She had megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow and chronic severe liver disease. |
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Whitehead et al demonstrated megaloblastic changes in cervical smears of oral contraceptive users in the absence of general folate deficiency. |
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Iron-deficiency anaemia and megaloblastic anaemia can occur during pregnancy. |
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Folate and vitamin D deficiency may necessitate vitamin supplementations and, if uncorrected, leads to megaloblastic anemia. |
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Three of these children revealed megaloblastic changes in bone marrow aspiration though their serum vitamin B12 and folate levels were normal. |
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While macrocytosis and megaloblastic anemia have occurred, these conditions usually respond to folic acid therapy. |
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The classic affected patient who presents with neuropathy and megaloblastic anemia likely represents the minority of subjects with cobalamin deficiency. |
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Consequently, the gastritis is expressed clinically as vitamin B12 deficiency associated with megaloblastic anemia. |
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Another type of anemia linked to lack of iron is called megaloblastic anemia. |
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The deficiency is usually only discovered when patients develop megaloblastic anemia. |
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More marked elevations are found in few conditions, easily diagnosed clinically, such as sickle cell or megaloblastic anemias. |
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A bone marrow showed a hypercellular smear with plasmacytosis and increased erythropoiesis with severe megaloblastic features. |
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The report indicated that the reaction was due to a medical problem of megaloblastic anemia secondary to vitamin B12 and folate deficiency and not to the olanzapine. |
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Folate deficiency results in a slowing of cell division and eventually megaloblastic anaemia. |
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A red, painful tongue can mean megaloblastic anaemia caused by deficiencies of vitamin B12 or folic acid. |
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Diphyllobothriosis is notoriously known as a potential cause of vitamin B12 avitaminosis and megaloblastic anemia. |
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That problem was quickly corrected, though, and then, after 133 days of ingesting no folic acid and losing 26 pounds, Dr. Herbert developed a mild megaloblastic anemia, with its symptoms of fatigue, headache and diarrhea. |
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His doubts were aroused when he found a deficiency of folic acid in a Boston man who developed megaloblastic anemia on a diet of hamburgers that had lost most of their folic acid by being overcooked. |
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It contains zinc and vitamin C in order to optimise the use of iron and folic acid so as to prevent megaloblastic anaemia and to reduce the risk of disorders regarding the neurological development of the foetus. |
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The safety issue raised by food fortification relates to pernicious anemia, which is a disease caused by vitamin B12 deficiency, manifested clinically by megaloblastic anemia and neuropathy. |
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You can die from megaloblastic anemia if you don't treat it. |
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The hallmark of folate deficiency is macrocytic anaemia with megaloblastic change in the bone marrow. |
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Nor do they have megaloblastic anaemia or obvious neuropathy. |
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A syndrome of methylmalonic aciduria, homocysteine, megaloblastic anemia and neurologic abnormalities in a vitamin B12 deficient breast-fed infant of a strict vegetarian. |
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Dapsone-pyrimethamine was another potential option but had a number of side-effects such as agranulocytosis, methaemoglobinaemia and megaloblastic anaemia. |
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Megaloblastic anemia is characterized by the presence of megaloblasts in the bone marrow. |
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