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Query: UMLS:C0003864 (
arthritis
)
69,039
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nine previously healthy children were seen with unique, and in several instances, unreported manifestations of acute histoplasmosis. Presenting manifestations included: obstructive airway disease; subacute parotitis; unilateral cervical lymphadenopathy; anterior mediastinal mass-simulating neoplasm; immune hemolytic anemia; a cutaneous lesion with regional lymphadenopathy; mediastinal mass and pericardial effusion; pulmonary infarction; and a symptom complex of cervical lymphadenopathy,
CSF
pleocytosis,
arthritis
, and interstitial nephritis. In eight children histoplasmosis was not initially considered, and the correct diagnosis was made only after complex, and sometimes invasive, diagnostic evaluation and considerable delay. All patients recovered fully without antifungal therapy. Reports of uncontrolled trials of new antifungal agents for treatment of histoplasmosis in immunocompetent hosts should be cautiously evaluated.
...
PMID:Unusual manifestations of histoplasmosis in childhood. 686 97
Three unrelated children (one girl and two boys) have had since birth a syndrome characterized by a permanent skin rash which becomes more intense during flare-ups associated with fever, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and
arthritis
symmetrically involving the large joints. In one boy, typical psoriasis was observed at age 3 years. In two patients, roentgenograms of the joints showed early patellar ossification and an abnormal epiphyseal appearance. The three children also had neurologic involvement, with mental retardation, enlarged head circumference, eye lesions, late closure of the anterior fontanel, and a chronic meningitis with infiltration by polymorphonuclear cells. No immunologic abnormalities were found, but polymorphonuclear cells infiltrated the skin, lymph nodes, synovial fluid, and
CSF
.
...
PMID:Arthropathy with rash, chronic meningitis, eye lesions, and mental retardation. 725 69
Eight-six children with meningococcal meningitis or bacteremia were evaluated prospectively between 1977 and 1979 to determine the incidence of complications and features predictive of their development. The majority (83%) of these infections were caused by serogroup B strains. Twenty-seven percent of survivors experienced one or more suppurative, allergic, or neurologic complications. Hearing loss, noted in 9% of children, occurred significantly more often in patients with admission leukocytosis or leukopenia, or with
CSF
leukocytosis greater than 10,000/mm3 than in those with an uncomplicated course (P less than 0.01). Ten percent of survivors developed allergic complications manifested as cutaneous vasculitis or
arthritis
with onset five to eight days after admission. Shock, purpuric skin lesions, and fever persisting longer than five days occurred significantly more often in these children than in those who developed hearing loss or those with an uncomplicated course (P less than 0.05). Resolution of allergic complications occurred within 14 days of their onset. Compared to Neisseria meningitidis groups A and C, group B strains appear to be intermediate in their potential for allergic complications associated with childhood infection.
...
PMID:Complications and sequelae of meningococcal infections in children. 727 93
Experimental data strongly suggest that the nervous and immune systems are interrelated. One example of this interrelation is anatomical and is represented by innervation of the lymphoid organs by substance P (SP) immunoreactive fibers, among others. Neurotransmitters/neuropeptides can exert functional receptor-mediated immunologic responses. SP binding to its receptor induces cytokine production in macrophages and T cells and stimulates IgG secretion from B cells. SP has also been associated with inflammation and other immune-mediated diseases such as
arthritis
. We have previously reported an in vitro stimulatory effect of SP on hematopoiesis that was mediated mostly by the induction of two relevant hematopoietic growth factors, IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage-
CSF
(GM-CSF). In this study, we have shown that SP, through the carboxyl terminus, induces the production of IL-3 and GM-
CSF
in bone marrow mononuclear cells. This production requires de novo synthesis and is blocked by two different SP-R antagonists, spantide and CP-96,345-1. The induction of IL-3 and GM-
CSF
is partially mediated by IL-1 and IL-6, which are also produced by bone marrow mononuclear cells. Furthermore, the production of IL-3 and GM-
CSF
correlated with an accumulation of their respective steady state mRNAs. T cells found within the bone marrow are responsible for most of the induced IL-3. Because SP mediates the release of IL-1, IL-3, IL-6, and GM-
CSF
, all important hematopoietic regulators, by bone marrow cells, this study further suggests the possibility of a regulatory role of the nervous system in hematopoiesis mediated by neuropeptides such as SP.
...
PMID:Induction of IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor by substance P in bone marrow cells is partially mediated through the release of IL-1 and IL-6. 751 64
A 73-year-old woman was diagnosed with seropositive destructive rheumatoid arthritis in 1981. She was treated with cortisone, chloroquine, and cyclophosphamide (Sendoxan) in 1982 and 1984 and contracted severe neutropenia. After that she only received cortisone. During 1991, again low neutrophilic counts were registered, especially granulocytopenia. At first, B-cell lymphoma was suspected, but later Felty's syndrome was established. The patient was treated with high-dose cortisone with some success and had a few minor septic episodes. In May 1992 she contracted a traumatic wound on the back of the lower leg. Conservative treatment resulted in a worsening of the condition and an increased wound area, most likely related to the neutropenic condition. In mid July the patient was hospitalized. Bacterial isolates yielded mixed gram-negative enteric bacteria from the wound. Parenteral antibiotic treatment was started, followed by oral drugs, rhG-
CSF
(filgrastim) was given subcutaneously once a day, starting 3 days after admission. This resulted in increased numbers of peripheral granulocytes. The ulcer started to heal and by mid August the patient received a transplant with autologous skin grafting. In mid September the wound was completely healed. It is concluded that the combination of antibiotics, skin transplantation, and G-CSF was necessary for the successful result. Actually, the bacterial growth did not call for antibiotics, but it was considered necessary to cover for staphylococci. No worsening of the underlying
arthritis
was observed.
