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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (
anemia
)
52,094
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The SLE patient database at the Rheumatology Clinic, St. Luke's Hospital includes 62 patients, 58 of which have complete data. The patients were grouped according to sex (7 males vs 51 females). The presentation, clinical manifestations, ACR criteria and laboratory findings of the 2 groups were analyzed and compared. Serositis as the initial manifestation at presentation was significantly commoner in males (29% vs 2%; p < 0.05). Cardiorespiratory problems such as pleurisy, pericarditis, pericardial effusions and
myocarditis
were more frequent in the male subgroup. Female patients had more arthritis, myositis, neuropsychiatric manifestations (depression, psychosis and headache)
anemia
, leucopenia and ENA positivity than their male counterparts. All 6 mortalities recorded were in the female subgroup.
...
PMID:Male SLE patients in Malta. 1059 40
We report a successful treatment of a B19 parvovirus-induced fetal hydrops diagnosed at 16 weeks of gestation. This disease could be corrected by means of a unique intraperitoneal blood transfusion performed at 18 weeks, once diagnosis was established. The delivery occurred at 36 weeks, leading to the birth of a healthy baby. This case suggests that transfusion should be attempted, as the spontaneous fetal recovery remains uncertain and shows that intraperitoneal blood transfusion is an effective therapeutic option of the B19 parvovirus-induced
anemia
, in the absence of a viral
myocarditis
.
...
PMID:B19 parvovirus-induced fetal hydrops:good outcome after intrauterine blood transfusion at 18 weeks of gestation. 1078 95
Parvovirus B19 infection during pregnancy causes up to 27% cases of non-immune hydrops in anatomically normal fetuses. The virus is believed to cause arrest of maturation of red blood cell precursors at the late normoblast stage and also causes a decrease in the number of platelets. Fetal
anemia
is presently thought to be responsible for the development of skin edema and effusions.
Myocarditis
leading to heart failure may contribute to the development of fetal hydrops. We reviewed the literature regarding prevalence, transmission rates, clinical presentation, diagnostic techniques, current invasive vs. conservative management options, outcome and postmortem findings in a total of 82 studies involving 230 invasively and 435 conservatively managed pregnancies. In this non-selected population, the proportion of seronegative susceptible mothers ranged from 19 to 65%, seroconversion with an incubation time of up to 20 days occurred in 5.7-12.1%, and 188/230 (82%) who were transfused infected fetuses had a normal outcome as opposed to only 239/435 (55%) in the conservatively managed group. The average time from diagnosis to resolution in both groups was 6 weeks (range, 3-12 and 2-12 weeks, respectively). The most promising diagnostic techniques were PCR of amniotic fluid or fetal blood and electron microscopy. There are some reports of fetal abnormalities occurring (probably coincidentally) in cases of parvovirus, but the majority of postmortem findings were infection-related, in particular
myocarditis
and hepatic abnormalities. Although management guidelines cannot be derived from this study due to the variable degree of hydrops in the analyzed studies, the present data suggest a benefit of transfusion therapy over conservative management in infected fetuses. The only study which was corrected for severity of hydrops using ultrasound criteria showed a clear benefit of intrauterine transfusion.
...
PMID:Fetal parvovirus B19 infection. 1155 63
The clinical significance of parvovirus B19 infection in pediatric solid-organ and bone marrow transplanted patients is unclear. The overall prevalence of parvovirus B19 infection in these patients is about 1-2% during the first year after transplantation. The most common symptom is
anemia
, but leukopenia and thrombocytopenia have also been observed. Rare cases of hepatic dysfunction,
myocarditis
, vasculitis and respiratory failure have also been reported. Whereas serology is of limited value around the time of transplantation, it is recommended that a search for B19 DNA is included in first-line investigations in any transplanted patient with unexplained
anemia
. Specific antiviral therapy is not available, however, intravenous immunoglobulin produces rapid improvement in most cases. Although relatively rare, the severe complications following parvovirus B19 infection in the transplant setting can be avoided by early diagnosis and treatment.
...
PMID:Parvovirus B19 infection in pediatric solid-organ and bone marrow transplantation. 1156 Jul 50
We report a case of fetal cardiomegaly secondary to
myocarditis
as a result of intrauterine parvovirus B19 infection. The fetus was delivered through caesarean section because of increasing deterioration of cardiac function at 33 + 3 weeks with reverse flow in the ductus venosus. Four weeks later, a cardiac transplantation was carried out because of therapy-resistant dilative cardiomyopathy. This case shows that fetal parvovirus B19 infection may occur without
anemia
and
myocarditis
and does not always result in spontaneous reformation of a dilated heart and normal recovery. It may become the determining prognostic factor for the child.
...
