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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three adults, 2 of whom had polymyositis and 1 with dermatomyositis, developed dysphagia during the course of their illness. Results of esophageal manometry supplemented with esophageal radiography indicated the presence of cricopharyngeal achalasia. Because of the severity of this disorder, which is associated with aspiration of esophageal contents into the airways, surgery to divide the cricopharyngeal musculature was performed in 2 patients, giving complete relief of their symptoms. Prednisone dosage was not increased to treat this condition since it arose not from weakness but from obstruction. A biopsy specimen taken from 1 patient demonstrated inflammatory changes in the obstructing muscle. A review of these 3 patients and 3 previously reported cases indicates that cricopharyngeal obstruction can be a dominant cause of dysphagia in patients with myositis. The recognition of this entity is important in the management of patients with myositis because: it has serious and potentially life-threatening implications; and in certain cases, it can be effectively treated with surgery.
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PMID:Cricopharyngeal obstruction in inflammatory myopathy (polymyositis/dermatomyositis). Report of three cases and review of the literature. 400 73

Thirteen reports of patients who developed polymyositis or dermatomyositis during treatment with D-penicillamine are reviewed and a fourteenth case is described. Twelve of the fourteen patients recovered after D-penicillamine was withdrawn; two patients died from cardiac involvement. Proximal muscle weakness was present in 13 patients and dermatomyositis in 4 patients. Dysphagia was the presenting symptom in 6 patients. Although D-penicillamine is useful in the management of rheumatoid arthritis, this drug should be used with caution and patients monitored closely for evidence of polymyositis or dermatomyositis.
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PMID:Fatal polymyositis in D-penicillamine-treated rheumatoid arthritis. 683 75

From January 1, 1981 to December 31, 1992, we experienced nine patients with childhood onset of dermatomyositis and polymyositis. The mean age of disease onset was 12 years (range 7 to 16 years). Seven of them fulfilled the criteria of dermatomyositis, the remaining two were polymyositis. Girls were more predominant than boys in 6:3 ratio. The clinical features included extremities muscle weakness, skin rash, periorbital swelling and dysphagia. Increased muscle enzymes including creatine phosphokinase (CPK) or lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) were all positive in nine patients. All of our nine patients were treated with prednisolone after the diagnosis was established. The duration of treatment ranged from 3 to 65 months (mean: 25.3 months). Two of the nine patients also received immunosuppressive agents, hydroxychloroquine and azathioprine respectively. At present six patients survive without treatment. Two patients continue with corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapy. One patient died from primary peritonitis, six months after being diagnosed with JDMS. In conclusion our study shows there is a female dominance; monocyclic clinical course is more common; and the prognosis is good in general, in the cases of juvenile dermatomyositis and polymyositis.
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PMID:Dermatomyositis and polymyositis in childhood. 794 27

In a retrospective study, the files of 19 patients with dermatomyositis examined at our departments from 1970 to 1993 were reviewed. The parameters studied were age, sex, muscle enzyme values, muscle biopsies, electromyographical findings and interval from onset of dermatomyositis until first visit to the department. Out of 19 patients with dermatomyositis, 18 were adults and in nine of these the condition was associated with cancer (three out of three men, six out of 15 women). Electromyographical findings were pathological in 17 investigated patients and myositis was indicated in 13 out of 15 biopsies. Muscle enzyme values were elevated in seven out of nine patients with cancer and in three out of nine without. Out of five patients with dysphagia, four patients had cancer. The risk of cancer is increased in patients with dermatomyositis. Factors indicating a poor prognosis regarding the association between dermatomyositis and cancer in our study were old age, male sex and dysphagia.
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PMID:[Dermatomyositis and cancer. A retrospective study]. 799 92

