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Query: UMLS:C0011633 (
dermatomyositis
)
4,181
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eosinophilic infiltration into skeletal muscle, although rare, has been described in a diverse group of conditions. It most commonly occurs in parasitic infection as focal eosinophilic myositis but can be a feature of systemic hypereosinophilic conditions such as eosinophilia-
myalgia
syndrome and idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome. The majority of cases have no discernible etiological factor. Eosinophilic myopathies should be distinguished from the commoner idiopathic inflammatory myopathies such as polymyositis and
dermatomyositis
. This report describes the various conditions in which eosinophilic myopathy occurs and reviews the current state of knowledge of eosinophilic myopathy.
...
PMID:Eosinophilic myopathic syndromes. 981 10
A retrospective analysis of 25 Arab patients with juvenile
dermatomyositis
(JDMS) was conducted between 1988 and 1996. The mean age at disease onset was 8.25 years (range 1.5-15 yrs) with a male: female ratio of 1.5:1. The disease duration before diagnosis was 1-108 months. Two patients had a family history of JDMS. The clinical features included fever in 14 patients (56%), weight loss in 20 (80%), muscle weakness in all 25 (100%), and
muscle pain
in 14 (56%). Skin lesions included Gottron's papules in 15 patients (60%), heliotrope in 13 (52%), erythematous malar rash in 8 (32%), and pigmentary changes in 12 (48%). Seventeen of the 25 patients had arthralgia (68%) and 16 patients had arthritis (64%). Gastrointestinal symptoms were noted in 19 patients (76%). Myocarditis with cardiac failure was the initial presentation of 1 patient, while 2 had conduction defect. Twelve patients (48%) had respiratory symptoms. The course of the disease was complicated by calcinosis in 10 patients (40%). All of the patients were treated with prednisone; 15 were also treated with methotrexate. The duration of follow up ranged from 6-108 months (mean 54.5 months). Twenty-three patients improved, including those who had calcinosis at the time of presentation, with a current muscle power of 4/5 in 10 patients (40%) and 5/5 in 13 patients (52%). No deaths were reported in our series and no patients are currently bedridden.
...
PMID:Juvenile dermatomyositis: clinical profile and disease course in 25 patients. 1008 45
The most common scleroderma overlap syndromes are mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD), scleromyositis and synthetase syndrome. There is controversy concerning MCTD as a separate entity due to heterogeneous clinical manifestations, not infrequent transformation into definite CTD and various classification criteria. Our study of 94 adult patients and 20 children, classified according to the criteria of Alarcon-Segovia, and especially a 5, 9-year follow-up showed transformation into SLE or SSc in over 20% of patients, less frequently than reported by others, whereas over half of the cases remained undifferentiated CTD. In several cases ARA criteria for both SSc and SLE were fulfilled, and there is no consensus whether such cases should be recognized as coexistence of both definite diseases or as MCTD. High titers of U1 RNP antibodies to 70 kD epitope were invariably present, whereas, by transformation into distinctive CTD there appeared, in addition, antibodies characteristic of these CTD. Of 108 cases positive for PM-Scl antibody, 83% were associated with scleromyositis. This scleroderma overlap syndrome differed from MCTD by coexistent features of
dermatomyositis
(
myalgia
, myositis, Gottron sign, heliotrope rash, calcinosis) with no component of SLE, characteristic of MCTD. The course was also chronic and rather benign, as in MCTD, and all cases responded to low or moderate doses of corticosteroids. A not infrequent complication was deforming arthritis of the hands. Our immunogenetic study showed an association of cases positive for PM-Scl antibody with HLA-DQA1x0501 alleles in 100% and with HLA-DRB1x0301 in 94% of cases. Synthetase syndrome, associated with anti-histidyl-tRNA synthetase antibodies, studied in 29 patients with myositis and interstitial lung disease (ILD), only in single cases had scleroderma-like features. These cases differed from SSc by acute onset with fever, and by response to moderate doses of corticosteroids. We also studied overlap of localized scleroderma with other CTD: 21 cases of progressive facial hemiatrophy and linear scleroderma, and 55 (39.5%) of atrophoderma Pasini-Pierini (APP) and morphea. As in other autoimmune disorders, two or more connective tissue diseases (CTD) may develop concurrently or sequentially in the same patient. In such overlap syndromes ARA criteria must be fulfilled for each of the disease, and the clinical presentation has features of both. However more frequently overlap syndromes only combine some manifestations of more than one CTD, and present a highly heterogeneous group of disorders with prevailing clinical features of SSc.
...
