Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Relationships between various types of chronic anemia, wound healing, and red cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3 DPG) were examined in rabbits. Wound tensile strength and energy absorption were not affected by chronic iron-deficiency anemia, the chronic hemolytic anemia caused by intravenous water infusion nor by chronic hemolytic anemia caused by intravenous water infusion nor by chronic phenylhydrazine-induced anemia. Red cell 2,3 DPG levels were increased in the anemia of iron deficiency and were normal in the rabbits with chronic phenylhydrazine-induced anemia at the time of wound excision but were low following phynylhydrazine injection. The results show that chronic anemia per se does not affect the tensile strength and energy adsorption of wound healing. The findings suggest that the wound healing process may differ in certain types of anemia.
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PMID:Chronic anemia, wound healing, and red cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. 0 66

Hemin allows maximal protein synthesis in intact rabbit reticulocytes and their cell-free lysate preparations by retarding the formation of a translational repressor (HCR) found in the postribosomal supernate. In order to evaluate the role of HCR in the pathogenesis of hypochromic anemias, HCR was isolated and partially purified from intact rabbit reticulocytes incubated in vitro with either 0.1 mM alpha,alpha-dipyridyl (an iron-chelating agent) or 0.1 M ethanol. Both of these agents inhibit reticulocyte protein synthesis. Hemin (50 muM) protects against the inhibition by both agents. A ferrous iron-transferrin mixture, however, protects only against alpha,alpha-dipyridyl. Both alpha,alpha-dipyridyl and ethanol inhibit heme synthesis before the time that protein synthesis is affected, while neither lowers either ATP or GSH levels. These results indicate that while both agents inhibit heme synthesis, alpha,alpha-dipyridyl does so by inducing iron deficiency while ethanol works at a non-iron-requiring step. When HCR was isolated from intact cells and assayed in the reticulocyte cell-free systems, plus and minus hemin, premature appearance of HCR was found in cells incubated in vitro with alpha,alpha-dipyridyl or ethanol. When hemin was present in the intact cell incubation, the appearance of HCR was retarded. The HCR from alpha,alpha-dipyridyl ethanol-treated cells was partially purified and eluted at the same location on a Sephadex G-200 column (molecular weight approximately 3 x 10(5)) as that from postribosomal supernates incubated minus hemin. In addition rabbits with phenylhydrazine-induced hemolytic anemia were given intravenous ethanol in vivo at a dose of 0.4 ml/kg. This concentration of alcohol resulted in an inhibition of the rate of heme synthesis and protein synthesis as well as an acceleration of HCR formation in reticulocytes. The HCR from these in vivo treated rabbits was isolated, partially purified, and assayed in an identical fashion as the in vitro experiments. These in vivo experiments further support the physiological and pathophysiological role of HCR in reticulocytes. On the basis of these results a model for a role of HCR in some of the hypochromic anemias is proposed. In iron deficiency or chronic disease (where iron is not available to the erythroblast for heme synthesis) HCR appears prematurely and inhibits protein synthesis. When heme synthesis is inhibited by ethanol but there is sufficient intracellular iron, HCR appears prematurely and inhibits protein synthesis, iron accumulates in the erythroblast, and the end result is sideroblastic anemia.
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PMID:A rabbit reticulocyte model for the role of hemin-controlled repressor in hypochromic anemias. 0 17

Lateral X-ray pictures of the skull in certain several and chronic disorders of the blood as thalassaemia, congenital haemolytic anaemia, sickle cell anaemia and iron deficiency disease show frequently changes of the outlines of the cranial bones. They consist of a double contour of the outer cranial border and on the interior side below the sagittal sutura of a band-like shadow or of multiple stripes and lines running parallel to the carnial vault. They concern the parietal bones and may extend from the bregma till to the lamda or occupy only a part of this distance. The roentgenological features are due to the enlargement of the crainal bones, the bulging out of both parietal bondes, the sometimes enlarged and deepened borders of the sulcus sagittalis superior and particularly to the furrow and depression on the skull above the sagittal suture caused by the protruding parietal bones on both sides. As these different abnormal structures must be passed by the picturing X-ray, effects of superposition and interference are produced. Longitudinal ridges or bony edges which could explain the roentgenological findings could not be established. Since the peculiar alterations of the cranial bones are mainly found in the mentioned blood disorders, where they are caused by the overgrowing red marrow, they also display the same roentgenological features. These features are, therefore, a characteristic sign of these diseases.
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PMID:[Double contours and companion shadows in the skull associated with anaemias (author's transl)]. 15 80

