| Literature DB >> 14227435 |
Abstract
The total concentrations of alpha(2) globulin and two of its components, haptoglobin and caeruloplasmin, have been determined in the sera from 78 patients with primary malignant diseases of lympho-reticular tissue (reticuloses). The total alpha(2) globulin fraction was significantly raised only in Hodgkin's disease. The serum haptoglobin was also significantly increased in Hodgkin's disease and some other reticuloses, including acute leukaemia, lymphosarcoma, and reticulum cell sarcoma. The serum level of caeruloplasmin was raised in all reticuloses. There was possibly some correlation between the rise in haptoglobin and caeruloplasmin concentrations and the total alpha(2) globulin in Hodgkin's disease but this was not statistically significant. The significance of these results is discussed, and it is concluded that the increase in alpha(2) globulin which occurs in Hodgkin's disease is due to an increase in several of its components and not to a single component.Entities:
Keywords: ALPHA GLOBULIN; BLOOD CHEMICAL ANALYSIS; BLOOD PROTEIN ELECTROPHORESIS; BLOOD PROTEINS; CERULOPLASMIN; COLORIMETRY; HAPTOGLOBINS; HODGKIN'S DISEASE; LEUKEMIA; LEUKEMIA, LYMPHOCYTIC; LEUKEMIA, MYELOCYTIC; LYMPHOMA; LYMPHOSARCOMA; MULTIPLE MYELOMA; SARCOMA, RETICULUM CELL
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Year: 1964 PMID: 14227435 PMCID: PMC480849 DOI: 10.1136/jcp.17.6.651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Pathol ISSN: 0021-9746 Impact factor: 3.411