Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serious infections and sepsis due to nondiphtheria Corynebacteria have been well described. A patient with chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis, who developed Corynebacterium minutissimum bacteremia, is described in this report. Corynebacterium minutissimum is the causative agent of erythrasma and to our knowledge, this is the first published report of septicemia due to this organism.
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PMID:Corynebacterium minutissimum bacteremia in a patient with chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis. 346 94

Therapeutic effects on cefmenoxime hemihydrochloride (CMX, Bestcall), a new synthetic cephem antibiotic, were examined in the treatment of various infections complicated with hematological diseases. The number of patients treated with CMX was 37 including 5 cases of sepsis or suspected sepsis, 14 cases of pneumonia or suspected pneumonia, 5 cases of upper respiratory diseases, 2 cases of urinary tract infections and 11 cases of other infections. All of these infections were complicated with hematological diseases: Acute leukemia, 13 cases; chronic myelocytic leukemia, 1 case; adult T cell leukemia, 3 cases; malignant lymphoma, 8 cases; Hodgkin's disease, 2 cases and myeloma, 3 cases. CMX were administered by a single intravenous injection or by a drip infusion. The dose was between 2 and 6 grams per day. Good to excellent clinical results were obtained in 25 out of 37 cases, total effective rate of 67.6%. No clinical side effects or abnormal laboratory findings attributable to CMX were observed except for light diarrhea in 2 cases. By the clinical investigation, it was demonstrated that CMX was one of safe and effective antibiotics for treating infections in the compromised hosts complicated with hematological diseases.
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PMID:[Clinical investigation of the therapeutic effects of cefmenoxime in the treatment of infections complicated by hematological diseases]. 348 22

Current therapy for children with cancer includes a variety of invasive procedures many of which require repeated venous access over a considerable period of time. Such procedures are poorly tolerated by children and by their veins. Recently it has become possible to undertake the majority of such procedures by means of permanent indwelling silastic catheters improving the quality of life of the children and their parents and increasing the scope of therapeutic intervention. In the period July '83 - August '84 we have used 46 of these catheters in 45 children with malignant disease, 12 with acute myeloid leukaemia, 12 with neuroblastoma, 7 with B cell leukaemia-lymphoma, 6 with rhabdomyosarcomas, 2 with Ewing's Sarcoma, 2 with Wilms' tumor and 1 case each of Hodgkin's disease, teratocarcinoma, osteosarcoma and juvenile chronic myeloid leukaemia. The children's ages ranged from 2 months to 14 years; 22 were male and 23 female. The catheters were inserted under general anaesthesia (duration 20-40 minutes) usually without difficulty, except for a single patient in whom no suitable vein could be found. No complications connected with the placement of the catheter were observed. Subsequent management of the catheter was initially complicated and time-consuming, but was subsequently simplified so that acceptance by parents, children and nursing staff was eventually excellent. The duration of use of 46 catheters ranges from 7 to 350+ days; 24 catheters are presently in use at 30-350+ days from insertion. Eight children died as a result of disease progression and two of sepsis with the catheter in place.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Advantages of a permanent venous access in children treated for cancer. Preliminary results]. 383 38

Diaziquone (AZQ), a new lipid-soluble antitumor agent, was given by 15-30-minute infusion on a daily X 5 schedule to 47 children with refractory solid tumors and leukemia. The starting daily dose of 6 mg/m2 was escalated to 10 and 35 mg/m2 in patients with solid tumors and leukemia, respectively. In patients with solid tumors, myelosuppression was dose-limiting at a daily dose of 10 mg/m2. In patients with leukemia, prolonged pancytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia were observed at daily doses greater than or equal to 25 mg/m2. At these higher doses, significant hyperbilirubinemia associated with sepsis was also seen. Corresponding increases of transaminases or alkaline phosphatase and significant hemolysis were not noted. The maximum tolerated dose for this daily dose schedule was 9 mg/m2 in children with solid tumors and 25 mg/m2 in children with relapsed leukemia. Responses to AZQ included stabilization of disease in osteosarcoma, neurofibrosarcoma, pinealoma, and ependymoma. A patient with juvenile chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis converted back to the chronic phase. A patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia had a substantial decrease in cerebrospinal fluid blast count. Bone marrow aplasia was achieved in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia; however, remissions were not achieved. A phase II study of AZQ in children with refractory malignancies is now being performed by the Childrens Cancer Study Group.
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PMID:Phase I clinical evaluation of diaziquone in childhood cancer. 385 80

