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)

To evaluate the use of ultra low-field (0.02 T) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the diagnosis of musculoskeletal infection, MR examinations with T2 weighted sequences were performed in 61 patients thought to be suffering from one of four major diagnostic categories: Soft-tissue abscesses (n = 22), osteomyelitis (n = 21), septic arthritis (n = 9) and spondylitis (n = 9). Infection was confirmed for 37 of these 61 patients. The verified abscesses, arthritis, spondylitis and acute osteomyelitis could be detected by 0.02 T MR. The sensitivity was poor in cases of chronic osteomyelitis. There was one false positive finding in a patient with a possible soft tissue infection. The 0.02 T MR examination failed four times. Two patients were too heavy and another 2 patients had magnetic material in or near the scanning field. Compared with computed tomography and isotope scanning, 0.02 T MR proved a little more informative, but without any statistical significance.
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PMID:Detection of soft-tissue and skeletal infections with ultra low-field (0.02 T) MR imaging. 261 Oct 56

Infection of Lewis rats with Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae represents an experimental model system of acute and chronic arthritis. We studied here the acute inflammatory phase with respect to stimulation of macrophages and lymphocytes. Intragluteal injection of viable E. rhusiopathiae (10(2) to 10(4) bacteria) rapidly induced generalized inflammation, loss of body weight, hind leg arthritis, and systemic macrophage activation within 2 to 3 days. The same symptoms could also be evoked by injection of dead E. rhusiopathiae. Ex vivo, peritoneal macrophages released large amounts of tumor necrosis factor alpha on day 2 and interleukin-1 on day 3, whereas production of prostaglandin E2 was delayed to days 5 to 7 and appeared to counteract tumor necrosis factor alpha synthesis. The inflammatory response and development of arthritis were strongly dependent on T lymphocytes, as evidenced by the following findings: (i) lymphocytes released lymphokines that activated macrophages to enhanced mediator release; (ii) treatment of rats with cyclosporin A reduced infection-induced macrophage activation; (iii) mitogen-stimulated thymocyte proliferation was enhanced, indicating an infection-induced maturation-differentiation process in the thymus; and (iv) in T-cell-deficient nude rats, a higher dose of bacteria was required for infection, the inflammatory response was less severe, and only mild, but not chronic, arthritis developed. Thus, an E. rhusiopathiae-induced inflammation in rats provides a useful tool to characterize activated macrophages and T lymphocytes during the development of acute arthritis and its transition into the chronic form.
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PMID:Activation of macrophages in an experimental rat model of arthritis induced by Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae infection. 278 93

Infection due to yersinia enterocolitica is a common antecedent illness in patients with reactive arthritis in Scandinavia, but appears to be less frequent in other countries. In order to examine the frequency of yersinia infection in patients with seronegative arthritis in Australia we examined 22 patients, 15 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and seven with Reiter's syndrome (RS). A sensitive ELISA assay was used to detect serum antibodies to the most common serotypes. Six patients (29%) had positive yersinia serology, all were HLA B27 and four had a history of diarrhea preceding the onset of their disease. Four patients with positive yersinia serology had AS and two had RS. Antibodies were directed against Y. enterocolitica biotype 0:3 in three cases, Y. enterocolitica 0:9 in two cases and Y. enterocolitica 0:8 in one subject. Twenty-nine control subjects (13 HLA B27) had no serum antibodies to yersinia. The results of this study indicate that preceding yersinia infection occurs in a significant (p less than 0.05; compared to controls) proportion of patients with HLA B27 related seronegative arthropathies.
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PMID:Seronegative arthritis associated with serological evidence of Yersinia infection in Australia. 278 9

