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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (
iron deficiency
)
7,156
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Belgrade rats exhibit microcytic,
hypochromic anemia
and systemic
iron deficiency
due to a glycine-to-arginine mutation at residue 185 in a metal ion transporter of a divalent metal transporter/divalent cation transporter/solute carrier 11 group A member 2 or 3 (DMT1/DCT1/SLC11A2), a member of the natural-resistance-associated macrophage protein (Nramp) family. By use of rabbit duodenal tissue, a calcein fluorescence assay has previously been developed to assess transport of divalent metal ions across the small-intestinal brush border membrane (BBM). The assay was readily applied here to rat BBM to learn if it detects DMT1 activity. The results demonstrate protein-mediated transport across the BBM of all tested ions: Mn(2+), Fe(2+), and Ni(2+). Transport into BBM vesicles (BBMV) from (b/b) Belgrade rats was below the detection limit. BBMV of +/b origin had substantial activity. The kinetic rate constant for Ni(2+) membrane transport for +/b BBMV was within the range for normal rabbit tissue. Vesicles from +/b basolateral membranes (BLM) showed similar activity to BBMV while b/b BLM vesicles (BLMV) lacked transport activity. Immunoblots using isoform-specific antibodies demonstrated that intestinal levels of b/b DMT1 were increased compared to +/b DMT1, reflecting
iron deficiency
. Immunoblots on BBMV indicated that lack of activity in b/b vesicles was not due to a failure of DMT1 to localize to the BBMV; an excess of specific isoforms was present compared to +/b BBMV or duodenal extracts. Immunoblots from BLMV also exhibited enrichment in DMT1 isoforms, despite their distinct origin. Immunofluorescent staining of thin sections of b/b and +/b proximal intestines confirmed that DMT1 localized similarly in mutant and control enterocytes and showed that DMT1 isoforms have distinct distributions within intestinal tissue.
...
PMID:Transport of divalent transition-metal ions is lost in small-intestinal tissue of b/b Belgrade rats. 1573 55
Although alpha0-thalassemia (thal) defects are not very frequent in the Iranian population, Hb H disease does occur in the country. We have analyzed the alpha gene cluster of 13 patients showing the presence of Hb H to establish the molecular background of this disease in southwest Iran (Shiraz and Hormozgan provinces). Using gap-polymerase chain reaction (gap-PCR) and direct DNA sequencing we have found the --MED-I deletion, the polyadenylation signal (poly A) mutations alphaT-Saudi alpha and alphaT-Turkish alpha and Hb Constant Spring (Hb CS) in association with the common -alpha3.7 deletion. This study has revealed that: 1) at least six genotypes are responsible for Hb H disease in the area: .-alpha3.7/ --MED-I; -alpha3.7/alphaT-Saudi alpha; alphaT-Saudi alpha/alphaT-Saudi alpha; alphaCSalpha/--MED-I; --MED-I/alphaT-Turkish alpha; and the atypical forms of Hb H disease -alpha3.7/alphaCSalpha. 2) The molecular background of Hb H disease in the southwest area of Iran is more similar to the Mediterranean type than to the Southeast Asian. 3) Hb Bart's hydrops fetalis syndrome and mild, intermediate or severe postnatal Hb H disease conditions can be expected, but at a relatively low incidence. 4) The diagnostic flowchart for patients with microcytic
hypochromic anemia
should include
iron deficiency
, beta-thal, alpha+- and alpha0-thal analyses.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of Hb H disease in southwest Iran. 1576 54
Hephaestin is a transmembrane copper-dependent ferroxidase necessary for effective iron transport from intestinal enterocytes into the circulation. Hephaestin is mutated in sex-linked anemia (sla) mice. The initial uptake of iron from the diet in these animals is normal, but the basolateral export of iron from enterocytes is defective, resulting in
iron deficiency
and microcytic
hypochromic anemia
. In addition to the small intestine, hephaestin is expressed to a lesser extent in colon, spleen, placenta and kidney but its role in these tissues remains unknown. So far, hephaestin has not been linked to a human disease.
...