PMID:Scleroderma overlap syndromes. 1059 27
A 14-year-old boy presented with a 3-year history of a skin rash typical of juvenile
dermatomyositis
, and a 2-month history of mild proximal weakness,
myalgia
, and weight loss. A quadriceps biopsy showed perifascicular fibre atrophy, focal necrosis and regeneration, immunohistochemical labelling for HLA-1 on the surface of the fibres, and focal C5-9 deposition in capillaries. Macrophages with diastase-resistant, PAS-positive cytoplasm were present. Ultrastructural studies showed electron dense and membranous debris. The patient's symptoms responded to intravenous immunoglobulin and oral prednisolone. Four months after discontinuing prednisolone, the patient developed cardiac failure, ventricular tachycardia, and a recurrence of his rash. The 16S ribosomal RNA specific for Tropheryma whippelii was identified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis in skeletal and cardiac muscle. The
myalgia
and skin rash responded to prednisolone and oral co-trimoxazole, and the tachycardia is controlled by oral verapamil. This patient appears to have a novel association of juvenile
dermatomyositis
and Whipple's disease.
...
PMID:Dermatomyositis and Whipple's disease. 1067 63
We found a microvascular endothelial abnormality in a biopsy specimen from the gastrocnemius muscle of a patient with gastric cancer, who had severe
myalgia
and angialgia in the calf region with the symptoms of thrombophlebitis. There were no definite findings of inflammatory myopathy in histochemical and immunohistochemical studies. Electron microscopic examination revealed the accumulation of abnormal mitochondria in the subsarcolemmal area, and a fair number of degenerating capillaries. Immunohistochemical analysis of procoagulant or anticoagulant factors revealed marked reduction of thrombomodulin (TM) expression on small vessels and capillaries. Although a reduction of TM on small vessels has been observed around perifascicular atrophic fibers in patients with
dermatomyositis
, histochemical findings of the present patient showed no perifascicular atrophy or severely degenerating fibers. These pathological findings in the patient may be related to a malignant neoplasm and may be one of the causes of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), which is the main complication of malignant neoplasms. Further studies are necessary to determine whether the reduction of TM on the small vessels and capillaries in skeletal muscle is a predictor of some severe condition such as DIC or a rare pathological finding in some special condition such as scirrhous carcinoma with thrombophlebitis.
...
PMID:Microvascular endothelial abnormality in skeletal muscle from a patient with gastric cancer without dermatomyositis. 1107 26
A 41-year-old white man is described with papules of the lower and upper back, the neck and the upper chest, a marked deposition of mucin in the upper reticular dermis, and an IgG lambda monoclonal gammopathy strongly evocative of scleromyxedema (lichen myxedematosus). Additionally, he developed intense
myalgia
, muscle weakness and rhabdomyolysis, which were associated with heliotrope erythema, photosensitivity and an erythematous rash of the dorsum of the hands with Gottron's papules. Muscle biopsy revealed an inflammatory myositis, and
dermatomyositis
was diagnosed. The association of
dermatomyositis
and secondary mucinosis, or muscle involvement in primary papular mucinosis are not rare. However, the association between scleromyxedema and
dermatomyositis
has only exceptionally been reported.
...
PMID:Scleromyxedema (lichen myxedematosus) associated with dermatomyositis. 1125 73
Clinical, electromyographic and pathological features were studied in 18 patients with lipid storage myopathy (group I) and 18 patients with polymyositis and
dermatomyositis
(group II). The results showed a remarkable lower spontaneous activity(SA) incidence (14%) in group I than that (55%) in group II; 46% and 34% short-duration motor unit potentials(MUAPs) with polyphasic potentials and 74% and 71% short-duration MUAPs without polyphasic potentials respectively; the percentages of increased polyphasic MUAPs were same in the two groups. The reduced or pathologic interference patterns accounted for 61% in the group I and 50% in group II. Increased CPK, LDH and HBD were also found in both of them. It is suggested that the lipid storage myopathy may be diagnosed when patients have muscle weakness and
myalgia
with short-duration and low-amplitude and polyphasic MUAPs without or with occasional spontaneous activities, and increased CPK, LDH and HBD.
...
