Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0003864 (arthritis)
69,039 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Partial decalcifying algodystrophy (PDA) appears in two forms: one, a radial form, affects, following a certain metameric topography, one or two radiuses of the hand or of the foot (two cases reported); the other, a zonal form, is more peculiar: only part of a condyle or of the femoral head, are demineralized for two to three months. The authors report 7 cases of this misleading zonal form, 2 of them after histological verification. The image leads to various diagnostic errors: osteitis or infectious osteo-arthritis, acute inflammation close to the bone, and especially malignant processes. However, zonal PDA has its own characteristics: demineralization, that becomes clear only during the second month, and quickly extends over a rather long sub chondral bone surface. Tomography is very useful: it demonstrates better the severe sub chondral osteoporosis and the retention of the bone sole, which becomes detached from the bone. Scintigraphy shows the massive localized or panregional hyperfixation and sometimes other infraradiological sites (hips, knee or ankle). Zonal osteoporosis remains partial and misleading for only 2 or 3 months, after which it becomes a classical panregional form. The rate of development is that of DA. Painful impotence quickly increases, with cure in 6 months.
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PMID:[Partial decalcifying algodystrophy]. 43 12

A 27-year-old white man with no significant risk factors for coronary artery disease presented with a 9-month history of progressive impotence, gynecomastia, lower extremity paresthesias, and extensive myocardial infarction and subsequently developed ulcerative proctitis. A diagnosis of POEMS syndrome was made based on the clinical presentation; additional physical findings of papilledema, clubbing, and hyperpigmentation; and laboratory findings of an immunoglobulin G M component of the lambda subtype, elevated cerebrospinal fluid protein, and typical sclerotic bone lesions. Abnormal in vitro binding of the patient's serum immunoglobulin to testicular tissue was also seen. Cardiac catheterization showed evidence of diffuse coronary artery narrowing and left ventricular wall motion abnormalities. Diffuse coronary involvement and ulcerative proctitis have not been previously described in POEMS syndrome. It is hypothesized that an abnormal immunoglobin (or fragment) is responsible for both findings. Furthermore, the detection of antitesticular autoantibodies suggests the possibility of an interaction between the antibody and Leydig cells, leading to an alteration in the synthesis and release of sex steroids and thereby explaining the gonadal failure seen in this syndrome. Long-term glucocorticoid therapy for the past 5 years has resulted in marked subjective and objective improvement.
Semin Arthritis Rheum 1992 Dec
PMID:POEMS syndrome with myocardial infarction: observations concerning pathogenesis and review of the literature. 129 88

The relationship of arthritis and sexual dysfunction was investigated among 169 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis and spondyloarthropathy, 130 of whom were pair-matched to controls. Assessments of marital happiness and depressed mood were also made using the CES-D and the Azrin Marital Happiness Scale (AMHS). Sexual dysfunctions were found to be common among patients and controls, the majority in both groups reporting one or more dysfunctions. Impotence was more common among male patients than controls and was found to be associated with co-morbidity and the taking of methotrexate. Depressed mood was more common among patients and was associated with certain sexual difficulties, but not with impotence. Marital unhappiness, as indicated by AMHS scores, was not associated with arthritis but was associated with sexual dysfunction, sexual dissatisfaction and being female.
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PMID:Sexual dysfunction among patients with arthritis. 340 45

Approximately 1.5 million persons in the United States are affected by iron overload diseases, which are primarily caused by hereditary hemochromatosis--the most common genetic disorder in the United States. Hereditary hemochromatosis is characterized by increased iron absorption in the gastrointestinal tract, which may cause lifelong excessive iron absorption and accumulation and serious health effects, including arthritis, cirrhosis, diabetes, impotence, heart failure, and death. Hereditary hemochromatosis is an autosomal recessive disease; the estimated prevalence of the homozygous genotype is 1:200 - 1:250 persons, and 10% of persons are carriers. Although the disease was previously believed to affect primarily white males of northern European descent, recent data indicate hereditary hemochromatosis also occurs among blacks. Moreover, iron overload diseases are underdiagnosed among whites and may not be considered in other racial/ethnic groups (e.g., Hispanics) even when compatible symptoms and clinical findings are present. As part of a joint demonstration project during August-October 1995 to determine the overall prevalence of iron overload, CDC reviewed data from a health-maintenance organization (HMO) in San Diego, California; the prevalence among Hispanics appeared similar to that for non-Hispanic whites. This report presents the preliminary findings of an analysis of the prevalence of iron overload among Hispanics and compares these findings with nationally representative data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). These findings indicate that the prevalence of possible iron overload among Hispanic clients of the HMO based on initial screening was consistent with the nationwide prevalence of possible iron overload based on a single screening test for Hispanics of Mexican descent and non-Hispanic whites.
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PMID:Iron overload disorders among Hispanics--San Diego, California, 1995. 900 7