The preleukemic syndrome occurs mainly after middle age. We report 11 patients, aged 62 to 92 years, who presented with weakness, fatigue, malaise and pallor. Eight patients died; survival from the time of diagnosis was between 2 and 21 months. Two of them developed acute myelomonocytic leukemia. A third patient developed Philadelphia chromosome-negative chronic myeloid leukemia within 9 months. Serum unsaturated B12 binding capacity and transcobalamin I were elevated in this patient, preceding the transformation to chronic myeloid leukemia. Five other patients died from sepsis or pneumonia. All patients were anemic, and 10 were leukopenic. Bone marrow was hypocellular in 1 and hypercellular in 10 cases. Chromosomal studies were performed in five patients, with three showing abnormal findings: 47xx, trisomy 8 and a tetraploid karyotype 92xxyy5q-. No cytotoxic treatment should be given during the preleukemic phase until transformation to acute leukemia occurs. Since preleukemic patients are very susceptible to infections, early diagnosis of the condition is important, as is supportive care in the case of surgery.
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PMID:Preleukemic syndrome in elderly patients--report of 11 cases. 385 73

Classification of platelet disorders has been based on the platelet count. Addition of a second variable, mean platelet volume (MPV), to the routine blood count allows classification of patients into 9 categories: high, low, or normal MPV, and high, low or normal platelet count. We studied 1,244 adult inpatients. 1,134 had both platelet values normal. 11 patients had high MPV and low platelet count: all had hyperdestructive causes. 15 patients had high MPV and normal platelet count: 12 had heterozygous thalassemia, and three had iron deficiency. Seven patients had high MPV and high platelet count: causes included myeloproliferative disorders, inflammation, iron deficiency, and splenectomy, 25 patients had high platelet counts and normal MPV: the causes were inflammation, infection, sickle cell anemia, iron deficiency, or chronic myelogenous leukemia. 52 patients had an MPV that was inappropriately low for the platelet count (high, normal, or low). All had sepsis, splenomegaly, aplastic anemia, chronic renal failure, or a disease being treated with myelosuppressive drugs. High MPV thus appears correlated with myeloproliferative disease or thalassemia; and low MPV, with cytotoxic drugs or marrow hypoplasia. Addition of MPV to the platelet count allows subtler disorders to be detected (when the platelet count is normal), and allows distinction of the cause of thrombocytopenia.
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PMID:Use of mean platelet volume improves detection of platelet disorders. 407 87

Chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL) developed in a 31-year-old man after he underwent a third renal transplant. The leukemia was initially controlled with azathioprine sodium and prednisone therapy, but eventually it entered blast cell crisis. This was controlled with an adult acute lymphocytic leukemia protocol with an excellent response. Despite discontinuing treatment with azathioprine and with the use of busulfan to control the peripheral WBC count, the patient maintained stable renal function for one year following treatment of the blast cell crisis and subsequently died of sepsis. We suggest that CGL after renal transplantation is similar to that observed in the general population and can be treated with the usual chemotherapeutic agents for the disorder without sacrificing renal function.
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PMID:Chronic granulocytic leukemia after renal transplantation. 635 25

