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)

Parvovirus B19 was discovered in 1974 by Cossart et al; is a single stranded unenveloped DNA virus, which virion is isometric, uniform and has icosagedral symmetry. B19 infection has been found in all countries, it is almost certainly world-wide in distribution. Infections occurs most frequently in late winter, spring and early summer months and are transmitted by respiratory route. Erythema infectiosum is the most common manifestation of human parvovirus B19 infection, is most commonly acquired between 4 and 10 years of age and at least 60% of adults are seropositive. Erythema Infectiosum is characterized by three stages of rash that involves the face and may also involves trunk and extremities. In adult patients, particularly women, arthralgia or arthritis have been associated with up to 80% of Erythema Infectiosum casually starts in the small joints of the hand. Maternal parvovirus B19 infection with or without rash, can affect fetus. Transient aplastic crisis can be caused by HPV B19 in patient who have increased rate of RBC destruction or loss. Others diseases or symptoms complexes may be associated with B19 infection in the coming years as this virus and its infections continues being an interesting field of investigation.
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PMID:Infections caused by parvovirus B19. 888 43

Due to the preparative regimen necessary, bone marrow transplantation (BMT) consistently results in severe immunodeficiency, often associated with anaemia, leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. Parvovirus B19 replicates in red blood cell precursors in the bone marrow and causes erythema infectiosum ('fifth disease'), anaemia, arthritis and foetal death. We assessed the significance of B19 infections as a cause of post-BMT complications. Over 900 serial serum samples from 201 allogeneic bone marrow recipients were studied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and by modern serodiagnostic methods. During the first 6 months after transplantation all BMT recipients remained B19 PCR-negative. Antibody screening for B19 infections was performed up to 36 months post-transplantation. Three cases of acute B19 infection were diagnosed during the second year post-BMT. To characterize the adoptively transferred immune system we measured subclasses and avidity of anti-VP1 IgG and epitope-type specificity (ETS) of anti-VP2 IgG, which allowed functional differentiation of primary and secondary B-cell responses long after BMT. The profile of the immune response was that of a primary infection in 1 and of reinfection in 2 of the 3 acute cases. Both types were clinically mild. Infection by human parvovirus B19 is not a frequent cause of post-BMT cytopenias. The findings with the new B19 antibody markers support the concept that the donated marrow determines the type of antiviral B-cell responses.
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PMID:Primary and secondary infections by human parvovirus B19 following bone marrow transplantation: characterization by PCR and B-cell molecular immunology. 918 47

Parvovirus B19 is known to cause erythema infection (fifth disease), acute and chronic arthritis, aplastic crises in chronic hemolytic anemia, chronic anemia in the immunocompromised host and hydrops fetalis. We present two patients with acute arthritis due to parvovirus infection. Both had symmetrical synovitis in wrists and ankles. Patient 1 presented with fever and rash before joint symptoms occurred; patient 2 had joint symptoms only. Arthritis due to parvovirus is usually self-limited, but may develop into a chronic disease similar to rheumatoid arthritis. Parvovirus should be considered one of the differential diagnoses while dealing with acute or chronic arthritis.
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PMID:[Parvovirus B19 as a cause of acute arthritis]. 1055 37

Human parvovirus B19 is the cause of several distinct clinical syndromes. The most common is erythema infectiosum (fifth disease), a febrile exanthem occurring primarily in children. Recent studies have shown that parvovirus B19 can cause acute arthritis and occasionally a chronic arthropathy, both in children and adults. Parvovirus B19 DNA has been detected in studies in the synovial tissue of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, but other studies have varied in their findings. Recent studies also indicate a possible connective tissue disease-like syndrome with parvoviral infections. The common features of this syndrome are malar eruption, arthralgias, arthritis, and laboratory abnormalities including antinuclear antibody and rheumatoid factor positivity. However, the data indicate it is unlikely that B19 infection causes rheumatoid arthritis or systemic lupus erythematosus. Continued studies of the pathogenesis of acute and chronic parvoviral B19 infections and arthropathy may provide insights into virus-host interactions and mechanisms of joint disease and connective tissue disease.
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PMID:Parvovirus-associated arthritis. 1091 Jan 81

Human parvovirus B19 infections may cause a widespread benign and self-limiting disease in children and adults, known as erythema infectiosum or fifth disease. A variety of further manifestations are associated with the infection such as arthralgias, arthritis, leukopenia and thrombocytopenia, anemia and vasculitis, spontaneous abortion and hydrops fetalis in pregnant women. Both in children and adults parvovirus B19 infections have been frequently implicated as a cause or trigger of various forms of autoimmune diseases affecting joints, connective tissue and large and small vessels. In addition, autoimmune neutropenia, thrombocytopenia and hemolytic anemia are known as sequelae of B19 infection. The molecular basis of the autoimmune phenomena and resultant pathogenesis is unclear. The involvement of molecular mimicry between cellular and viral proteins, the induction of enhanced cytokine production via the viral transactivator protein NS1 and the phospholipase A2-like activity of the capsid protein VP1 may contribute to the induction of autoimmune reactions. All the known data and the potential mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis will be discussed in this review.
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PMID:Parvovirus B19 infection and autoimmune disease. 1284 49

