Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (encephalomyelitis)
13,017 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the LEW/N rat model, a decreased hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis response to inflammatory and immune mediators confers susceptibility to the development of a variety of inflammatory and immune diseases, including experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. In humans with optic neuritis, early intervention with steroids is associated with a decrease in the number of patients who go on to develop multiple sclerosis (MS). The current study was designed to determine whether patients with MS show evidence of a hypoactive HPA axis. Thirteen patients with MS were studied at baseline and with provocative tests of HPA axis function [ovine CRH, arginine vasopressin (AVP), and ACTH stimulation]. Compared to matched controls, patients with MS had significantly higher plasma cortisol levels at baseline. Despite this hypercortisolism and in contrast to patients with depression who had similar elevations in plasma cortisol levels, patients with MS showed normal, rather than blunted, plasma ACTH responses to ovine CRH, suggesting that the pathophysiology of hypercortisolism in MS is different from that in depression. Patients with MS also showed blunted ACTH responses to AVP stimulation and normal cortisol responses to high and low dose ACTH stimulation. Taken together, these findings are compatible with data from studies of experimental animals exposed to chronic inflammatory stress, which showed mild increased activation of the HPA axis with increased relative activity of AVP in the regulation of the pituitary-adrenal axis. These data do not support a role for hypocortisolism in MS once the disease is established.
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PMID:Multiple sclerosis is associated with alterations in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function. 807 72

Cushing's disease is usually associated with higher mortality rate, especially from cardiovascular causes. Development or exacerbation of autoimmune or inflammatory diseases is known to occur in patients with hypercortisolism after cure. We report for the first time a 34-year old woman with a psychiatric background, who developed four months after the surgical cure of Cushing's disease an acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) presenting initially as a psychiatric illness. We hypothesize that the recent correction of hypercortisolism triggered ADEM and that the atypical presentation, responsible for diagnosis delay, led to the death of this patient.
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PMID:Lethal acute demyelinization with encephalo-myelitis as a complication of cured Cushing's disease. 2085 Jan 7