Infection has not been considered in this article with each individual implant. The incidence is low indeed. In the only publication concerned primarily with the topic of infection following silicone implant surgery, Millender et al. reviewed 2105 implants of varying kinds. There were ten infections, seven of which were with Staphylococcus aureus. The onset was remarkably late--17 days after surgery on average. In seven cases the implant had to be removed and the eventual result was good, being likened to that obtained after an excisional arthroplasty. Reviewing the complications that occur with the various implants, it becomes evident that there are three primary concerns--fracture, subluxation, and synovitis. Fracture occurs primarily in the wrist and the metacarpophalangeal implants. The incidence of fracture in the wrist implant is 8.6, 9.4, and 19.8 per cent, giving an average of the means of 12.6 per cent. In the metacarpophalangeal joint, the incidence with the Swanson design is variously 1.9, 26.2 and 21 per cent, the average of the means being 16.4 per cent. The Niebauer design is reported as having a fracture rate of 29.7 and 38 per cent, for an average of the means of 33.9 per cent. The somewhat lower incidence of fracture of the wrist implant is offset by the fact that, in contrast to the situation with the smaller joint, the fracture is almost always symptomatic, requiring treatment. Largely for this reason, silicone wrist arthroplasty is limited mainly to the rheumatoid patient, being little used for post-traumatic arthritis. Subluxation of implants occurs mainly with the carpal replacements. The incidence in independent reports are 56.5 and 50 per cent, for an average of the means of 53.3 per cent with the scaphoid; 20, 20, and 50 per cent for an average of the means of 30 per cent with the lunate; and 5.3, 10, 11.2, 29, and 32 per cent for an average of the means of 17.5 per cent with the trapezium. In the case of the trapezium, excision of a portion of the trapezoid, supplemented where necessary by ligament reconstruction to support the first metacarpal, appears to give the hope of lowering the incidence of subluxation to an acceptable level. With the lunate, preservation of an anterior shell may give satisfactory results but judgment should await longer term studies of larger groups. The scaphoid implant gives most cause for concern, both because the incidence is high and because the solutions offered have either failed or are too recent to judge and perhaps too radical to accept.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Silicone implants. 293 96

Caprine arthritis-encephalitis virus (CAEV) and visna virus are pathogenic lentiviruses of goats and sheep which share morphologic features and sequence homology with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III), the etiologic agent of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. The nucleotide sequence of the CAEV long terminal repeat (LTR) was determined, and it was found to be 450 base pairs long, with U3, R, and U5 regions of 287, 85, and 78 base pairs, respectively. Portions of the CAEV LTR are closely homologous to analogous regions of visna virus. The CAEV LTR is not significantly homologous with the HTLV-III LTR; however, like HTLV-III, visna virus, and equine infectious anemia virus, CAEV uses tRNA lysine as a primer for reverse transcription. The transcriptional activity of the CAEV and visna virus LTRs was measured by a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay, and the activity of the visna virus LTR was generally higher in a variety of uninfected cell types. Infection of cells with visna virus markedly increased gene expression directed by either the CAEV or visna virus LTR, but in contrast, infection of cells with CAEV had little effect on the activity of either LTR. The lack of trans-activation by CAEV, a virus which causes debilitating arthritis and encephalitis in goats, suggests that trans-activation may not be a general property of pathogenic lentiviruses.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence and transcriptional activity of the caprine arthritis-encephalitis virus long terminal repeat. 302 73

We describe an infant with symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus infection, who was born to a mother with active systemic lupus erythematosus. Infection in the child resulted from reactivation of maternal cytomegalovirus infection. The mother's use of prednisone may have contributed to the reactivation. The role of maternal immunosuppression in the acquisition of congenital viral infection by the neonate is discussed.
Arthritis Rheum 1986 Nov
PMID:Congenital cytomegalovirus infection and maternal systemic lupus erythematosus: a case report. 302 60

Six cases of Kingella kingae arthritis, osteomyelitis, and diskitis were studied, and data were reviewed from an additional 23 cases in the English-language literature. K. kingae is a slow-growing, fastidious, gram-negative microorganism that colonizes mucous membranes of the upper respiratory tract. Infections were predominantly seen in infants and young children (86% of cases) and were preceded by an upper respiratory tract infection in 31% of patients. Low-grade fever (38 degrees C-39 degrees C) and pain or swelling involving the affected limb developed insidiously. However, 76% of the infections were diagnosed within 1 week after the onset of symptoms. The knee was involved in 47% and the hip in 33% of cases of arthritis. Osteomyelitis mainly involved the femur (36%); four cases of osteomyelitis (29%) were diagnosed as diskitis. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was greater than 20 mm/h in all patients. Gram stains of aspiration fluid were positive in 19% of cases, whereas blood cultures yielded growth in only 5%. Radiographic signs indicating the presence of osteomyelitis were observed in 93% of patients. All patients recovered completely. K. kingae is an important causative agent in indolent bone, joint, and intervertebral disk infections.
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PMID:Bone and joint infections caused by Kingella kingae: six cases and review of the literature. 305 96