...
PMID:Successful treatment of chronic wound infection in neutropenia and rheumatoid arthritis with filgrastim (rhG-GSF) 752 58
Parallel time courses of preclinical and behavioural pain-related parameters and levels of substance P-like immunoreactivity in plasma (plasma-SPLI) and cerebrospinal fluid (
CSF
-SPLI) were studied in 2 groups of rats injected with an arthritogenic solution (concentrated Freund adjuvant) over a 9-week post-infection (PI) period; 1 group was pretreated with saline (control) and 1 pretreated with diluted Freund adjuvant (immunized). In control rats all symptoms of adjuvant-induced
arthritis
(AIA) developed while in immunized rats AIA symptoms were significantly reduced or did not appear. A significant increase in plasma-SPLI was obvious as early as the 2nd week PI and remained at this level in both groups of animals until the end of the 9-week PI observation period, but with a significantly higher increase in control versus immunized group at all stages. In contrast,
CSF
-SPLI transiently peaked only in the control group at 3 weeks PI whereas
CSF
-SPLI values did not differ from one week to another in both groups of rats. These results suggest that successive injections of diluted Freund adjuvant impairs the development of chronic inflammation and pain in AIA in rats, as well as the transient increase in SP release in
CSF
at 3 weeks PI, but not the long-lasting increased SP release in plasma. Since there is a clear dissociation between our biochemical and preclinical and behavioral data, this study does not provide evidence for the role of substance P as a possible biologic marker of chronic pain either in plasma or in
CSF
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prevaccination with diluted Freund adjuvant prevents the development of chronic pain and transient release of cerebrospinal fluid substance P in adjuvant-induced arthritis in rats. 752 93
A patient with Felty's syndrome and rheumatoid arthritis was treated with recombinant granulocyte stimulating factor rhG-
CSF
(Neupogen) in view of severe neutropenia. He had a prompt rise in his neutrophil count and associated with this a severe flare of his
arthritis
and a skin rash. rhG-
CSF
was stopped, his neutrophil count fell rapidly and his symptoms resolved. rhG-
CSF
and the resulting rise in neutrophil count may be associated with flare of autoimmune disease in susceptible individuals.
...
PMID:Felty's syndrome treated with rhG-CSF associated with flare of arthritis and skin rash. 754 May 27
The incidence of meningococcal disease appears to be increasing in the Netherlands. Numerous complications, mostly involving the central nervous system, have been reported. We focus attention on
arthritis
by describing the case history of a 2-year-old boy who developed oligoarthritis 8 days after a disease onset characterised by general malaise, fever, signs of meningeal irritation and positive cultures of Neisseria meningitidis in
CSF
, blood and nasopharynx. The
arthritis
was probably immune complex mediated. He recovered after antibiotic therapy. There are three forms of
arthritis
as a complication of meningococcal disease: primary meningococcal
arthritis
, purulent metastatic
arthritis
, and immune complex
arthritis
.
...
PMID:[Arthritis as complication of acute meningococcal infection]. 841 35
Type II collagen-induced
arthritis
(CIA) is a pathologic process mediated, in part, by humoral immune mechanisms. Because many antibody-mediated reactions are neutrophil-dependent, the role of this cell population was examined in passive CIA transferred with anti-type II collagen (CII) antibody. In cyclophosphamide (CY)-induced leukocytopenic rats, swelling and inflammation associated with the arthritic response were significantly reduced. Concomitant administration of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) to leukocytopenic rats for 7 consecutive days from the day of CY injection resulted in the recovery of peripheral blood neutrophils count and the abrogation of the suppression of
arthritis
with an optimal dose of anti-CII antibody. Further study demonstrated that a prior administration of rhG-
CSF
to naive rats for five consecutive days resulted in the significant and specific increase of peripheral blood neutrophils count and enhancement of passive
arthritis
with a suboptimal dose of anti-CII antibody. It was suggested that neutrophils played an important role in the development of passive CIA.
...
PMID:The effects of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor on passive collagen-induced arthritis transferred with anti-type II collagen antibody. 769 55
Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato has been subdivided into three genospecies: B. burgdorferi sensu stricto, B. garinii, and B. burgdorferi group VS461. Sixty-eight isolates cultured from patients and 26 strains from ticks were characterized with use of SDS-PAGE, western blotting, and rRNA gene restriction analysis. Fifty-seven of 58 strains obtained from the skin of 70 patients who had erythema migrams or acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans were of group VS461, whereas the genotype of the remaining strain was unidentifiable. Of 10 strains cultured from
CSF
(n = 3) and skin (n = 7) of 20 patients with extracutaneous symptoms of Lyme borreliosis, nine were B. garinii and one was B. burgdorferi sensu stricto. Of these 20 patients, 17 had neuroborreliosis, one had
arthritis
and carditis, one had myalgia, and one had erythema and arthralgia. All 26 isolates from ticks were of group VS461. In conclusion, infections due to group VS461 and B. garinii are associated with cutaneous and extracutaneous symptoms, respectively. Our findings suggest that B. burgdorferi genotypes have different pathogenic potentials.
...
PMID:Different genospecies of Borrelia burgdorferi are associated with distinct clinical manifestations of Lyme borreliosis. 790 58
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