Medicina: Ematologia: Talassemie e trapianto del midollo osseo
English |
recombinant human erythropoietin |
  |
|
Attestation |
3
|
Part of speech |
Noun syntagm
|
Grammatical label |
Countable
|
Variant |
rHuEPO, rHEPO, recombinant erythropoietin
|
Definition |
A hormone produced by the kidney that promotes the formation of red blood cells in the bone marrow. EPO is a glycoprotein (a protein with a sugar attached to it). Human EPO has a molecular weight of 34,000. The kidney cells that make EPO are specialized and are sensitive to low oxygen levels in the blood. These cells release EPO when the oxygen level is low in the kidney. EPO then stimulates the bone marrow to produce more red cells and thereby increase the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood. EPO is the prime regulator of red blood cell production. Its major functions are to promote the differentiation and development of red blood cells and to initiate the production of hemoglobin, the molecule within red cells that transports oxygen. The EPO gene has been found on human chromosome 7 (in band 7q21). EPO is produced not only in the kidney but also, to a lesser extent, in the liver. Different DNA sequences flanking the EPO gene act to control kidney versus liver production of EPO. The measurement of EPO in the blood is useful in the study of bone marrow disorders and kidney disease. Normal levels of EPO are 0 to 19 mU/ml (milliunits per milliliter). Elevated levels of EPO can be seen in polycythemia, a disorder in which there is an excess of red blood cells. Lower than normal levels of EPO are seen in chronic renal failure. Using recombinant DNA technology, EPO has been synthetically produced v(Recombinant Human erythropoietin) for use in persons with certain types of anemia -- such as anemia due to kidney failure, anemia secondary to AZT treatment of AIDS, and anemia associated with cancer.
|
Definition source |
MedicineNet. Medterms Medical Dictionary.
|
Context |
Recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) is used for the treatment of different types of anemia, and a great deal of evidence shows that responsiveness to rHuEPO seems to be strictly related to a low or inadequate EPO response to anemia. Only a few cases of rHuEPO administration to patients with thalassemia intermedia have been reported, and in some of them an increase in hemoglobin level, without a specific effect on HbF, was achieved. In one of our previous studies we reported that giving low doses of rHuEPO to untransfused subjects with b-thalassemia intermedia did not improve their anemia, but did produce a decrease in the transfusional requirement of transfused thalassemia intermedia patients.
|
Context source |
Dore, F., et al. (1996). ‘Serum transferrin receptor levels in patients with thalassemia intermedia during rHuEPO administration’. Haematologica 81(1):37-9. (RISCEN58)
|
Subject field |
Haemopoiesis
|
Related concept |
Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, syngeneic bone marrow transplantation, anemia
|
it |
Eritropoietina ricombinante
|
Reliability code |
3
|
|