Ten patients with chronic Yersinia enterocolitica infections are described. The initial diagnosis was made by culture, significant agglutinin titres and indirect immunofluorescence (IF) on biopsies. During the chronic phase, culture and agglutinin titres were negative, but specific serum IgA and IgG antibodies reactive with at least two, i.e. the 36 kDa and the 46 kDa, virulence-associated released proteins were demonstrated in nine patients by immunoblot techniques. One patient had only IgG antibodies. The chronically elevated IgA production was the result of chronic stimulation of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue by virulent persistent Yersinia antigen, which was identified by IF with O-specific antiserum and monospecific antiserum to the 46 kDa released protein in biopsies. Virulent Yersinia bacilli were demonstrated in the intestinal mucosa and in the lymphoid tissue of the submucosa associated with macrophages in patients with chronic ileitis and arthritis, in granulomatous centres of lymph nodes in patients with chronic lymphadenopathy and in portal infiltrates in a patient with chronic hepatitis. Recognition of persistent Yersinia infections may have therapeutic implications.
Infection
PMID:Persistence of Yersinia enterocolitica in man. 328 8

Pediatric patients with serious infections are usually hospitalized for parenteral antibiotic treatment. We studied prospectively 74 pediatric patients with community-acquired serious infections and used once daily intramuscular ceftriaxone. Seventeen patients (23%) were initially hospitalized and 57 (77%) patients were treated entirely as outpatients. An initial intramuscular dose of 75 mg/kg was followed by daily doses of 50 mg/kg (maximum, 1.5 g). Infections treated included periorbital/buccal cellulitis, other cellulitis, urinary tract infections, pneumonia, osteomyelitis, mastoiditis, suppurative arthritis and orbital cellulitis. Organisms were recovered from cultures of 37 (50%) patients and 6 (8%) patients were bacteremic. Bacteria included Gram-positive (mostly Staphylococcus aureus) and Gram-negative (mostly enteric bacilli and Haemophilus influenzae organisms). No serious side effects were observed. Of 74 patients 72 (97%) were cured and improvement was usually observed within 24 hours. Two patients did not improve: one with chronic Pseudomonas mastoiditis; and one with lung abscess. Based on previous experience it is estimated that 376 hospitalization days were saved. All 72 successfully treated patients and their parents resumed normal activity within 72 hours of starting therapy. Our data suggest that ceftriaxone can be used for outpatient treatment of some infectious diseases.
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PMID:Outpatient treatment of serious community-acquired pediatric infections using once daily intramuscular ceftriaxone. 332 38

Twenty-one infected total hip arthroplasties in 19 patients performed between 1971 and 1982 were prospectively followed, using a computerized standard orthopaedic arthritis record. These cases represent an inclusive and unselected, consecutive series. The mean follow-up period from time of infection was 4.8 years (range, 1.2-11.7 years). Infection was diagnosed by positive bacteriologic culture. Ten hips grew a staphylococcal species, 5 a single gram-negative organism, 1 a Streptococcus, and 5 multiple organisms. At final follow-up evaluation, only three hips (14%) had the previously infected prosthesis still in situ, and these had no evidence of ongoing deep infection. Five additional hips (24%) were successfully salvaged after one- or two-stage prosthetic exchange. Two hips (10%) have an infected prosthesis in situ. Eleven hips (52%) had resection arthroplasty, three after attempts at prosthetic reinsertion. Therefore, at final follow-up evaluation, only 8 of the 21 hips (38%) have an apparently infection-free salvaged or reinserted prosthesis in place. Good prognostic factors for prosthetic salvage/successful reinsertion include Staphylococcus epidermidis infection and a traumatic etiology necessitating later hip arthroplasty. Poor prognostic factors include infection with Staphylococcus aureus or multiple organisms and a preoperative diagnosis of avascular necrosis.
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PMID:Outcome of infected total hip arthroplasty. An inclusive, consecutive series. 339 52


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