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)

2,3-Dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) an investigational chelant structurally similar to dimercaptopropanol (BAL), offers the advantage of not depleting iron stores on which basis it would not seem to form a toxic chelate with iron. We report the case of a man with a formidable body burden of lead (Pb) and depleted iron stores who was given iron intramuscularly during a defined period of long-term retreatment with DMSA. Initiation of retreatment with DMSA, 30 mg/kg/day given orally in three divided doses for the first 7 days markedly enhanced Pb diuresis, entailed a pronounced fall in blood Pb and abolished symptoms of Pb poisoning. Continuation of retreatment with two-thirds the initial DMSA dose for an added 15 days maintained blood Pb at sustained low levels. Iron sorbitol administered intramuscularly during this period in individual doses of 100 mg of elemental iron given 3 days apart to a conservative total of 400 mg produced no untoward effects, suggesting that a toxic chelate between iron and DMSA was not formed. Serum ferritin entered the normal range and there was virtually an immediate significant decrease in erythrocyte protoporphyrin. Together with discernible increases in haemoglobin, haematocrit and MCV, this pointed to enhanced iron utilization. Since iron utilization is curtailed by high concentrations of Pb, the immediacy and magnitude of the post-chelation rebound in blood Pb precluded iron administration at any other stage. From these data, DMSA emerges as a uniquely versatile new chelant. Suitable for long-term administration, it permits the simultaneous parenteral administration of iron during dose-related sustained decreases in blood Pb.
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PMID:Intramuscular administration of iron during long-term chelation therapy with 2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid in a man with severe lead poisoning. 254 23

A fifty five-year-old male presenting as FAB M6 had blasts that were positive both for erythroblastic and megakaryocytic surface makers, i.e., carbonic anhydrase I, CD36 and CD41. HLA-DR and cD71 were also positive. In a very small portion, CD33 and glycophorin A were also positive. By Giemsa staining, these blasts were relatively large and had basophilic cytoplasm. By electroscopic study, PPO was negative and showed ferritin particles, theta granules and iron containing mitochondria in cytoplasm. Chromosome analysis revealed major karyotypic abnormality (MAKA). After initial treatment with blood transfusion, prednisolone and exymetholone, CD41b increased in positive ratio. Trial of remission induction with BHAC-DMP failed and patient died in 5 months.
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PMID:[Acute erythroblastic leukemia presenting as FAB M6 with surface marker positive for megakaryocytic and erythroid: report of a case]. 813 10

Lung transplantation has become a therapeutic option for end-stage pulmonary diseases, but after transplantation, infections and obliterative bronchiolitis (OB) are major causes of long-term morbidity and mortality. OB is a fibroproliferative disease, of poorly understood etiology, characterized by an irreversible decline in allograft function. Because diseases with tissue iron overload are characterized by fibrosis and end-organ failure, we studied the iron concentrations in BAL fluid and lung tissue in 10 lung allograft patients. BAL fluid revealed significantly elevated iron concentrations in allograft patients compared with five normal volunteers (135+/-16.54 micromol/L vs 33.65+/-7.48 micromol/L, respectively). Prussian blue staining of biopsy specimens of lung allograft tissue revealed an accumulation of iron primarily in alveolar macrophages. Immunohistochemical stains for ferritin revealed accumulation of the protein in macrophages, interstitium, vascular walls, and bronchiolar epithelium. Iron studies of the blood (serum ferritin and iron concentrations) revealed no evidence for systemic iron overload. In conclusion, patients with pulmonary allografts appear to have elevated concentrations of iron in lung tissue. This iron overload may place the allografts at increased risk of metal-mediated injury and fibrosis.
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PMID:Iron accumulation in lung allografts after transplantation. 926 81

Pulmonary involvement in the form of acute pneumonitis in adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) is an uncommon manifestation, with few cases reported in the literature. We report the case of a 61-year-old male with 3 years of AOSD evolution, treated with methotrexate (MTX) and half-dose corticosteroids, which debuted with symptoms of fever, dyspnea and dry cough after 3 weeks of receiving the first dose of tocilizumab (TCZ). In the follow-up study showed leukocytosis with left shift, elevated serum ferritin and C-reactive protein standard. The chest CT scan showed ground-glass pattern predominantly in central and upper lobes and the BAL shows an increase in the percentage of lymphocyte with normal subpopulations and negative cultures. MTX and TCM were suspended, prednisone was increased to 30mg/day and within a week Anakinra 100mg/day SC was iniciated, noting in a few days a progressive clinical, analytical and radiological improvement.
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PMID:Acute pneumonitis in a patient with adult-onset disease after toclizumab treatment with good response to anakinra. 2660 61