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Query: UMLS:C0003864 (arthritis)
69,039 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reactive arthritis is defined as arthritis of 1 or more joints, in association with infection at a distant site, but without the infective agent being found in the synovial fluid. Patients with Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection and articular disease, who do not fulfill the modified Jones criteria for diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever, have been classified as having poststreptococcal reactive arthritis. We describe 6 patients seen during the winter of 1991 who had various clinical presentations of poststreptococcal reactive arthritis. This condition is considered by some as a distinct disease, but by others as part of the spectrum of acute rheumatic fever.
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PMID:[Poststreptococcal reactive arthritis]. 145 1

Reactive arthritis following infection with Yersinia is endemic in Scandinavian countries; the prevalence is low in the UK, however. We have reviewed the literature pertaining to Yersinia-related reactive arthritis in the UK and describe 12 patients who presented over a 3-year period with an asymmetrical seronegative polyarthropathy and serological evidence of recent Yersinia infection. Five patients recalled having a diarrhoeal illness prior to the onset of the arthropathy. None had a prior history of psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease or ankylosing spondylitis. A history of urethral discharge was elicited from one patient. Extra-articular manifestations were seen in three patients (iritis in two, erythema nodosum in another). Four patients developed chronic joint disease after periods of 4, 6, 8, and 18 months, respectively. The prevalence of Yersinia-related arthritis in the UK may be higher than previously thought.
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PMID:Yersinia-related arthritis in the United Kingdom. A report of 12 cases and review of the literature. 148 36

Reactive arthritis is the leading cause of arthritis in Papua New Guinea, followed probably by gonococcal arthritis. Indomethacin and local hydrocortisone acetate are useful in the treatment of reactive arthritis. Refractory cases of reactive arthritis may be helped by weekly low-dose oral methotrexate or by long courses of doxycycline. When Neisseria gonorrhoeae is thought to be involved treatment should cover penicillinase-producing strains. Infective arthritis due to Staphylococcus aureus and Mycobacterium tuberculosis is less common but should be considered in all patients because prompt and specific treatment is required to avoid permanent damage.
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PMID:The diagnosis and management of common forms of arthritis in adults in Papua New Guinea. 175 Feb 56

Among a group of children hospitalized for "joint pain", four of the cases of reactive arthritis were due to Yersinia infection. These four cases are described. Some patients had suggestive clinical symptoms but serologic studies were needed to establish the diagnosis. Tissue group studies showed that two children were HLA B27 and one was HLA B7. Reactive arthritis due to Yersinia in a form of "enteral arthritis". The prevalence of Yersinia arthritis has not been documented. Serologic tests are essential to outrule the main differential diagnosis, i.e. chronic juvenile arthritis (juvenile rheumatoid arthritis). Short-term resolution of symptoms is seen in every case. The long-term outcome is less well documented, especially with regard to the risk of recurrence and to relationships with peripheral joint disease and spondylarthropathies of early adulthood. HLA B27 positivity may be a risk factor. The pathogenesis of Yersinia-induced reactive arthritis is unclear; current studies are focusing on immunologic factors. The uncertainties concerning long-term outcome justifies renewed interest in childhood reactive arthritis.
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PMID:[Reactive arthritis caused by Yersinia in children. Report of 4 cases]. 187 25

Reactive arthritis is a postinfectious complication which develops after certain infections, mostly gastrointestinal or urogenital. Antigenic structures of the causative microbes, but no live organisms, have been demonstrated in inflamed joints. The host factors as well as the microbial antigens responsible for the initiation of the arthritic process are unknown. The pathogenesis of reactive arthritis is discussed here with special reference to the intracellular life of the causative microbes and to monocytes/macrophages, which may be involved in early events of the arthritic process as well as in maintenance of the autoimmune type of responses.
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PMID:Intracellular pathogens and professional phagocytes in reactive arthritis. 188 11