Ninety homozygous patients with Hb S haemoglobinopathy from Sudan were reported with respect to clinical findings, haematological and serum parameters. For comparison, 27 Hb AS heterozygous subjects and 28 Hb AA controls were investigated also. The patients showed an extreme type of illness presenting with severe clinical signs such as dactylitis, liver enlargement and cardiac complications. There was marked haemolytic anaemia (mean haemoglobin 66 g/l). Some patients also presented with low serum (S)-iron levels, indicating iron deficiency. S-bilirubin, S-ASAT, S-ALAT, S-GT and S-urate were notably raised, most probably as a consequence of haemolysis with liver involvement. The patients had lower S-calcium levels when compared with the AS and AA subjects. This may suggest a possible role of HB S in the production of this feature.
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PMID:Sickle cell anaemia in Sudan: clinical findings, haematological and serum variables. 138 85

Thalassemia has been considered a recessive, autosomic, hereditary disease, characterized by microcytic, hypochromic, hemolytic anemia, which occurs as the consequence of a defect in the synthesis of the globin chains, the two most frequent types are thalassemias a and b, which in their most severe forms are known as Hydrops Fetalis and Major Thalassemia. The patients who bear thalassemia are concentrated to those places on earth where malaria is endemic, including the Mediterranean region, Northern Africa, The Middle East, India, China and Southern Asia. The simple Heterozygotic states in both types of thalassemia are more benign and may go unnoticed or confused with iron deficiency.
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PMID:[Molecular aspects of alpha dn beta thalassemias]. 166 26

The perinatal outcome of 96 patients who had an antenatal haemoglobin value of less than 8.0 g/dl was compared with that of a similar number of controls who were matched for age and parity. Sixty-one patients (63%) had iron deficiency anaemia, 25 (26%) had alpha or beta thalassaemia minor, 7 (7.3%) had iron deficiency and thalassaemia trait, 2 had idiopathic pancytopenia and 1 had haemolytic anaemia due to systemic lupus erythematosus. Patients in the study group attended the antenatal booking clinic later, had less weight gain during pregnancy and their babies had lower birth-weights (2,984 g versus 3,177 g p less than 0.01) although there was no significant difference in the period of gestation at delivery. Six patients in the study group had placental abruption and another 2 patients had stillbirths but neither of these complications occurred in the control group. Although 37 patients (39%) in the study group received an antenatal blood transfusion, 53 (55%) of this group also had postnatal anaemia.
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PMID:A case controlled study of pregnancy complicated by severe maternal anaemia. 193 33

In the present study the 60 patients with brucellosis and evaluation of bone marrow aspirate seen at the Hospital Base Cayetano Heredia from 1980 to 1986 were included. Iron deficiency was found in the bone marrow in 34.5% of patients, 31% in males and 36% in females. No correlation was found between iron deficiency and severity of the hematological or non-hematological clinical features. Bone marrow cytophagocytosis was found in 28.3% of patients. All had moderate to severe clinical features, and it is postulated that this finding may be helpful as a severity marker in patients with brucellosis. Bone marrow cytophagocytosis was significantly associated with the presence of hematologic abnormalities in general; anemia was the most common of these, followed by thrombocytopenia. This finding suggests that cytophagocytosis is an important mechanism in the pathogenesis of these abnormalities in brucellosis. Bone marrow hypercellularity was present in 70% with normocellularity in 28.3% and one case of pure megakaryocytic aplasia. In thirty-five patients pathological study of bone marrow was carried out 10 of these (28.5%) had granulomas. Their presence was not correlated with the clinical severity. Peripheral blood finding were: anemia in 83.3%, with two cases of hemolytic anemia and positive direct Coombs test, one of them associated with thrombocytopenia (Evans syndrome); leukopenia in 21%, basically due to neutropenia; thrombocytopenia in 33.3%, in one case associated with positive antiplatelet antibodies and with pure megakaryocytic aplasia in others; pancytopenia in 13.5% of cases (8 patients) associated to bone marrow cytophagocytosis in 5 cases (64.5%) and thus suggesting that this might be the major underlying pathogenetic mechanism.
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PMID:[Evaluation of the bone marrow in patients with brucellosis. Clinico-pathological correlation]. 209