PMID:A case of fetal parvovirus B19 myocarditis, terminal cardiac heart failure, and perinatal heart transplantation. 1169 51
The course of an experimental Trypanosoma evansi infection in coatis (Nasua nasua, carnivora, Procyonidae) was followed for 262 days. Hematological analysis of the infected coatis revealed a marked decline in hemoglobin, packed-cell volume, and total erythrocyte count. An intense
anemia
followed the first wave of parasitemia and persisted until the end of the experimental period. Biochemical analysis showed increased serum levels of alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase and decreased albumin. The main histopathological features consisted of
myocarditis
with the presence of degenerate cardiac fibers and meningoencephalitis. This study has shown that coatis infected with T. evansi develop a chronic disease.
...
PMID:Experimental Trypanosoma evansi infection in South American coati (Nasua nasua): hematological, biochemical and histopathological changes. 1183 97
Belews Lake, North Carolina was contaminated by selenium in wastewater from a coal-fired power plant during the mid-1970s, and toxic impacts to the resident fish community (20 species) were studied for over two decades. Symptoms of chronic selenium poisoning in Belews Lake fish included, (1) telangiectasia (swelling) of gill lamellae; (2) elevated lymphocytes; (3) reduced hematocrit and hemoglobin (
anemia
); (4) corneal cataracts; (5) exopthalmus (popeye); (6) pathological alterations in liver, kidney, heart, and ovary (e.g. vacuolization of parenchymal hepatocytes, intracapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis, severe pericarditis and
myocarditis
, necrotic and ruptured mature egg follicles); (7) reproductive failure (reduced production of viable eggs due to ovarian pathology, and post-hatch mortality due to bioaccumulation of selenium in eggs); and (8) teratogenic deformities of the spine, head, mouth, and fins. Important principles of selenium cycling and toxicity were documented in the Belews Lake studies. Selenium poisoning in fish can be 'invisible', because, the primary point of impact is the egg, which receives selenium from the female's diet (whether consumed in organic or inorganic forms), and stores it until hatching, whereupon it is metabolized by the developing fish. If concentrations in eggs are great enough (about 10 microg/g or greater) biochemical functions may be disrupted, and teratogenic deformity and death may occur. Adult fish can survive and appear healthy despite the fact that extensive reproductive failure is occurring--19 of the 20 species in Belews Lake were eliminated as a result of this insidious mode of toxicity. Bioaccumulation in aquatic food chains causes otherwise harmless concentrations of selenium to reach toxic levels, and the selenium in contaminated sediments can be cycled into food chains for decades. The lessons learned from Belews Lake provide information useful for protecting aquatic ecosystems as new selenium issues emerge.
...
PMID:Symptoms and implications of selenium toxicity in fish: the Belews Lake case example. 1187 37
Mediterranean spotted fever is an infectious disease due to Rickettsia conori transmitted to man by the dog tick Rhipicephalus sanguineus. The review of a consecutive series of 525 cases, admitted to Caltagirone hospital in the last 20 years, permits the classic clinical picture to be identified by fever, maculopapular eruption and tache noire, and any complications to be visualized. Usually the course of the disease is good, but 12.7% of our cases reported complications such as renal failure,
myocarditis
, pneumonia, encephalitis, anicteric hepatitis, gastrointestinal bleeding,
anaemia
and impaired glucose tolerance. The development of a systemic vasculite is the main pathogenetic factor in the origin of systemic complications. Early diagnosis and specific antibiotic treatment may reduce the risk of complications.
...
PMID:[Complications of mediterranean spotted fever]. 1208 17
Parvovirus B19 is the causative agent of erythema infectiosum. In addition, the infection may be associated with other disease manifestations:
anemia
and aplastic crisis, thrombo- or granulocytopenies; spontaneous abortion or hydrops fetalis in pregnant women; acute and chronic arthritis in adults and children,
myocarditis
and hepatitis. Both acute and persistent courses of B19-infections have been reported. All patients develop IgG against the capsid proteins VP1 and VP2, the majority of virus neutralizing antibodies that offer life-long protection against reinfections are directed against the VP1-unique region. IgM is mainly directed against VP2-specific epitopes. These antibodies may be present for only a rather short period of two to ten weeks after acute infection. IgG-antibodies against the nonstructural protein NS1 are preferentially found in patients which are unable to eliminate the virus and develop persisting viremia or virus persistence in distinct organs, e.g. synovial fluid, liver, bone marrow.
...
PMID:Antibody responses in parvovirus B19 infected patients. 1211 51
Despite improvements in the management of transplanted patients, viral infections following transplantation remain significant causes of morbidity and mortality. New laboratory techniques have improved the diagnosis of pathogenic viral infections following transplantation such as parvovirus B19 infections.
Anemia
is the principal abnormality associated with parvovirus B19 infection but other complications have been reported such as hepatitis, glomerulonephritis,
myocarditis
or arthritis. In immunocompromised patients, infection, which may remain undiagnosed by serological tests is usually assessed by PCR. Patients may spontaneously recover. However, in the absence of specific antiviral therapy, intravenous immunoglobulin appears to be the more efficacious treatment.
...
PMID:[Parvovirus B19 infection after renal transplantation]. 1458 98
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