the cause of the polycythaemia. While secondary polycythaemia because of a non-neoplastic condition of the kidneys occasionally occurs in human beings, it has only extremely rarely been reported in dogs. This is the first case report of a unilateral pyelonephritis causing secondary polycythaemia in a dog.
...
PMID:Secondary polycythaemia associated with high plasma erythropoietin concentrations in a dog with a necrotising pyelonephritis. 1848 31