The basic ferritin level in red cells was examined in 60 healthy volunteers and in 110 patients with various diseases of the red cell series. From samples of heparinized whole blood first leucocytes were removed and then they were haemolyzed. After subsequent centrifuging in the supernatant the basic ferritin content was assessed by means of an Amersham Ferritin RIA kit (Amersham, Great Britain). Normal values in healthy volunteers varied between 3.2 and 30.2 ag/ery. In patients with iron deficiency the values were significantly reduced, in patients with pernicious anaemia, beta-thalassemia minor, hereditary spherocytosis and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency or pyruvate kinase deficiency the levels of red cell ferritin were significantly elevated, as compared with the control group. The red cell ferritin level depends on the iron supply to cells of the red cell series and the amount needed for erythropoiesis. A reduced supply in sideropenia leads to a reduced level of red cell ferritin, in haemolytic anaemia its level depends on the generally elevated iron supply in the organism and possibly impaired haemoglobin synthesis, on the one hand, and concurrent elevated iron requirements in case of hyperplasia of red cell formation, on the other hand. Assessment of red cell ferritin is important not only for accurate estimation of the amount of iron available in the cell for haeme formation but also to elucidate the pathogenesis of some changes of iron metabolism in diseases of the red cell series.
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PMID:[The importance of determination of ferritin levels in erythrocytes]. 224 33

Our study concerns eight pregnancies, six of which were successful, in four patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). Several complications of PNH during pregnancy were prevented: chronic anemia, folate and iron deficiency, and deep-vein thrombosis. During puerperium, acute hemolytic crises, most probably triggered by delivery, were observed in two patients. Thrombotic complications could be prevented by early initiation of an anticoagulant therapy after delivery. The only neonatal complication, observed in two cases, was isoimmune hemolytic anemia related to the multiple blood transfusions received before and during pregnancy. These results show that successful pregnancies are possible in women with PNH provided that both the obstetricians and physicians in charge monitor the pregnancies closely.
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PMID:Pregnancy and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. 334 61

Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is an acquired clonal disorder characterized by sensitive populations of erythrocytes, granulocytes and platelets. PNH is a disease of young adults with a slight female predominance. Several complications of PNH during pregnancy, could be prevented; chronic anemia, folate and iron deficiency, deep vein thrombosis. We report seven pregnancies, six of which were successful in four patients. One pregnancy was terminated after 25 weeks by a fetal death during an acute hemolytic crisis. Diagnosis of PNH was made in the four patients before the pregnancy by the acidified serum lysis assay and the sucrose lysis assay. During puerperium, acute hemolytic crisis, most probably triggered by delivery, were observed in two patients. Thrombotic complications could be prevented by early initiation of an anticoagulant therapy after delivery. The only neonatal complication, observed in two cases was iso immune hemolytic anemia related to the multiple blood transfusions received before and during pregnancy. These results show that successful pregnancies are possible in PNH women when monitoring is especially close. To allow optimal fetal development, patients were transfused with saline-washed or frozen-thawed packed red-cells to prevent the precipitation of hemolysis, so that the hemoglobin level remained higher than 10 g/dl. During the whole pregnancy, patients had to be given dietary supplementation with folic acid and iron therapy whenever deficiency was demonstrated, under close surveillance of hemolysis. To prevent thrombotic complications during pregnancy, anticoagulant therapy was used if the patients had to be bedridden, or within 8 hours following delivery.
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PMID:[Marchiafava-Micheli syndrome and pregnancy]. 344 16


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