Literature DB >> 7453561

Human cyclic neutropenia: clinical review and long-term follow-up of patients.

D G Wright, D C Dale, A S Fauci, S M Wolff.   

Abstract

Human cyclic neutropenia is a distinctive disorder of unknown cause characterized by regularly recurrent episodes of profound neutropenia, which have a periodicity of about 3 weeks. This periodicity remains constant and is remarkably consistent among patients. Although blood elements other than neutrophils are nt depleted, essentially all patients experience a cycling of monocyte counts with monocyte cycles of the same length as but reciprocal to neutrophil cycles. Cycling of platelet and reticulocyte numbers also may occur. Patients experience a clinical syndrome of recurrent illness characterized by malaise, fever, aphthous stomatitis, and cervical adenopathy. Incidental infections may occur with neutropenia but respond readily to antibiotics. The clinical course is benign compared with others conditions in which similar degrees of neutropenia occur. The only life-threatening complication encountered during long-term follow-up of patients was the occurrence of spontaneous peritonitis, segmental bowel necrosis, and septicemia which required surgical intervention. Most patients develop the disease in childhood, but a significant number of patients develop the disease in adulthood as an apparently acquired condition. The disease occurs equally in both sexes and is familial in some. Studies of marrow morphology, myelopoiesis, and neotrophil kinetics have shown that cyclic neutropenia is primarily a disease of abnormally regulated neutrophil production. The judicious use of antibiotics, careful oral and dental care, and patient education are the mainstays of management. Alternate-day corticosteroids have been used successfully to abate the recurrent signs and symptoms, and in one patient the disease was gradually corrected by alternate day prednisolone. Human cyclic neutropenia is of special investigative interest because clarification of this disease may contribute greatly to an understanding of the normal control of myelopoiesis.

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Year:  1981        PMID: 7453561     DOI: 10.1097/00005792-198101000-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.889


  15 in total

1.  Autoimmune neutropenia of infancy.

Authors:  E G Lyall; G F Lucas; O B Eden
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1992-05       Impact factor: 3.411

2.  Understanding, treating and avoiding hematological disease: better medicine through mathematics?

Authors:  David C Dale; Michael C Mackey
Journal:  Bull Math Biol       Date:  2014-09-12       Impact factor: 1.758

3.  Cycling of peripheral blood and marrow lymphocytes in cyclic neutropenia.

Authors:  D Engelhard; K S Landreth; N Kapoor; P W Kincade; L E De Bault; A Theodore; R A Good
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1983-09       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Autoimmune neutropenia with cyclic oscillation of neutrophil count after steroid administration.

Authors:  N Hirase; Y Abe; K Muta; H Ishikura; T Umemura; H Nawata; J Nishimura
Journal:  Int J Hematol       Date:  2001-04       Impact factor: 2.490

5.  Cyclic neutropenia and pyomyositis: a rare cause of overwhelming sepsis.

Authors:  M D Waites; J V Roberts; D Scott-Coombes; S Al-Hamali
Journal:  Ann R Coll Surg Engl       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 1.891

6.  A randomized controlled phase III trial of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (filgrastim) for treatment of severe chronic neutropenia.

Authors:  D C Dale; M A Bonilla; M W Davis; A M Nakanishi; W P Hammond; J Kurtzberg; W Wang; A Jakubowski; E Winton; P Lalezari
Journal:  Blood       Date:  1993-05-15       Impact factor: 22.113

7.  Neutropenic enterocolitis due to Clostridium septicum infection.

Authors:  A King; A Rampling; D G Wight; R E Warren
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1984-03       Impact factor: 3.411

8.  Steroid responsive cyclical neutropenia.

Authors:  G A Young; H J Iland; S F Deveridge; P R Forrest; P C Vincent
Journal:  Blut       Date:  1984-03

9.  Abnormal responses of myeloid progenitor cells to granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in human cyclic neutropenia.

Authors:  D G Wright; V F LaRussa; A J Salvado; R D Knight
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1989-04       Impact factor: 14.808

10.  Cyclic ultrastructural abnormalities in human cyclic neutropenia.

Authors:  R T Parmley; G J Presbury; W C Wang; J Wilimas
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1984-08       Impact factor: 4.307

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