PMID:Hephaestin--a ferroxidase of cellular iron export. 1577 82
Sideroblastic anemia is an anemic condition characterized by chronic
hypochromic anemia
and the presence of large iron deposits in erythroid cells. Seven dogs with sideroblastic anemia were evaluated retrospectively. Historical, clinical, and clinicopathologic findings were reviewed to determine whether the condition was idiopathic or associated with disease conditions or drug or toxin exposure. Associated diseases were identified in 6 affected dogs and included acute hepatitis, pancreatitis, acute hepatitis and pancreatitis, inflammatory disease, glomerulonephritis, and myelofibrosis. None of the dogs had a history of recent exposure to drugs or toxins. One dog had no evidence of associated disease. Regardless of the associated disease condition, sideroblastic anemia was characterized by moderate to severe nonregenerative and frequently
hypochromic anemia
with prominent dysplastic features in bone marrow that were most prominent in the erythroid series. Survival varied from days to years. Identification of large numbers of siderocytes or sideroblasts in blood or bone marrow is inconsistent with a diagnosis of
iron deficiency
and should prompt a search for inflammatory disease conditions, including hepatitis, pancreatitis, and glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:Sideroblastic anemia in 7 dogs (1996-2002). 1595 46
Defects in iron absorption and utilization lead to
iron deficiency
and anemia. While iron transport by transferrin receptor-mediated endocytosis is well understood, it is not completely clear how iron is transported from the endosome to the mitochondria where heme is synthesized. We undertook a positional cloning project to identify the causative mutation for the hemoglobin-deficit (hbd) mouse mutant, which suffers from a microcytic,
hypochromic anemia
apparently due to defective iron transport in the endocytosis cycle. As shown by previous studies, reticulocyte iron accumulation in homozygous hbd/hbd mice is deficient despite normal binding of transferrin to its receptor and normal transferrin uptake in the cell. We have identified a strong candidate gene for hbd, Sec15l1, a homologue to yeast SEC15, which encodes a key protein in vesicle docking. The hbd mice have an exon deletion in Sec15l1, which is the first known mutation of a SEC gene homologue in mammals.
...
PMID:Iron metabolism mutant hbd mice have a deletion in Sec15l1, which has homology to a yeast gene for vesicle docking. 1628 49
We present a case of a 33-year-old man, who had a past history of a total pancreatectomy for duodenal malignant lymphoma complicated by life-threatening bleeding during chemotherapy at 23 years of age. He achieved complete remission and received no more chemotherapy. Around August 1999 he developed anemia, which failed to improve following intravenous administration of iron, and he was hospitalized. The cause of the anemia remained unclear and he received a blood transfusion. Because of the increasing frequency of transfusions, he was admitted to our hospital to evaluate his anemia in September 2000. On examinations, laboratory findings revealed a low level of serum vitamin B6 (B6) with
iron deficiency
. Intravenous administration of B6 was performed in addition to iron, with the result that the patient's hemoglobin level was kept at 10 g/dl without blood transfusion. An oral B6 administration test resulted in a low level of B6. These results suggest that B6 deficiency due to malabsorption may cause therapy-resistant anemia. Some reports say that B6 deficiency causes microcytic
hypochromic anemia
, since B6 is necessary for erythrocytic hemopoiesis as a coenzyme for heme biosynthesis. In the case of microcytic
hypochromic anemia
, if the cause is unclear, evaluation should be performed, taking the possibility of a hidden cause of B6 deficiency into consideration.
...
PMID:[Therapy-resistant microcytic hypochromic anemia from malabsorption-related vitamin B6 deficiency after a gastrointestinal operation]. 1644 Jul 62
Patients with deficiency in ferrochelatase (FECH), the last enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway, experience a painful type of skin photosensitivity called erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP), which is caused by the excessive production of protoporphyrin IX (PPIX) by erythrocytes. Controversial results have been reported regarding hematologic status and iron status of patients with EPP. We thoroughly explored these parameters in Fechm1Pas mutant mice of 3 different genetic backgrounds. FECH deficiency induced microcytic
hypochromic anemia
without ringed sideroblasts, little or no hemolysis, and no erythroid hyperplasia. Serum iron, ferritin, hepcidin mRNA, and Dcytb levels were normal. The homozygous Fechm1Pas mutant involved no tissue
iron deficiency
but showed a clear-cut redistribution of iron stores from peripheral tissues to the spleen, with a concomitant 2- to 3-fold increase in transferrin expression at the mRNA and the protein levels. Erythrocyte PPIX levels strongly correlated with serum transferrin levels. At all stages of differentiation in our study, transferrin receptor expression in bone marrow erythroid cells in Fech(m1Pas) was normal in mutant mice but not in patients with iron-deficiency anemia. Based on these observations, we suggest that oral iron therapy is not the therapy of choice for patients with EPP and that the PPIX-liver transferrin pathway plays a role in the orchestration of iron distribution between peripheral iron stores, the spleen, and the bone marrow.
...