PMID:EMG study in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of lipid storage myopathy. 1171 23
Juvenile dermatomyositis is a rare, chronic multisystemic inflammatory disorder of unknown etiology, characterized by a typical skin rash and proximal muscle weakness. A retrospective study from the medical records of patients diagnosed as juvenile
dermatomyositis
was performed at Queen Sirikit National Institute of Child Health from 1988 to 1998. There were seven cases of juvenile
dermatomyositis
diagnosed according to the criteria of Bohan and Peter. Six cases were female and one case was male. The age of diagnosis ranged from 2.5 years to 11 years. (mean age was 7 +/- 3.6 years). The presenting symptoms were muscle weakness (6 cases),
muscle pain
(2 cases) and skin rashes (4 cases). All of the patients developed proximal muscle weakness of the lower extremities varying from grade 3 to grade 4. The cutaneous manifestations were heliotrope signs (6 cases), gottron's papules (2 cases), photosensitivity (2 cases) and calcinosis cutis (4 cases). Electromyography (EMG) was performed in 6 cases and revealed typical change of myopathic type. Elevated muscle enzymes were noted in all cases. Muscle biopsy was performed in 6 cases and was compatible with myositis. Oral prednisolone (1-2 mg/kg/day) was given in 6 cases and the muscle weakness improved. There was no mortality in this study. Four cases developed calcinosis cutis 1 to 3 years after muscle weakness and did not respond to any treatment. In conclusion, juvenile
dermatomyositis
is a disease which causes chronic disability in children. Early diagnosis and treatment can prevent morbidity and mortality. Calcification at the skin usually occurs after the onset of muscle weakness several months to years after diagnosis.
...
PMID:Juvenile dermatomyositis in Thai children. 1185 94
The idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) are a heterogeneous group of systemic diseases that include the familiar disease entities of
dermatomyositis
(DM), polymyositis (PM), and inclusion body myositis (IBM). A subset of patients has unique autoantibodies which are specific for IIM (myositis specific autoantibodies; MSAs). We studied the clinical and serological characteristics of IIM in 125 Dutch patients. Sera were analysed by immunoblotting, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and immunoprecipitation. The most frequently encountered MSA was the anti-Jo-1 autoantibody (20%), followed by anti-tRNAHis (6%), anti-Mi-2 (6%), and anti-SRP (4%). The presence of certain MSAs was clearly associated with specific clinical characteristics. Anti-Jo-1 and anti-tRNAHis were associated with the anti-synthetase syndrome, anti-SRP with PM with severe
myalgia
and arthralgia and a moderate response to immunosuppressive treatment. A novel finding was the presence of anti-Mi-2, not only in DM, but also in PM. MSAs were frequently present in DM/PM sera, but were hardly ever detected in the sera of IBM patients. The few IBM patients with MSAs demonstrated a significant response to immunosuppressive treatment. It can be concluded that MSAs define specific clinical syndromes within the spectrum of IIM and that they can assist in the differential diagnosis and treatment plan of these enigmatic disorders by virtually excluding IBM by their presence, and by potentially identifying a subgroup of steroid-responsive IBM patients.
...
PMID:Clinical and serological characteristics of 125 Dutch myositis patients. Myositis specific autoantibodies aid in the differential diagnosis of the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. 1195 71
Dermatomyositis
and polymyositis are the two major idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. The Bohan and Peter's criteria are still useful despite the probably different pathogenesis of the two myopathies. Cutaneous manifestations of
dermatomyositis
include heliotrope rash and Gottron's papules. The heliotrope rash, with or without edema, in a distribution involving periorbital skin is very suggestive of the diagnosis. Papules may be found overlying the "kneedle" of the hand or the elbows, knees, feet. Periungueal erythema with telangiectasis were characteristic but not pathognomonic. Scalp involvement is common. Skin lesions of
dermatomyositis
may precede the development of the myopathy and may persist after the control of the myositis. Some patients have an amyopathic
dermatomyositis
with normal muscle-enzyme, magnetic resonance scan and muscle biopsy. Muscle disease affects the proximal muscles, is generally symmetrical and symptoms are fatigue, weakness and sometimes
myalgia
. Proximal dysphagia reflects an involvement of striated muscle of the pharynx or proximal esophagus. Camptocormia reflects a severe involvement of paravertebral muscle. Other systemic features may be seen: pulmonary involvement (mostly interstitial pneumonitis and hypoventilation), arthralgias or arthritis, cardiac involvement, vasculatis and calcinosis particularly in children or adolescents with
dermatomyositis
. Malignant disease is associated with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies with a frequency of approximatively 10 to 15% in
dermatomyositis
and 5 to 10% in polymyositis and is strongly correlated with age, more than 50% of the patient over 65 years old were found to have a cancer. In the absence of malignant disease, the mainstay therapy for
dermatomyositis
and polymyositis is systemic corticosteroids (mostly 1mg/kg). In the lake of response or high dose dependance, intravenous immunoglobulins or immunosuppressive drugs like methotrexate or azathioprine may be discuss. Cyclophosphamide show some effectiveness in interstitial pneumonitis. Cyclosporin might be effective in children, less in adults. The efficacy of tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, leflunomide and anti-TNF therapy need some prospective studies to determine if there are of value in idiopathic inflammatory myositis.
...
PMID:[Dermatomyositis and polymyositis: clinical aspects and treatment]. 1196 87
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