Twenty-four cases of polymyositis, 3 (12.5%) of them Dermatomyositis, have been treated and followed up for over 12 years. Majority (75%) were males. Inflammatory lesion was the cause in 18 (75%), collagen disease in 4 (16.7%) and malignancy in 2 (8.35%). Presenting features were fever (100%), proximal muscle weakness (95.8%) and tenderness (54.2%), facial and respiratory muscle weakness (4.2%). Raised CPK and transaminases, electromyogram abnormality and positive muscle biopsy were recorded in all. All were treated with steroids. Complication/associations noted were arthalgia (25%), dysphagia (20.6%), peripheral neuritis (8.35%), diabetes mellitus (4.2%), pulmonary fibrosis (4.2%) and malabsorption (4.2%). Fourteen cases (58%), all of inflammatory aetiology, recovered completely. Seven cases (29.2%) developed permanent atrophy of affected muscles. Cases with collagen disease and malignancy fared worse and deteriorated because of the primary disease.
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PMID:Polymyositis--a review and follow up study of 24 cases. 800 72

Myositis due to the etiologic agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, has been reported nine times in the English-language literature; there has been but a single report of exacerbation of dermatomyositis due to B. burgdorferi in a patient with known dermatomyositis. Multiple infectious agents, but not B. burgdorferi, have been hypothesized to trigger dermatomyositis. We report the first case of dermatomyositis that appears to have been triggered by B. burgdorferi. This case involved an individual from Westchester County, NY, who presented with skin lesions suggestive of erythema migrans and who was seropositive for Lyme disease. He soon developed a clinical syndrome suggestive of dermatomyositis: periorbital edema, dysphagia, proximal muscle weakness, and a markedly elevated level of creatine phosphokinase. We also review the clinical presentation and response to treatment of patients with Lyme myositis.
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PMID:Dermatomyositis associated with Lyme disease: case report and review of Lyme myositis. 816 22

Two women, aged 72 (case 1) and 77 (case 2) were referred for neurological diagnosis because of progressive muscular weakness, for 4 and 18 months, respectively, which had finally led to dysphagia and required mechanical ventilation. The cause of the disease in case 1 was classical dermatomyositis. Creatinine kinase concentration, never previously measured, was 950 U/l. In case 2 there was polymyositis, previously not considered as she had a diabetic polyneuropathy and muscle enzyme concentration was normal. In both cases the correct diagnosis was speedily confirmed by electromyography and muscle biopsy. Immunosuppressive treatment was largely successful in reversing the symptoms (case 1: initially 500 mg methylprednisolone daily, reduced to 50 mg daily within 6 weeks; case 2: 500 mg methylprednisolone daily for 1 week, then 100 mg daily plus 150 mg azathioprine with maintenance dosage of 20 mg glucocorticoid daily).--These two cases demonstrate that, particularly in the elderly, dermatomyositis and polymyositis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of progressive general weakness.
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PMID:[Is chronic dermato- or polymyositis misdiagnosed as "weakness of old age"?]. 822 97

In the gastroenterological diagnostic armamentarium, dysphagia is considered as an important symptom for diseases of the esophagus. Concerning the history of illness, symptoms such as retrosternal pain and heartburn are often associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease. Morphological changes of the mucosa can be diagnosed by flexible endoscopy and radiographic examinations. Investigation with 24-h pH monitoring, manometry, and pharmacological tests is necessary for the diagnosis of functional disorders. Additionally, dysphagia can be associated with multiple internal diseases, including muscular diseases such as dermatomyositis, progressive systemic sclerosis, as well as lupus erythematosus. Difficulties in swallowing associated with hypo- and hyperthyroidism can also be interpreted as muscular lesions. Metabolic disorders such as alcoholism, and diabetes mellitus can be the cause of dysphagia. Increasing importance in the differential diagnosis of dysphagia is attached to infections of the upper GI tract. Especially in immunocompromised patients, infections of Candida albicans, mycobacterias, herpes, varicella zoster, and cytomegaloviruses can produce dysphagia and odynophagia. The differential diagnosis of the "angina-like chest pain" has to differentiate between cardiac disease and a noncardiac genesis. Therefore, besides the cardiac diagnostic investigation, endoscopy, radiography, and manometry are often indicated.
Dysphagia 1993
PMID:The gastroenterologist's approach to dysphagia. 846 28