Recent findings justify the opinion that Chlamydia psittaci is the reappearance of a forgotten pathogen. The clinical manifestation and the course of psittacosis are extremely variable, whereas the clinical spectrum of the infection with the different strains of C. psittaci is not known. Reactive arthritis during the course of psittacosis has been rarely described in humans. However, it has been stated that C. psittaci could be added to the list of infectious agents able to induce reactive arthritis. We describe a patient who presented with clinical signs consistent with reactive arthritis during the course of psittacosis, and we emphasize the good therapeutical results with ceftriaxone in the treatment of psittacosis.
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PMID:Psittacosis and arthritis. 203 70

Reactive arthritis may develop within a period of some days until upto 3 weeks after infections with Yersinia enterocolitica, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, Campylobacter jejuni/coli, Shigella and Salmonella. Intestinal infections with Klebsiella pneumoniae, Clostridium perfringens, Clostridium difficile, Cryptosporidium, Strongyloides stercoralis, Taenia saginata and Schistosoma mansoni are, in some cases, considered to be responsible for reactive arthritis. Detection of pathogenic bacteria in feces is generally most successful in the early stage of the infection. A large spectrum of special tests is required in order to detect all the causative agents and to ensure reliable results. It is therefore necessary that the laboratory is provided with information about the diagnostic object and the tentative diagnosis. The detection of serum antibodies to Y. enterocolitica, Y. pseudotuberculosis, C. jejuni/coli, and Schistosoma may suggest connections between infection and reactive arthritis.
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PMID:[Value of microbiologic studies for diagnosis of post-enteritis reactive arthritis]. 208 58

The term reactive arthritis was introduced to describe an acute non-purulent arthritis complicating an infection elsewhere in the body. Reactive arthritis can also be classified into HLA-B27 associated and non-associated forms. Rheumatic fever is an example of the HLA-B27 non-associated forms with genetic factors other than HLA-B27 involved. HLA-B27 associated reactive arthritis includes enteric, urogenic and idiopathic arthritides. The bacteria known to trigger post-enteritic reactive arthritis are: Yersinia, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, Clostridium difficile and Brucella; those known to trigger post-urethritic reactive arthritis are Chlamydia trachomatis and Ureaplasma urealyticum, but often the germ remains unidentified. Mechanisms through which susceptibility to reactive arthritis is linked to HLA-B27 antigen are still incompletely understood, but a clue could be cross-reactivity between B27 and a surface antigen of pathogenic germs. The clinical profile of the disease is characterized by an asymmetrical oligoarthritis with involvement particularly of the peripheral joints of the lower limbs. The arthritis generally recovers without sequelae within a few weeks or months. Accompanying features can be the involvement of enthesis and tendon sheets in form of a talalgia or dactylitis. In some cases the arthritis can relapse and chronicize. In some cases, in addition, involvement of the axial skeleton can occur (spondylitis and/or sacroiliitis). Another feature of the disease is the frequent association with typical extra-articular manifestations such as uveitis and muco-cutaneous lesions.
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PMID:[Reactive arthritis]. 208 18

Reactive arthritis is a non suppurative articular inflammation following an infection elsewhere in the body. It probably occurs by interaction of external infections agents and immunological factors that mediate the host's response to the agent's antigens. The authors reviewed the role of gastrointestinal infection and infestation as a cause of reactive arthritis. Since there are no good diagnostic criteria for reactive arthritis and the investigations in this area are difficult, it is possible that many of these cases are misdiagnosed.
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PMID:[Reactive arthritis associated with infections and intestinal infestations]. 213 74

Reactive arthritis is differentiated from infectious arthritis by the lack of intraarticular infectious agents. Recently 2 groups, using different techniques have demonstrated intra-articular antigens in cases of reactive arthritis associated with Chlamydia and Yersinia infections. In this article we report the preliminary results of screening cells from synovial fluid for DNA of certain microorganisms by in situ hybridization. Our findings provide complementary evidence of the intra-articular presence of at least parts of microbes.
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PMID:[The study of intra-articular infectious agents in reactive arthritis]. 271 45


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