Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With a newly developed short term enzyme linked immunosorbent assay kit (TOYOBO Co.), in which 2 kinds of anti-EPO monoclonal antibodies were used, we assayed EPO concentration in sera from patients with renal failure and hematological disorders. In this report, the EPO data were analysed in relation to serum iron concentrations, with ferritin and UIBC. In the patients with renal failure, there was no significant correlation between EPO concentration and serum iron, ferritin, nor UIBC concentration. On the other hand, in the patients with hematological disorders, there were two types. One was in patients with iron deficiency anemia, whose serum EPO was negatively correlated to serum iron (r = -0.64) and ferritin (r = -0.59), but positively related to UIBC (r = 0.27). The another was the pattern in patients with aplastic anemia, leukemia and MDS, whose serum EPO positively correlated to iron and ferritin but negatively correlated to UIBC. In the patients with aplastic anemia serum EPO had good correlation to serum iron (r = 0.62), ferritin (r = 0.60) and UIBC (r = -0.46). The relationship of EPO to iron in the patients with leukemia (r = 0.54), and EPO to ferritin in the patients with MDS (r = 0.42) show significantly positive correlation coefficient.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Assay of erythropoietin in serum with short term enzyme linked immunosorbent assay method--the clinical significance: Part 2--:Relation to serum iron, UIBC and ferritin in renal failure and hematological disorders]. 835 May 9

We report a case of aplastic anemia complicated with secondary hemochromatosis after allogenic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). A 29-year-old man was diagnosed as having aplastic anemia at the age of 8. At the age of 28, BMT was performed from his HLA-identical sister. Total volume of blood transfusion before BMT was about 28,000 ml, and in three months after BMT was 8,000 ml. The transplantation was successful, but one month after BMT, dry eyes, skin pigmentation and hepatomegaly appeared. Serum bile duct enzymes and ferritin also increased remarkably. Moreover after thirteen months, glucose tolerance impaired seriously. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) revealed atrophic pancreas and an increased CT density in the liver and the tail of the pancreas. A large amount of iron deposition were also found in liver and stomach biopsy specimens. We concluded that diabetes mellitus was due to secondary hemochtomatosis in the present case. There is a possibility that tissue damage due to iron deposits may have been accelerated through BMT in this patient with a history of many blood transfusions.
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PMID:[Aplastic anemia complicated with secondary hemochromatosis after allogenic bone marrow transplantation]. 853 29

Nineteen children and adolescents receiving repeated transfusions and subcutaneous desferrioxamine treatment were investigated in an attempt to quantitate iron overload non-invasively. Before patients were started on desferrioxamine individual relationships were correlated for 12 to 36 months between transfused iron, absorbed iron estimated gastrointestinally, and increasing serum ferritin concentrations. Patients with inflammation, increased liver enzymes, or haemolysis were excluded from analysis. The relationship between the variables could be described by a logarithmic regression curve (y = transfused iron [plus eventually gastrointestinally absorbed iron] = iron overload = a+b log [x = serum ferritin]) for each individual patient. All patients showed close correlation (R2) between x and y (median R2 of 0.909, 0.98, and 0.92 in thalassaemia, aplastic anaemia, and sickle cell anaemia patients, respectively). When started on desferrioxamine, current serum ferritin concentrations were used to derive the iron overload from each individual regression curve. The derived estimated iron overload ranged from 0.6 g to 31 g. Left ventricular dilatation was observed in three patients with beta thalassaemia and in one patient with aplastic anaemia with median iron overload of 20.7 (14.1-31.3) g and 24.0 g respectively. Hypothyroidism was found in four patients with beta thalassaemia and one patient with aplastic anaemia with iron overload between 14.7 (6.8 and 26.1) g and 15.1 g respectively. Human growth hormone deficiency was detected in three patients with beta thalassaemia with an iron overload of 4.2 (3.5-6.8) g; all three patients had excellent desferrioxamine compliance.
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PMID:Logarithmic quantitation model using serum ferritin to estimate iron overload in secondary haemochromatosis. 866 33

