Results 191 to 200 of about 290,691 (220)
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Megaloblastic Anemia in China

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1982
Excerpt To the editor: The article, "Hematology in the People's Republic of China" (1), states that "megaloblastic anemias, and, in particular, pernicious anemia are said to be virtually unknown ex...
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Masked Megaloblastic Anemia

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1982
In six patients, eight episodes of anemia associated with folic acid or vitamin B12 deficiency were unaccompanied by macrocytosis. Six of the eight episodes of anemia were complicated by illnesses of an inflammatory or infectious nature, two patients had iron deficiency, two appeared to have a thalassemia trait, and one had severe renal failure.
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Fever in Megaloblastic Anemia

Southern Medical Journal, 1979
Charts of 122 patients with megaloblastic anemia due to either B12 or folic acid deficiency were reviewed for the presence of fever. Fever, defined as a temperature of 100 F (37.8 C) or more, was present in approximately 40% of the patients with both.
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Megaloblastic Anemia—A Rare Cause

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2011
A 2- year- old boy presented with non responsive megaloblastic anemia, growth failure and developmental delay. Blood levels of B(12), folic acid and iron were normal. Tandem mass spectroscopy for common inborn errors of metabolism did not reveal any abnormality. There was an increased excretion of orotic acid in urine. The authors report this as a rare
Anju Aggarwal   +2 more
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Detection of Sickle Cell, Megaloblastic Anemia, Thalassemia and Malaria through Convolutional Neural Network

2021 Global Congress on Electrical Engineering (GC-ElecEng), 2021
E. Abdulhay   +2 more
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The Many Faces of Megaloblastic Anemia

Postgraduate Medicine, 1968
Megaloblastic anemias share a common feature—disordered DNA synthesis, most often resulting from deficiency of folic acid or vitamin B12 or both. However, the cause of the anemias varies from pregnancy to poor nutrition, gastrointestinal disorders, cirrhosis, hemolytic anemias, drugs, fish tapeworms, orotic aciduria, erythroleukemia or long-term ...
Raymond F. Sheets, Henry E. Hamilton
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Megaloblastic Anemia in "Alcoholic" Cirrhosis

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1957
Introduction Macrocytic anemia is common in patients with hepatic disease.1-11As early as 1883 an increase in the mean diameter of the erythrocyte was observed in "icterus catarrhalis."12There have been numerous references1-11to this phenomenon, but its mechanism remains incompletely understood.
Paul Heller   +3 more
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Thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1969
An 11-year-old Caucasian girl is presented who had a megaloblastic anemia responsive only to thiamine. Other abnormalities included diabetes mellitus, aminoaciduria, and sensorineural deafness. Initially the anemia, refractory to vitamin B 12 and folic acid therapy, responded to administration of a multiple vitamin preparation. Vitamin supplementation
F. Stanley Porter   +2 more
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Megaloblastic Anemia in Sarcoidosis

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1986
Excerpt To the editor: We report the case of a patient with sarcoidosis and macrocytic anemia attributable to megaloblastic changes in a bone marrow infiltrated by typical sarcoid granulomas.
D. N. Mitchell, M Sweatman, R. Wilson
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Folates and megaloblastic anemia: A review

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1965
In recent years, a great deal of new information on the identity and distribution of the naturally occurring folates, on the adult daily requirement for folic acid, and on folate‐vitamin B12 interrelationships has been published. The compound, 5‐methyltetrahydrofolate, has been found rfo be present in significant amounts in human serum, red cells, and ...
D. G. Johns, J. R. Bertino
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