This is the first report on idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) in French Canadians. We reviewed retrospectively 30 French Canadian adults (20 women and 10 men) with IIM seen consecutively over 12 years. The median age at diagnosis was 45 years. The IIM were 8 (27%) primary polymyositis (PM), 9 (30%) primary dermatomyositis (DM), 5 (17%) IIM with neoplasia (lymphoma, breast, esophageal, colonic, and skin cancer) and 8 (27%) IIM with a connective tissue disease (4 with systemic sclerosis, 2 with mixed connective tissue disease, and 2 with rheumatoid arthritis). The most common presenting symptom was proximal muscle weakness (n = 10,33%). Of the remaining 20 patients, 6 (20%) had the onset of their weakness within 1 month of the presenting symptom. Only 3 (10%) patients did not have proximal muscle weakness. Twenty-six (87%) patients had weakness in the pelvic girdle, 25 (83%) in the shoulder girdle, and 7 (23%) in the neck muscles. Other common symptoms included dyspnea on exertion and dysphagia, each present in 13 (43%) patients. Gottron's papules and the heliotrope rash were the most common skin lesions documented in 11 (37%) and 10 (33%) patients, respectively. The serum creatine kinase (CK) level was between 171 and 1,000 U/L in 13 (43%) patients and between 1,001 and 6,000 U/L in 13 (43%) patients. Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) on HEp-2 cells were positive in 16 (53%) patients, of which 2 (13%) expressed autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes. Autoantibody specificities were anti-La (n = 4, 13%), anti-U1RNP (n = 3, 10%), and anti-Ro (n = 2, 7%). None of the patients expressed anti-Jo-1, anti-topoisomerase I, or anticentromere antibodies. Twenty-eight (93%) patients received corticosteroid therapy, and 8 (27%) patients responded to prednisone alone. Thirteen (43%) patients were treated with methotrexate, and 9 (69%) responded. The mean follow-up was 62 months: 23 (77%) had their disease controlled, 3 (10%) patients were lost to follow-up, and 4 (13%) died (no death occurred because of IIM or its treatment). Therapy was discontinued because of remission in 5 (17%) patients. Cumulative survival rates at 2, 5, and 10 years were 89%, 89%, and 85%, respectively. The presence of autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes and anti-La autoantibodies, the rare occurrence of anti-Jo-1 autoantibodies, the response to conventional therapies, and a high survival rate may distinguish IIM in French Canadians from that of other reported series.
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PMID:Distinctive features of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies in French Canadians. 887 Jan 12

The case of dermatomyositis complicated with cecum perforation and panniculitis occurred in a 62-year-old woman was reported. She was admitted to Keio University Hospital with a history of proximal muscular weakness, and dysphagia. Physical examination showed erythema over the face and shoulder. Serum level of muscle enzymes was remarkably increased. The diagnosis of dermatomyositis was made based on proximal muscular weakness, elevated serum level of muscle enzymes and myogenic change of electromyocardiogram. The treatment with 60 mg/day of prednisolone was started, and was a good response. However, 7 months later the disease became active again when the amount of prednisolone was reduced to 13 mg/day. Subsequently she complained of abdominal pain on the right lower quadrant. The surgical findings included peritonitis due to the perforation of the cecum and multiple ulcers of the cecum. After operation, azathioprine was added. Four years and 9 months later, she noticed skin erythema with ulceration and subcutaneous nodule. Skin biopsy indicated the findings of the panniculitis with membrano-cystic lesion. It was thought that both cecum perforation and panniculitis were caused by angiopathy which was often seen in childhood dermatomyositis.
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PMID:[An adult case of dermatomyositis complicated with cecum perforation and panniculitis]. 910 66


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