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Hematopoietic responses to stress conditions in young dogs compared with elderly dogs

Clinical observations show that older patients do not tolerate high-dose chemoradiotherapy as well as younger patients. It is unclear whether this is due to age-related differences in their responses to hematopoietic injury or to differential toxicities to other organs. In the present study, 6 young...

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Published in:Blood 2001-07, Vol.98 (2), p.322-327
Main Authors: Zaucha, J. Maciej, Yu, Cong, Mathioudakis, George, Seidel, Kristy, Georges, George, Sale, George, Little, Marie-Térèse, Torok-Storb, Beverly, Storb, Rainer
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description Clinical observations show that older patients do not tolerate high-dose chemoradiotherapy as well as younger patients. It is unclear whether this is due to age-related differences in their responses to hematopoietic injury or to differential toxicities to other organs. In the present study, 6 young (0.5 years) and 6 elderly (8 years) dogs were challenged with 7 repeated nonlethal doses of 50 or 100 cGy total body irradiation (TBI) each (total 550 cGy), and 21 days of recombinant canine granulocyte–colony stimulating factor (rcG-CSF) after the last TBI dose. Recoveries of absolute neutrophil, platelet, and lymphocyte counts after each TBI dose, responses to rcG-CSF treatment, and telomere lengths in neutrophils were compared before and after the study. No differences were found in recoveries of neutrophils, platelets, or in responses to rcG-CSF among young and old dogs. In contrast, recoveries were suggestively worse in younger dogs. After rcG-CSF, platelet recoveries were poor in both groups compared with previous platelet recoveries (P < .01). Consequently, 2 old and 3 young dogs were euthanized because of persistent thrombocytopenia and bleeding. At the study's completion, marrow cellularities and peripheral blood counts of the remaining young and elderly dogs were equivalent. The telomere lengths in both groups were significantly reduced after the study versus beforehand (P = .03), but the median attritions of telomeres were not different. It was concluded that aging does not appear to affect hematopoietic cell recoveries after repeated low-dose TBI, suggesting that poor tolerance of radiochemotherapy regimens in older patients may be due to nonhematopoietic organ toxicities rather than age-related changes in hematopoietic stem cells reserves.
doi_str_mv 10.1182/blood.V98.2.322
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source ScienceDirect®
subjects Aging
Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Biological effects of radiation
Bone Marrow Cells - cytology
Cell differentiation, maturation, development, hematopoiesis
Cell physiology
Dogs
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor - pharmacology
Hematopoiesis
Ionizing radiations
Leukocyte Count
Lymphocyte Count
Molecular and cellular biology
Neutrophils - ultrastructure
Platelet Count
Recombinant Proteins
Stress, Physiological - blood
Stress, Physiological - etiology
Telomere - ultrastructure
Thrombocytopenia - etiology
Tissues, organs and organisms biophysics
Whole-Body Irradiation - adverse effects
title Hematopoietic responses to stress conditions in young dogs compared with elderly dogs
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