A number of studies have shown that regular chelation therapy with deferoxamine is effective in patients with secondary hemochromatosis. However, compliance with these regimen is difficult to obtain in most cases because long-term administration is burdensome. In 3 patients, one each with myelodysplastic syndrome, aplastic anemia and thalassemia intermedia, self-administered subcutaneous one-shot administration of deferoxamine at a dose of 500 mg once or twice daily was carried out over a long period. In all three patients serum ferritin level decreased significantly and the progression of hemochromatosis was prevented. Liver density on computed tomography scan also decreased in one patient. This regimen, in which the patient self-administered deferoxamine subcutaneously one or twice a day is seems to be the most practical method to protect against the progression of hemochromatosis.
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PMID:[Long-term efficacy of subcutaneous administration of deferoxamine in patients with secondary hemochromatosis]. 884

A male patient with severe aplastic anemia was admitted for bone marrow transplantation. While waiting for a donor, high doses of methylprednisolone, anabolic steroid and granulocyte colony stimulating factor were given without response. Deferoxamine was administered for prophylaxis of hemochromatosis because of high level of ferritin. Acute right lower abdominal pain and pyrexia developed. A diagnosis of acute appendicitis was made and appendectomy was performed. The histopathological examination of the resected appendix revealed necrotizing hemorrhagic appendicitis with numerous hyphae of Mucorales. Though anti-fungal agent (amphotericin B) administration was continued, he subsequently developed ileo-cecal abscess and eventually died due to myoglobinuric nephropathy caused by extensive necrosis of the iliopsoas muscle. Autopsy revealed dissemination of hyphae of Mucorales in lungs, kidneys, large vessels and muscle of the bilateral lower limbs. Systemic vascular invasion and embolization of fungal hyphae were also observed. However, culture of exudate sampled from ileocecum yielded no Mucorales. It was emphasized that antemortem diagnosis and effective anti-fungal treatments are essential for the management of intestinal mucormycosis. The relation ship between mucormyocosis and deferoxamine was also discussed.
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PMID:[Acute appendicitis caused by mucorales in a patient with severe aplastic anemia: report of an autopsy case]. 885 34

Serum insulin, and plasma glucagon and glucose levels were measured in 56 Chinese patients with aplastic anemia (AA) and 40 normal controls. Serum insulin and plasma glucose levels in 18 newly diagnosed cases and 11 previously treated cases with prednisone were significantly higher than those in the controls. Serum insulin and plasma glucose levels in 27 cases previously treated with stanozolol were significantly higher than those in the newly diagnosed cases and the previously treated cases with prednisone. There was no significant difference in plasma glucagon levels between the patients and the controls. Serum insulin and plasma glucose levels were significantly correlated with the amount of blood transfusions and serum ferritin and cortisone concentrations in the AA patients. Our findings suggest that AA patients may have hyperinsulinemia accompanying hyperglycemia, which can be further aggravated by stanozolol and prednisone therapy and iron overload.
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PMID:Hyperinsulinemia accompanying hyperglycemia in Chinese patients with aplastic anemia. 937 26

Chloramphenicol is an antibiotic that consistently suppresses the bone marrow and induces sideroblastic anemia. It is also a rare cause of aplastic anemia. These toxicities are thought to be related to mitochondrial dysfunction, since chloramphenicol inhibits mitochondrial protein synthesis. We hypothesized that chloramphenicol-induced mitochondrial impairment alters the synthesis of ferritin and the transferrin receptor. After treating K562 erythroleukemia cells with a therapeutic dose of chloramphenicol (10 microg/ml) for 4 days, there was a marked decrease in cell surface transferrin receptor expression and de novo ferritin synthesis associated with significant decreases in cytochrome c oxidase activity, ATP levels, respiratory activity, and cell growth. Decreases in the transferrin receptor and ferritin were associated with reduced and unchanged message levels, respectively. The mechanism by which mitochondrial dysfunction alters these important proteins in iron homeostasis is not clear. A global decrease in synthetic processes seems unlikely, since the expression of the cellular adhesion proteins VLA4 and CD58 was not significantly decreased by chloramphenicol, nor were the message levels of beta-actin or ferritin. The alterations were not accompanied by changes in binding of the iron response protein (IRP) to the iron-responsive element (IRE), although cytosolic aconitase activity was reduced by 27% in chloramphenicol-treated cells. A disturbance in iron homeostasis due to alterations in the transferrin receptor and ferritin may explain the hypochromic-microcytic anemia and the accumulation of nonferritin iron in the mitochondria in some individuals after chloramphenicol therapy. Also, these studies provide evidence of a link between mitochondrial impairment and iron metabolism in K562 cells.
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PMID:Chloramphenicol-induced mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with decreased transferrin receptor expression and ferritin synthesis in K562 cells and is unrelated to IRE-IRP interactions. 1043 Jan 73

