Rinsho Ketsueki
Online ISSN : 1882-0824
Print ISSN : 0485-1439
ISSN-L : 0485-1439
Volume 48, Issue 2
Displaying 1-10 of 10 articles from this issue
Picture in Clinical Hematology
Review
Clinical Study
  • Takayuki TSUJIOKA, Hideho WADA, Ken-ichiro YATA, Toshinori KONDO, Sini ...
    2007Volume 48Issue 2 Pages 134-139
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: August 01, 2008
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    We performed a clinical analysis on 8 patients with primary follicular lymphoma in the duodenum taken from among 26 cases of primary gastrointestinal malignant lymphoma treated in our division. The median age was 60 years (range 48 to 82 yr). The ratio of males to females was 4:4. The chief complaints were no symptoms in 4 cases, heartburn in 2 cases, lower abdominal pain in 1 case, and back pain in 1 case. All patients were in clinical stage I EA. Gastroendoscopic findings showed multiple whitish granules around the ampulla of Vater in all patients. Involvement of the site in 6 cases was only located at the second portion; lesions in the other 2 cases were located at the second portion, and at the third portion or fourth portion, respectively. A histological study showed follicular lymphoma grade 1, and an immunohistological study demonstrated that the lymphoma cells were positive for CD79a, CD10, CD20, and bcl-2. Five patients were positive for the FISH analysis fusion signal of IgH/bcl-2 genes. Rituximab with CHOP therapy was performed for 7 patients. Seven patients are currently alive, and one died of uterine cancer. At the medium-term 39 month-follow-up, 7 patients were in complete remission, and 1 patient was in partial remission. Rituximab with CHOP (CVP) therapy is a possible treatment for primary follicular lymphoma in the duodenum. Further consideration of appropriate therapy for this disease might be necessary.
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Case Reports
  • Motohiro KATO, Akira KIKUCHI, Koichi OSHIMA, Syohei YAMAMOTO, Shinji M ...
    2007Volume 48Issue 2 Pages 140-143
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: August 01, 2008
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    We report on a case of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia presenting with massive bone marrow necrosis. A 4-year-old boy complained of fever and leg pain. Laboratory data revealed pancytopenia, but bone marrow examination showed only necrotic materials. About one month later, repeated bone marrow examination showed leukemic cells and the necrotic marrow had disappeared. The patient was treated with standard chemotherapy and was successfully induced to complete remission. Patients with massive bone marrow necrosis should undergo bone marrow examination repeatedly to make the correct diagnosis.
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  • Hitomi KANEKO, Masanori MATSUMOTO, Kohei OKAMOTO, Kazuhisa CHYONABAYAS ...
    2007Volume 48Issue 2 Pages 144-147
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: August 01, 2008
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    A 26-year-old man was referred to our hospital with vomiting and high fever. He was disoriented and laboratory results showed microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (Hb 7.1 g/dl) and severe thrombocytopenia (15×103l). The diagnosis of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) was established. The activity of von Willebrand cleaving protease (ADAMTS13) was found to be remarkably low (<0.5%) and the high activity of the inhibitor (11.0 Bethesda U/ml) was detected, confirming the diagnosis of typical acquired TTP. Although he had been successfully treated with daily plasma exchange and methylprednisolone, he relapsed after a week. To this therapeutic strategy we added four weekly doses of rituximab (375 mg/m2) and two weekly doses of vincristine (1 mg/m2) simultaneously. The response was very rapid and complete, that is, the platelet count recovered to normal seven days after the first rituximab and vincristine treatment. The patient maintains complete remission nine months later under the administration of 17.5 mg prednisolone. Recovery of the plasma ADAMTS13 activity was clearly correlated with the decrease or disappearance of the inhibitor activity. Combination of rituximab and vincristine therapy would appear to be very effective against refractory TTP.
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  • Tsutomu SATO, Satoshi IYAMA, Naoko ARAKI, Kazuyuki MURASE, Yasushi SAT ...
    2007Volume 48Issue 2 Pages 148-150
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: August 01, 2008
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    The patient described herein is a 69-year-old Japanese woman with a history of excessive bleeding after left heminephrectomy for a malignant renal tumor at 31 years of age. Her parents, who do not have abnormal bleeding, are first cousins. Her factor XI activity was less than 1% of normal with an prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) of 74.3 seconds. Analysis of the patient's factor XI genes revealed homozygosity for a valine substituting for the wild-type glycine at amino acid 400 (Gly400Val). The patient has two children, neither of whom has abnormal bleeding and whose factor XI activities are 62% and 57% of normal, with APTT levels within normal limits in both cases. We herein report on a Japanese family with factor XI deficiency caused by Gly400Val mutation.
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