Chemotherapy-Responsive Acute Myeloid Leukemia in a Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)

Author(s):  
Shannon Dehghanpir ◽  
Bonnie Boudreaux ◽  
Sita Withers ◽  
Adrien Izquierdo ◽  
Emi Sasaki ◽  
...  

A 4-year-old captive-bred male veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus) presented with anorexia, weight loss, and stomatitis. Complete blood count revealed pancytopenia and a marked leukocytosis (197 x103/µL) composed of blast cells (195 x103/µL) that had oval to irregular nuclei with finely stippled chromatin and occasional nucleoli. The diagnosis was acute leukemia of presumptive myeloid origin. Treatment with prednisone (1.5 mg/kg once daily orally) and cytosine arabinoside (300 mg/m2 subcutaneously) was initiated. Post-treatment hematologic analysis revealed decreased blast count (88.5 x103/µL) and improved mentation. Additional doses of cytosine arabinoside were given two and three weeks after the initial diagnosis with marked improvement in circulating blast concentration (15.3 x103/µL). During the course of treatment, which included the chemotherapeutics, fluid therapy, and oral supportive care, the chameleon’s weight increased 32.5% (199 g to 295 g). Unfortunately, the animal died 33 days after presentation. Histopathologic evaluation revealed hypocellular bone marrow with rare blast-like cells within vessels and mycotic granulomatous hepatitis with intralesional hyphae and fructiferous bodies. The blast cells expressed Iba1 but not CD3, CD79a, or lysozyme, suggesting a myeloid origin. Cell morphology further reinforced an acute myeloid leukemia. The authors surmised that the chameleon was responding to treatment, but ultimately succumbed to the mycotic hepatitis. This report describes the first case of acute myeloid leukemia with response to chemotherapeutic intervention in a veiled chameleon.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 84-94
Author(s):  
Rasha Hamid ◽  
Ayad Hameed Ibraheem

The acute leukemia is a group of malignant disorders of the haemopoietic cells, characteristically related with increases of number of leucocytes in the blood. The present study is aimed to evaluation the expression of immunophenic antibodies which used on blast cells to diagnosis and classification acute leukemia by flow cytometry to define their relationship with age, gender and French-American–British (FAB) subtypes, and assessment complete blood count (CBC) including white blood cells WBCs, hemoglobin HGB, and platelets PLTs, addition to define histological changes of bone marrow biopsy (BMB) of acute leukemia patients. This study included 73 patients were newly diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 60 of them was adults (range 15 –77 years), and the other 13 cases were children (range 1–14 years). The patients divided into three groups: 15-35, 36-55, and 56-77 years, while children patients divided into: 0-4, 5-8 and 9-14 years. The results shown that fever and paleness were the most common clinical feature among acute myeloid leukemia patients ( adults and children).


Author(s):  
Carlo Lajolo ◽  
Rupe Cosimo ◽  
Schiavelli Anna ◽  
Gioco Gioele ◽  
Metafuni Elisabetta ◽  
...  

Background: Saprochaete clavata infection is an emerging issue in immunosuppressed patients, causing fulminant fungaemia. The purpose of this systematic review of cases is to retrieve all cases of S. clavata infection and describe oral lesions as the first manifestation of S. clavata infection. Methods: We report the first case of intraoral S. clavata infection in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) affected subject, presenting as multiple grayish rapidly growing ulcerated swellings, and provide a review of all published cases of infection caused by S. clavata, according to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines, conducted by searching SCOPUS, Medline, and CENTRAL databases. Only articles in English were considered. Individual patient data were analyzed to identify risk factors for S. clavata infection. Results: Seventeen of 68 retrieved articles were included in the review reporting data on 96 patients (mean age 51.8 years, 57 males and 38 females). Most cases were disseminated (86) with a 60.2% mortality rate. Ninety-five were hematological patients, with AML being the most common (57 cases). Conclusions:S. clavata infection in immunosuppressed patients has a poor prognosis: middle-age patients, male gender and Acute Myeloid Leukemia should be considered risk factors. In immunosuppressed patients, the clinical presentation can be particularly unusual, imposing difficult differential diagnosis, as in the reported case.


2000 ◽  
Vol 79 (10) ◽  
pp. 533-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Flasshove ◽  
P. Meusers ◽  
J. Schütte ◽  
R. Noppeney ◽  
D. W. Beelen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Matek ◽  
Simone Schwarz ◽  
Karsten Spiekermann ◽  
Carsten Marr

AbstractReliable recognition of malignant white blood cells is a key step in the diagnosis of hematologic malignancies such as Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Microscopic morphological examination of blood cells is usually performed by trained human examiners, making the process tedious, time-consuming and hard to standardise.We compile an annotated image dataset of over 18,000 white blood cells, use it to train a convolutional neural network for leukocyte classification, and evaluate the network’s performance. The network classifies the most important cell types with high accuracy. It also allows us to decide two clinically relevant questions with human-level performance, namely (i) if a given cell has blast character, and (ii) if it belongs to the cell types normally present in non-pathological blood smears.Our approach holds the potential to be used as a classification aid for examining much larger numbers of cells in a smear than can usually be done by a human expert. This will allow clinicians to recognize malignant cell populations with lower prevalence at an earlier stage of the disease.


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