PMID:Increased plasma transferrin, altered body iron distribution, and microcytic hypochromic anemia in ferrochelatase-deficient mice. 1700 76
TNF-alpha is a pleitropic cytokine that expresses both pro- and anti-inflammatory activity and transgenic mice expressing human tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) exhibit a progressive polyarthritis that models rheumatoid arthritis (RA). One of the common comorbidities of RA is anemia of chronic disease (ACD). The purpose of these experiments was to study the changes in the bone marrow and peripheral blood that accompany polyarthritis in TNF-alpha transgenic mice in an effort to better understand the pathogenesis of myelodysplasia and ACD. Polychromatic cytometry, hematology and serum cytokine analysis were used to study the pathogenesis of ACD in human TNF-alpha transgenic mice. Our hematological evaluation revealed a mild, compensated, microcytic
hypochromic anemia
, and monocytosis. In the bone marrow, we observed alterations in cell kinetics, decreased relative expression of transferrin receptor and increased apoptosis and cell death in several late precursor cell populations. Although significant levels of human TNF-alpha were found in the serum, neither change in serum murine erythropoietin nor any significant difference observed in serum levels of murine IL-beta, IL-5, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12(p70), IL-17, TNF-alpha, IFNgamma, GM-CSF, MIP-1alphaJE, MCP-5 was observed. Tg197 mice develop a compensated, microcytic,
hypochromic anemia
, and a functional
iron deficiency
by 9 weeks of age. Changes in peripheral blood are reflected in alterations in cell kinetics, transferrin receptor expression and markedly increased apoptosis and cell death in the bone marrow indicating that TNF-alpha may contribute to myelodysplasia in ACD. Moreover, since human TNF-alpha can interact only with murine TNFR1, our data suggest that TNFR1 may play an important role in the development of ACD.
...
PMID:Myelodysplasia and anemia of chronic disease in human tumor necrosis factor-alpha transgenic mice. 1820 95
Administration of an iron-deficient diet to Wistar rats resulted within 14 days in reduced serum iron concentrations, a microcytic
hypochromic anemia
, characteristic for impaired hemoglobin synthesis, and an increase of duodenal epithelial cell proliferation. After 5 weeks of
iron deficiency
, hypochromic microcytic anemia and a clear increase of duodenum weight but no pronounced effects on cell proliferation was observed. Increased duodenum weights corresponded to significant increases in mucosal area, indicating a diffuse, simple mucosal hyperplasia. The sequence of events following iron depletion thus appears to be: (1) reduced serum iron levels, (2) induction of hypochromic microcytic anemia, (3) increased duodenal epithelial cell proliferation, and (4) increased duodenal weight (increased mucosal area). Iron deficiency anemia was rapidly reversible after a 2-week recovery period. However, increased duodenum weights were still noted at that time. Intramuscular iron supplementation in animals fed with iron-deficient diet maintained body iron levels not below normal values, and neither anemia nor increased duodenum cell proliferation were detected after 14 days. A 5-week iron supplementation period resulted in slightly increased serum iron values, and slightly decreased duodenal epithelial cell proliferation. Thus, increased duodenum mucosal hyperplasia was shown to be secondary to depletion of body iron and anemia and reflects an attempt to increase iron absorption to counteract
iron deficiency
.
...
PMID:Iron deficiency causes duodenum mucosal hyperplasia in male Wistar rats. 1835 45
We observed high incidence of anemia in patients with cerebral palsy sheltered in a specialized institution in Thessaloniki, Greece. Therefore, we decided to investigate its cause. We studied 108 patients, and assessed complete blood cell count, peripheral blood smear, serum iron, ferritin, folate, B12 and the presence of hemoglobin or parasites in the stools. In all cases, anemia was hypochromic and microcytic. Approximately 33% of patients suffered from
hypochromic anemia
, whereas 38% were iron deficient. There was no statistical difference in the incidence of
iron deficiency
between different age groups. All tests for fecal occult blood or intestinal parasites were negative. Folic acid and B12 levels were within normal range in all cases. We also found that 87 and 95.6% of patients on liquid diet were anemic and iron deficient, respectively, compared to only 18.8 and 22.3% of patients on normal diet. The high incidence of anemia was attributed to
iron deficiency
which was secondary to inadequate iron intake and decreased iron absorption. Thus, it would not be irrational to consider iron supplementation as the first measure in such patients and postpone endoscopic procedures for a later stage, unless there are clinical or laboratory findings (such as fecal occult blood) suggestive of gastrointestinal blood loss.
...
PMID:Increased incidence of iron deficiency anemia secondary to inadequate iron intake in institutionalized, young patients with cerebral palsy. 1899 Oct 57
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