Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was the evaluation of the xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibition produced by some synthetic 2-styrylchromones. Ten polyhydroxylated derivatives with several substitution patterns were synthesised, and these and a positive control, allopurinol, were tested for their effects on XO activity by measuring the formation of uric acid from xanthine. The synthesised 2-styrylchromones inhibited xanthine oxidase in a concentration-dependent and non-competitive manner. Some IC50 values found were as low as 0.55 microM, which, by comparison with the IC50 found for allopurinol (5.43 microM), indicates promising new inhibitors. Those 2-styrylchromones found to be potent XO inhibitors should be further evaluated as potential agents for the treatment of pathologies related to the enzyme's activity, as is the case of
gout
, ischaemia/reperfusion damage, hypertension,
hepatitis
and cancer.
...
PMID:2-styrylchromones as novel inhibitors of xanthine oxidase. A structure-activity study. 1236 60
Recent outbreaks of haemorrhagic nephritis enteritis in geese flocks of 3 to 10 weeks in age in Hungary were investigated. Mortality varied between 4% and 67%. Affected birds generally died suddenly. Occasional clinical signs included tremors of the head and neck, subcutaneous haemorrhages and excretion of faeces containing partly digested blood. At necropsy the most frequent findings were a turgid wall and reddish mucosa of the intestines and reddish discolouration of the swollen kidneys, but oedema and haemorrhages of the subcutaneous connective tissue, hydropericardium and ascites were also seen. In subacute cases, visceral
gout
was frequently observed. Histological examination revealed zonal necrosis of the tubular epithelial cells with haemorrhages in the kidney. Other histological findings were serous
hepatitis
with fatty infiltration, necrotizing haemorrhagic enteritis and haemorrhages in the different organs including the brain. Experimental geese infected parenterally with crude liver and spleen homogenates prepared from diseased birds died after 8 to 20 days without premonitory signs, and had typical gross and histological lesions. Attempts to isolate cytopathic virus on different tissue cultures failed. The presence of polyomavirus was proven by polymerase chain reaction. Five isolates were further investigated by analysing their complete VP1 gene sequence. All tested strains were very closely related to each other on the basis of the nucleotide sequence, and they were identical at the deduced amino acid level.
...
PMID:Epizootic occurrence of haemorrhagic nephritis enteritis virus infection of geese. 1527 95
Hyperuricemia is present in approximately 5% of the population, the vast majority of whom are asymptomatic and at no clinical risk. Complications, including renal calculi, uric acid nephropathy and
gout
, occur in a small proportion of patients. Allopurinol, an analog of hypoxanthine, has been widely used in clinical practice for over 30 years for the treatment of hyperuricemia and
gout
. Two percent of patients taking this medication develop a mild exanthema. A syndrome characterized by exfoliative dermatitis,
hepatitis
, interstitial nephritis and eosinophilia has been described previously. Termed allopurinol hypersensitivity syndrome, its etiology is related to the accumulation of one of the allopurinol metabolites, oxypurinol; clearance of oxypurinol is decreased in the setting of renal insufficiency and the use of thiazide diuretics. The term DRESS syndrome (Drug Rash with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms) was recently introduced to describe a disorder associated with various drugs or viral infections and characterized by similar features. The pathophysiology of allopurinol-induced hypersensitivity, clinical presentation and treatment are reviewed.
...
PMID:Allopurinol-induced DRESS syndrome. 1625 49
The health status of Tibetan herders in the Sanjiangyuan region of the Tibetan Plateau, in southwest Qinghai Province, is assessed in this paper. The field study was conducted in 2002 in the context of a broader community development and research framework, the ultimate goal of which is to achieve an effective region-specific programme of preventative health care and training for Tibetan pastoralists. Specifically, the authors analysed the impact of a number of potentially health-related environmental and lifestyle risk factors on self-reported health indicators, with a special emphasis on mother and child health. Several health status indicators were used, including a general morbidity index and a measurement of functional incapacity due to illness in the sample households. Maternal and child health findings were alarming with high rates of miscarriage and infant loss, with no traditional midwives to assist in pregnancy and delivery. Preventable childhood illnesses were also common. Other debilitating diseases included
hepatitis
, tuberculosis, arthritis (
gout
), gall bladder disease, peptic ulcers and back pain. Finally, binary logistic regression analysis showed a significant link between general morbidity and the time it takes to obtain water. The survey findings, validated by the focus groups, indicate a real need for increased accessibility and quality of health service provision to women and men and effective preventative health strategies.
...
PMID:Assessment of the health status and risk factors of Kham Tibetan pastoralists in the alpine grasslands of the Tibetan plateau. 1689 Oct 47
Insulin resistance (IR) in childhood has importance to the understanding and prevention of the growing epidemic of insulin resistance syndrome (IRS) in adults with attendant obesity, type 2 diabetes (T2DM), atherosclerotic diseases, hypertension,
gout
, non-alcoholic, steato-
hepatitis
(NASH), gall bladder disease, nephropathy, polycystic ovarian disease (PCOS), infertility and premature senility. The severity of IR and its' complications in children unfortunately and usually progresses in their pubertal transition to adulthood; affected young children are more likely than adults to have underlying causal monogenic disorders; the sequence of natural history and events give insights into disease pathogeneses, and optimal life style choices that last are best made during the early formative years. Some features of IR in children discussed herein are: a strong tendency to low birth weight for gestational age, adverse effects of adrenarche and therapeutic steroid therapy, predisposition to premature pubarche, acanthosis nigricans, tall stature despite pituitary GH suppression, allergic diathesis, hyperandrogenism and PCOS, dyslipidemia and fatty liver disease, and diagnosis by clinical and biochemical markers of IR including insulin regulated hepatic hormonal binding proteins such as IGFBP-1. The national preoccupation with the "metabolic syndrome" T2DM and obesity, should be appropriately directed to an improved understanding of IR in children and their management, if the looming health crisis in affected adults is to be seriously addressed. The nation is facing its' first generation of children who will be less healthy and die younger than the previous generation (Marks (2005) Presentation to the American Association of Diabetes Educators 32nd Annual Meeting and Exhibition, August 10-13, Washington, DC).