Peyronie's disease is an idiopathic disorder in which an inflammatory fibrosis occurs in the tunica albuginea of the corpora cavernosa which causes the erect penis to become deformed. Peyronie's disease has a prevalence of 1% in men over age 50 years. Paget's disease of bone is a chronic skeletal disease with areas of increased bone turnover leading to pain, deformity, and in some cases arthritis. Because of a high rate of Peyronie's disease in subjects in a Paget's disease industry-sponsored drug trial, we asked whether there was an association between Peyronie's disease and Paget's disease of bone. We evaluated 61 men with Paget's disease attending our clinic for metabolic bone disease in a tertiary referral hospital, reviewed hospital records of all men discharged from our three hospitals with the diagnosis of Peyronie's disease, and mailed a validated questionnaire about shape of the erect penis to 1500 male members of the Paget Foundation. In the clinic population of men with Paget's disease of bone, 51 of 61 (83.6%) reported having normal erections; 10 patients (16.4%) were impotent. Sixteen of the 51 men (31.4%) had developed a bend or deformity in their erect penis which was confirmed by a urologist's examination to be Peyronie's disease. When the men with Paget's disease with and without Peyronie's disease were compared, there was no difference in their ages, years with Paget's disease, or serum alkaline phosphatase level. Upon medical record review, 1 patient of 262 (0.4%) with Peyronie's disease was found to have Paget's disease of bone. The men with Paget's disease returned their questionnaires for a response rate of 44.8% and reported Peyronie's disease with a prevalence of 14.5%. We suggest that Peyronie's disease is associated with Paget's disease of bone. Furthermore, we suggest that Peyronie's disease may be a previously unrecognized complication of Paget's disease of bone.
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PMID:Peyronie's disease is associated with Paget's disease of bone. 916 52

Universal screening for hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) has been proposed by many experts, with understandable enthusiasm: HH can cause fatal complications, which are preventable with early treatment. The disorder involves excess iron accumulation that can result in tissue iron overload, with secondary cirrhosis, diabetes, heart failure, impotence and arthritis. These complications are preceded by years of iron accumulation, and most are believed to be preventable by removal of excess iron by phlebotomy. Thus, early identification and treatment - the quintessential functions of health screening - seem to make sense for HH. However, the available screening tests are imperfect. While they can identify many persons at increased risk from HH, the proportion that will develop serious clinical manifestations related to iron overload is not known with certainty. DNA-based tests do not provide a simple resolution to these questions.
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PMID:Screening for hereditary hemochromatosis: are DNA-based tests the answer? 1049 10

Hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) is a common inborn error of iron metabolism characterized by excess dietary iron absorption and iron deposition in several tissues. Clinical consequences include hepatic failure, hepatocellular carcinoma, diabetes, cardiac failure, impotence, and arthritis. Despite the discovery of the mutation underlying most cases of HH, considerable uncertainty exists in the mechanism by which the normal gene product, HFE, regulates iron homeostasis. Knockout of the HFE gene clearly confers the HH phenotype on mice. However, studies on HFE expressed in cultured cells have not yet clarified the mechanism by which HFE mutations lead to increased dietary iron absorption. Recent discoveries suggest other genes, including a second transferrin receptor and the circulating peptide hepcidin, participate in a shared pathway with HFE in regulation of iron absorption. This review summarizes our current understanding of the relationship between iron stores and absorption and presents models to explain the dysregulated iron homeostasis in HH.
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PMID:Mechanisms of iron accumulation in hereditary hemochromatosis. 1182 84

Fish gallbladders are consumed in rural areas of Asia as a traditional medicine to improve symptoms of arthritis, decreased visual acuity, and impotence. Consumption of large amounts of this traditional medicine can result in systemic toxicities; in particular, acute renal failure. We reviewed records of all admissions to Cho Ray Hospital (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam) between January 1995 and December 2000 after this ingestion. Clinical courses and outcomes were similar in 16 of 17 patients. Within hours, patients experienced profuse vomiting (n = 16) and diarrhea (n = 15). All developed acute renal failure, with a mean serum creatinine concentration of 14.7 +/- 3.9 mg/dL (1,299.5 +/- 344.8 micromol/L). Four patients administered intravenous fluid (IVF) developed extracellular fluid volume overload, as did 1 patient not administered IVF. Time to peak creatinine concentration was 8.6 +/- 3.0 days, which was accompanied by decreased urine volume (174.7 +/- 161.6 mL/24 h). Blood pressure remained normal, with a mean arterial pressure of 91 +/- 12 mm Hg. Twelve patients required renal replacement therapy. A mean of 1.9 +/- 1.1 hemodialysis sessions was performed per patient. Sixteen patients recovered renal function; 1 patient died of fulminant hepatic failure. Kidney biopsies showed features of acute tubular injury. Acute renal failure after fish gallbladder ingestion is characterized by a failure to respond to IVF, an 8.6-day interval to peak creatinine level, frequent need for dialysis therapy, and findings on renal biopsy consistent with acute tubular necrosis. Acute renal failure after fish gallbladder ingestion has an excellent prognosis. However, death from fulminant hepatic failure can occur.
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PMID:Ichthyotoxic ARF after fish gallbladder ingestion: a large case series from Vietnam. 1250 Feb 40