A total of 47 patients with relapsed or primarily refractory leukemia were treated with mitoxantrone alone or in combination with vincristine sulfate and prednisone or cytarabine. Eligible patients included those with adequate renal and hepatic function, normal left ventricular ejection fraction, and those who had received previous treatment. When mitoxantrone was given alone in a once daily times five schedule, 5 of 12 acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients achieved complete remission; 4 of these patients had been refractory to reinduction and 1 to induction chemotherapy with anthracycline-containing treatments. Four of these patients had progressive disease, and three died during induction. Of 12 patients with acute myeloid leukemia, 1 had a complete remission, 1 had a partial remission, 8 had progressive disease, and 2 died during induction. Mitoxantrone was also found to be active in two patients in the blastic transformation of chronic myeloid leukemia with a response in one patient lasting 17 weeks. Combinations of mitoxantrone with vincristine sulfate and prednisone resulted in complete remission in four of nine acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients and one of four patients with Tdt-positive chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis. Three of these patients had not experienced a prior remission following anthracycline-containing treatments. Partial remission occurred in two of the acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients and one of the Tdt-positive chronic myeloid leukemia patients. Two of this latter group of patients died in induction. Treatment with mitoxantrone and cytarabine resulted in two acute myeloid leukemia patients achieving complete remission and one a partial remission; two patients had progressive disease, and one died in induction. No response was seen in a patient with Tdt-negative chronic myeloid leukemia after two courses of treatment. One patient with acute leukemia in the course of myelofibrosis died in induction. All the patients achieving complete remission are alive and have been in complete remission from 2 to 12 months. Side effects included mild nausea and vomiting in 9 of 13 patients treated with the mitoxantrone-vincristine sulfate-prednisone combination, and in 3 of 8 patients treated with the mitoxantrone-cytarabine combination. Other side effects of the combination treatments include drug-induced oral mucositis (of a lesser degree than with mitoxantrone alone), transient hepatic abnormalities, and infectious complications, such as sepsis, Candida sp colonization of the upper digestive tract, and soft tissue cellulitis, in a few patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Mitoxantrone as a single agent and in combination chemotherapy in patients with refractory acute leukemia. 638 64

Eleven academic institutions were selected to study mitoxantrone administered on a schedule of 10 mg/m2/d for five days initially and later at 12 mg/m2/d for five days, each given as a 30 minute intravenous (IV) infusion each day. Patients with acute or chronic leukemia were stratified by leukemic type and clinical status and included one group of patients considered to be in relapse after complete remission from previous chemotherapy and another group of patients considered refractory to standard induction and/or salvage chemotherapy. During the initial treatment schedule, complete remissions were obtained in two of seven patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia, in one of three patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but in none of the patients with chronic granulocytic leukemia in blast crisis. The durations of remission for these three patients were 22, 57, and 78 days, respectively. An increase in mitoxantrone dose to 12 mg/m2/d produced complete remissions in 8 of 19 evaluable patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia, in one of ten patients with refractory acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia, and in one of four patients with chronic granulocytic leukemia in blast crisis. Each of these patients required only a single course of mitoxantrone to achieve remission; the median time to remission was 37 days (range 18 to 64 days). Remission duration ranged from 35 days (chronic granulocytic leukemia) to 186 days, with the median duration for those patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia achieving remission being 135 days. Of the six patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, none achieved remission at the higher dose level. Drug-related gastrointestinal toxicity included mucositis (25%), diarrhea (21%), and nausea and vomiting (61%). Systemic infection (nonfatal) was experienced by 21% of patients and alopecia by 17%. Other side effects that occurred occasionally were hepatic dysfunction, decreased renal function, confusion, lethargy, anxiety, and fever. Possible drug-related phlebitis developed in one patient, and a single episode of minor epistaxis was reported in another. Cardiovascular toxicity was low. At a mitoxantrone dose of 10 mg/m2/d for five days, one patient developed hypotension, and one episode of congestive heart failure was reported in another. At the higher dose of 12 mg/m2/d, no drug-related hypotension, congestive heart failure, tachycardia, or chest pain were reported. These data indicate that mitoxantrone is a promising single drug for the treatment of acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia and possibly for acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
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PMID:Mitoxantrone in the treatment of relapsed and refractory acute leukemia. 638 65

A retrospective study was conducted to analyze the surgical aspects of the splenectomy in chronic myelogenous leukemia. Twenty patients, Philadelphia chromosome-positive, were initially treated with busulfan until remission was reached. Elective splenectomy was then performed and chromosomal studies repeated at four- and six-month intervals yielding the indication for cyclic intensive chemotherapy. There ws no mortality, one episode of gram-negative sepsis with shock, and five instances of minimal complications. The spleen weights averaged 265 g, ranging from 60 to 800 g. All patients had normal coagulation profiles at the time of surgery, but four of them developed a postoperative thrombocytosis without related complications. A specific correlation was noted between postoperative thrombocytosis and splenomegaly (average weight 570 g). Eleven patients showed a high postoperative leukemoid reaction (average 40,500 cells/cu mm). The interval between diagnosis and splenectomy was shorter (average 7.5 months) in this group than for the patients who had a lower granulocytosis (average 19.5 months).
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PMID:Early splenectomy in chronic myelogenous leukemia: surgical aspects. 694 Apr 64


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