Anemia is a frequently observed manifestation during the clinical course of chronic liver disease. In this study, we retrospectively reviewed the hospital files of 500 chronic liver disease patients and assessed the frequency, etiology and morphology of anemia in 50 patients who fulfilled the criteria to be included in the study. The mean age of the patients was 48+/-16 years and male/female ratio was 1.4/1. The mean hemoglobin value was 9.54+/-2.03 g/dl. The mean MCV was 82.9+/-10.52 fl. Iron deficiency anemia, defined as absent bone marrow iron stores, was the most common anemia present in 50% of patients. Classical laboratory criteria used in the diagnosis of iron deficiency anemia (MCV < 80 fl, ferritin < 10 ng/ml) could not be applicable to all of the patients with iron deficiency anemia and hepatic disorders. Hemolytic anemia due to hypersplenism was the second most common anemia (24%) followed by anemias, namely anemia due to gastrointestinal hemorrhage (22%), anemia of chronic disease (8%), beta-thalassemia major (8%), folate deficiency (6%), vitamin B12 deficiency (4%), macrocytic anemia (2%), aplastic anemia (2%) and immune hemolytic anemia (2%). Twenty-eight percent of the patients had more than a single cause of anemia. Morphologically, microcytic anemia was the most common seen in 46% of the patients followed by normocytic (42%) and macrocytic anemia (12%). As patients do not always present with classical laboratory findings and may have more than a cause of anemia, a complex diagnostic approach should be considered in anemic patients with hepatic disorders.
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PMID:Erythrocytes: Anemias in Chronic Liver Diseases. 1139 3

Serum soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) has been reported to be higher in patients with iron deficiency or with elevated erythropoiesis. In the present study, serum sTfR was measured in various anemic diseases and their clinical significance was examined in a multi-institutional joint study. Serum sTfRs in patients with the following anemic diseases were markedly higher than those in normal healthy adults: non-treated iron deficiency anemia (IDA) (9.13 +/- 7.04 mg/l, n = 52, p < 0.0001), anemia of chronic disorders (ACD) (3.45 +/- 1.38 mg/l, n = 20, p < 0.0001), hemolytic anemia (HA) (5.57 +/- 3.26 mg/l, n = 17, p < 0.0001), and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) (4.03 +/- 2.83 mg/l, n = 20, p < 0.0001). There were significant differences between IDA and ACD (p < 0.0001), between aplastic anemia (AA) (1.58 +/- 1.26 mg/l, n = 16) and MDS (p < 0.001), and between AA and MDS with refractory anemia (MDS-RA) (4.16 +/- 3.40 mg/l, n = 9) (p < 0.02). In patients with chronic renal failure (CRF), serum sTfR levels and serum sTfR/log serum ferritin ratios (sTfR/F index) were compared in the two classified groups according to Muirhead's criteria, as IDA and non-IDA groups with or without recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) treatment. Significantly high levels of both serum sTfR (p < 0.0001) and the sTfR/F index (p < 0.0001) were observed in IDA without rHuEPO treatment. Especially in CRF with rHuEPO treatment, the sTfR/F index showed marked elevation in the IDA group (p < 0.0001) compared with serum sTfR (p < 0.001), indicating more diagnostic efficacy of the sTfR/F index for CRF with IDA. In conclusion, the serum sTfR concentration is a useful diagnostic tool for discrimination between IDA and ACD, and between AA and MDS-RA, and for the detection of iron deficiency in CRF patients in the Japanese population.
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PMID:Diagnostic significance of serum soluble transferrin receptors in various anemic diseases: the first multi-institutional joint study in Japan. 1261 83

We describe a case of a female who developed haemosiderosis, in the course of treatment for very severe unstable aplastic anaemia for fourteen years. She was 37 years old at the time of initial diagnosis. Her management consisted of regular blood transfusions aimed at haemoglobin above 8.5 g/dl, antimicrobials, oxymetholone, low dose prednisone and folate. She had received about seventy five units of blood at the start of 2 grams of desferrioxamine with every subsequent blood transfusion. Annual tests of serum ferritin showed progressive increase. She developed skin changes, diabetes mellitus, heart disease, recurrent infections, generalized joint and abdominal pains and liver failure. She died within six weeks of developing congestive heart failure coupled with liver failure due to haemosiderosis despite regular use of desferrioxamine.
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PMID:Transfusion haemosiderosis inspite of regular use of desferrioxamine: case report. 1616 82


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