There are few descriptions of young adults with self-reported hemochromatosis or iron overload (H/IO). We analyzed initial screening data in 7,343 HEmochromatosis and IRon Overload Screening (HEIRS) Study participants ages 25-29 years, including race/ethnicity and health information; transferrin saturation (TS) and ferritin (SF) measurements; and HFE C282Y and H63D genotypes. We used denaturing high-pressure liquid chromatography and sequencing to detect mutations in HJV, TFR2, HAMP, SLC40A1, and FTL. Fifty-one participants reported previous H/IO; 23 (45%) reported medical conditions associated with H/IO. Prevalences of reports of arthritis, diabetes, liver disease or liver cancer, heart failure, fertility problems or impotence, and blood relatives with H/IO were significantly greater in participants with previous H/IO reports than in those without. Only 7.8% of the 51 participants with previous H/IO reports had elevated TS; 13.7% had elevated SF. Only one participant had C282Y homozygosity. Three participants aged 25-29 years were heterozygous for potentially deleterious mutations in HFE2, TFR2, and HAMP promoter, respectively. Prevalences of self-reported conditions, screening iron phenotypes, and C282Y homozygosity were similar in 1,165 participants aged 30 years or greater who reported previous H/IO. We conclude that persons who report previous H/IO diagnoses in screening programs are unlikely to have H/IO phenotypes or genotypes. Previous H/IO reports in some participants could be explained by treatment that induced iron depletion before initial screening, misdiagnosis, or participant misunderstanding of their physician or the initial screening questionnaire.
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PMID:Characteristics of participants with self-reported hemochromatosis or iron overload at HEIRS study initial screening. 1772 83

The melanocortins (alpha, beta and gamma-melanocyte-stimulating hormones: MSHs; adrenocorticotrophic hormone: ACTH), a family of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived peptides having in common the tetrapeptide sequence His-Phe-Arg-Trp, have progressively revealed an incredibly wide range of extra-hormonal effects, so to become one of the most promising source of innovative drugs for many, important and widespread pathological conditions. The discovery of their effects on some brain functions, independently made by William Ferrari and David De Wied about half a century ago, led to the formulation of the term "neuropeptide" at a time when no demonstration of the actual production of peptide molecules by neurons, in the brain, was still available, and there were no receptors characterized for these molecules. In the course of the subsequent decades it came out that melanocortins, besides inducing one of the most complex and bizarre behavioural syndromes (excessive grooming, crises of stretchings and yawnings, repeated episodes of spontaneous penile erection and ejaculation, increased sexual receptivity), play a key role in functions of fundamental physiological importance as well as impressive therapeutic effects in different pathological conditions. If serendipity had been an important determinant in the discovery of the above-mentioned first-noticed extra-hormonal effects of melanocortins, many of the subsequent discoveries in the pharmacology of these peptides (feeding inhibition, shock reversal, role in opiate tolerance/withdrawal, etc.) have been the result of a planned research, aimed at testing the "pro-nociceptive/anti-nociceptive homeostatic system" hypothesis. The discovery of melanocortin receptors, and the ensuing synthesis of selective ligands with agonist or antagonist activity, is generating completely innovative drugs for the treatment of a potentially very long list of important and widespread pathological conditions: sexual impotence, frigidity, overweight/obesity, anorexia, cachexia, haemorrhagic shock, other forms of shock, myocardial infarction, ischemia/reperfusion-induced brain damage, neuropathic pain, rheumathoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, nerve injury, toxic neuropathies, diabetic neuropathy, etc. This review recalls the history of these researches and outlines the pharmacology of the extra-hormonal effects of melanocortins which are produced by an action at the brain level (or mainly at the brain level). In our opinion the picture is still incomplete, in spite of being already so incredibly vast and complex. So, for example, several of their effects and preliminary animal data suggest that melanocortins might be of concrete effectiveness in one of the areas of most increasing concern, i.e., that of neurodegenerative diseases.
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PMID:Brain effects of melanocortins. 1899 99


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