Patients receiving etoposide within four weeks after diagnosis had a good prognosis as five of the seven patients survived compared to one of 13 not treated with etoposide or treated late (chi-square test for survival, P = 0.0095). The Kaplan-Meier analysis showed the 2.5-year survival of 85.7 +/- 13.2% in the early etoposide-treated patients, compared to 10.3 +/- 9.4% in the remaining patients (log-rank test, P = 0.0141). Thus, early etoposide treatment is effective in treating EBV-HLH in young adults as well as in children.
Background: Tim22 is a central component of the mitochondrial inner membrane protein insertion machinery TIM22 complex. Results: Lack of the disulfide bond of Tim22 destabilizes Tim22 and impairs substrate protein assembly.
Conclusion:The disulfide bond of Tim22 has a role in stabilization of the TIM22 complex, which is important for the TIM22 protein assembly pathway. Significance: Tim40(Mia40)/Erv1-independent disulfide bond formation contributes to protein stability in mitochondria.
A rare association of Epstein-Barr virus-associated T- and B-lymphoproliferative disease (EBV(+) T- and EBV(+) B-LPD) in a patient with WHIM (warts, hypogammaglobulinemia, infections, and myelokathexis) syndrome is reported. A 26-year-old Japanese female, who had been treated for WHIM syndrome since early childhood, developed hemophagocytic syndrome associated with EBV(+) T-LPD at the lymph nodes and spleen. The disease rapidly resolved in response to prednisolone therapy. However, 6 weeks later, fatal EBV(+) B lymphoma unresponsive to chemotherapy occurred in the intestine and other organs. Caution must be exercised that the patient with WHIM syndrome may be at risk for EBV-LPD.
We describe two patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) who suffered cytomegalovirus (CMV)-related small intestinal perforations during the course of chemotherapy. Surgical specimens from both patients revealed his-tologic evidence of occlusive vasculitis and tissue destruction caused by CMV-affected cells in the submucosa and muscular walls, that may have played an important role in the pathogenesis of these perforations. Although such intestinal perforations are rare complications in NHL patients, CMV infection should be recognized as a primary etiological factor in acute abdominal crises when treating NHL patients with pharmaceutical agents including steroids. Emergency surgery and the anti-CMV agent, ganciclovir, would improve the prognoses of such patients.
A 21-year-old man with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who developed acute lupus peritonitis is described. Acute lupus peritonitis appeared during generalized lupus flare, with nausea, vomiting, frequent diarrhea, and abdominal tenderness with rebound and guarding. The patient was afebrile and had decreased bowel sounds. Abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography revealed marked thickening of the gastric, duodenal, and jejunal walls, massive intraluminal fluid collection, and increasing ascites. Gastrointestinal endoscopy showed edematous mucosa with multiple erosions of the stomach and duodenum. The ascitic fluid was remarkable for low complement levels and elevated anti-DNA antibody. These manifestations of acute lupus peritonitis resolved after steroid pulse therapy with methylprednisolone. We should consider acute lupus peritonitis in a patient with SLE when abdominal symptoms are severe. Experience with our patient indicates that steroid pulse therapy is effective for this rare but severe manifestation of SLE.
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