Parvovirus B19 infection occurs very frequently in patients with haemophilia on account of its transmission with plasma derivatives. In order to achieve a more defined serological pattern for the study of the role of B19 infection in haemophilic arthritis, 53 serum samples from 37 patients with haemophilic arthritis were investigated for the presence of IgG immune response against B19 VP2 and VP1 linear epitopes and VP2 conformational antigen compared to the serological reactivity against B19 NS1 and to the presence of B19 DNA in the synovial membranes. An IgG immune response against VP1 and VP2 linear epitopes was detected by immunoblot assay using recombinant proteins expressed in Escherichia coli. Specific IgG against VP2 and VP1 linear epitopes were present in 84.90 and 92.45% of haemophilic arthritis patients and in 28.0 and 64.0% of the controls (P<0.001) respectively. All 53 sera of the haemophiliacs (100%) and 66.0% of the controls (P<0.001) were IgG positive and IgM negative against VP2 structural epitopes. Specific IgG against VP2 linear epitopes, which are a serological marker of active or very recent B19 infection, proved to be significantly associated with the presence of anti-NS1 antibodies and with the presence of B19 DNA in synovial tissue in patients with haemophilic arthritis. In conclusion, in these patients the presence of B19 IgG anti-VP2 linear epitopes, in absence of IgM anti-VP2 structural antigens, can be a useful serological marker to diagnose active, recent or persistent B19 infection.
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PMID:Antibody response to B19 parvovirus VP1 and VP2 linear epitopes in patients with haemophilic arthritis. 1498 73

Parvovirus B19 infections may cause a widespread benign and self-limiting disease in children and adults known as erythema infectiosum (fifth disease). Several further manifestations are associated with B19 infections, such as arthralgias, arthritis, leucopenia and thrombocytopenia, anaemia and vasculitis and spontaneous abortion and hydrops fetalis in pregnant women. Persistent infections with continuous virus production may occur in immunocompetent as well as in immunosuppressed individuals. Parvovirus B19 infections have been frequently implicated as a cause or trigger of various forms of autoimmune diseases affecting joints, connective tissue and large and small vessels. Autoimmune neutropenia, thrombocytopenia and haemolytic anaemia are known as sequelae of B19 infections. The molecular basis of the autoimmune phenomena is unclear. Many patients with these long-lasting symptoms are not capable of eliminating the virus or controlling its propagation. Furthermore, latent viral genomes have been detected in cells of various organs and tissues by PCR. At present, it is not clear if these cells produce viral proteins and/or infectious B19 particles, if the virus genome can be reactivated to productive replication and if the presence of viral DNA indicates a causative role of parvovirus B19 with distinct diseases.
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PMID:Parvovirus B19: the causative agent of dilated cardiomyopathy or a harmless passenger of the human myocard? 1632 58

Infectious diseases commonly cause illnesses that mimic rheumatic diseases. Both Lyme disease and Parvovirus B19 infections produce arthritis, rashes, and a systemic illness that may be thought to represent a chronic rheumatic disease. In the case presented, a child with both infections simultaneously exhibited arthralgias, aseptic meningitis, and a facial rash. The features of Lyme disease and Parvovirus B19 infection that may mimic systemic lupus erythematosus include a facial rash, often in a malar distribution, hematologic abnormalities, arthritis, neurologic disorders, and autoantibody positivity. Given the proper season and geographical location, one must consider the possibility of co-infection with these two organisms, especially in those with atypical rheumatic complaints.
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PMID:Coexistent lyme disease and parvovirus infection in a child. 1704 56

Human parvovirus B19 infection causes erythema infectiosum in child, aplastic crisis in patients with chronic hemolytic anemia, chronic pure red cell aplasia in immunocompromised patients and hydrops fetalis. Human parvovirus B19 causes arthritis and acute glomerulonephritis due to immunological mechanism. Other disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, vasculitis and thrombotic microangiopathy, are linked in human parvovirus B19 infection. Parvovirus B19 infection causes choronic rheumatoid-like arthropathy. Autoantibody and low complement were seen in acute human parvovirus infection, and parvovirus B19 infection present clinically lupus like tableau.
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PMID:[Various clinical symptoms in human parvovirus B19 infection]. 1912 75

Parvovirus B19 infection in healthy hosts is self-limited, but persistent infection has been described in patients with cellular immune defects. A 6-year-old boy presented with a 6-month history of weight loss and malaise and a 1-month history of fever and polyarticular arthritis. Parvovirus DNA was detected in plasma at 10 300 copies/mL. Levels of immunoglobulin (Ig)G, IgA, IgM, IgG-1, and IgG-2 were low, and antibody responses to vaccine antigens were impaired. HIV antibody and DNA polymerase chain reaction were negative, and the patient had normal immunophenotype, mitogen stimulation response, CD40 ligand and inducible costimulator expression, transmembrane activator and CAML interactor sequencing, genomic analysis, and fluorescent in situ hybridization for deletions at 22q11.2. Common variable immunodeficiency was diagnosed and replacement therapy with immune globulin intravenous was initiated. The parvovirus DNA level declined by half over 3 months and was undetectable at 15 months. Constitutional symptoms improved but arthritis persisted and eosinophilic fasciitis eventually developed. This case demonstrates that persistent parvovirus infection may be a presenting feature of humoral immune deficiency and can mimic juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. The infection may respond to immune globulin intravenous therapy.
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PMID:Common variable immunodeficiency presenting with persistent parvovirus B19 infection. 2312 76


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