...
PMID:Childhood obesity and insulin resistance. 1770 76
We describe a 66-year-old woman hospitalized with fever, fatigue and hepatopathy. In her medical history arterial hypertension (treated with propranolol and lisinopril), diabetes mellitus type 2 (no treatment before admission) and a
gout
arthropathy were noted wherefore a therapy with allopurinol 300 mg per day has been started 4 months before. Liver biopsy revealed fibrin-ring granulomas, compatible with allopurinol-induced
hepatitis
. Because of persistence of high fever after stopping allopurinol, steroids (1 mg/kg) were started. Under this treatment, she developed pancytopenia and fever. The bone marrow aspiration revealed Leishmania infantum. A second liver biopsy showed amastigotes and a disappearance of the granulomas. The history revealed a travel to Malta 2 years earlier. Despite adequate treatment with liposomal amphotericin B the patient deteriorated and finally died in septic shock.
...
PMID:Hepatitis with fibrin-ring granulomas. 1792
Hyperuricemia is present in approximately 5% of the population. The vast majority is asymptomatic and at no clinical risk. Allopurinol, an analog of hypoxanthine, has been widely used in clinical practice for more than 30 years for the treatment of hyperuricemia and
gout
. Two percent of patients develop a mild exanthema when on this drug, which usually resolves after withdrawal of the drug. A syndrome characterized by exfoliative dermatitis,
hepatitis
, interstitial nephritis, and eosinophilia, termed allopurinol hypersensitivity syndrome, has been described, and its etiology related to the accumulation of one of allopurinol's metabolites, oxypurinol, of which clearance is decreased in the setting of renal insufficiency and the use of thiazide diuretics. The term DRESS (Drug Rash with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms) Syndrome has been recently used to describe an entity presenting with similar features.
...
PMID:Allopurinol-induced recurrent DRESS syndrome: pathophysiology and treatment. 1835 Apr 53
An inhibitor of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), allopurinol, and uricosuric agents, probenecid and benzbromarone, have been used for more than 20 years in the treatment of hyperuricemia and
gout
. However, they are inconvenient in some situations. With regard to allopurinol, the dosage reduction is recommended in patients with renal insufficiency for preventing from rare adverse effect, bone marrow depression. Benzbromarone also has quite rare adverse effect, fulminant
hepatitis
. Recently several new therapies have been developed such as new XDH inhibitors urate transporter (URAT) 1 inhibitor, and a modified recombinant uricase. The dosage reduction of the new XDH inhibitors, febuxostat and FYX-051, is not necessary in patients with renal insufficiency because renal excretion is not main excretory pathway. JTT-552 is a first medicine targeting on URAT1. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) conjugation with recombinant uricase sufficiently reduces the immunogenicity to permit repeated dosing and the clinical trials are ongoing for patients with treatment-failure
gout
and hyperuricemia.
...
PMID:[New antihyperuricemic medicine: febuxostat, Puricase, etc]. 1840 28
This report is the story of the long journey to identify the mechanism of fulminant
hepatitis
by the antigout drug, Benzbromarone. As soon as the 8th
gout
patient prescribed Benzbromarone (Benz) died of fulminant
hepatitis
in 20 years, the letter was sent to doctors identifying it as the causative agent in February 2000. At that time, Benz had been prescribed to 350,000 patients/year for 20 years. Is Benz the real cause of fulminant hepatitis? 1. Benz is a PPARa agonist like fenofibrate, and not a PPARgamma like troglitazone. 2. Troglitazone and Allopurinol have shown apoptosis in a human primary hepatocyte culture with the DNA laddering method, but Benz has not. 3. It was reported in 1979 that benzarone is a metabolite dissociated from two Br bases of Benz, but Walter et al. reported in 1987 that the Br base was not dissociated. Benzarone was not produced by an in vitro study with human S-9 and by an in vivo clinical study of Japanese volunteers. 4. The main metabolite of Benz in humans is 6-OH Benz, which has URAT-1 activity, like Benz. 5. It has been newly discovered that CYP2C9 is only one hepatic metabolism enzyme of Benz. 6. The rate of poor metabolizers of CYP2C9*3 (homozygous) in Japan is 1/2500, meanwhile, the rate of fulminant
hepatitis
at this time is 8 patients in 20 years, with 350,000 patients/year; therefore, it is difficult to view poor metabolizers as the cause. 7. Hepatic injury by Benz is an idiosyncrasy, the same as with many other drugs.
...
PMID:[Drug-induced hepatic injury, the challenge for cause investigation]. 2233 14
An outbreak of Chlamydophila psittaci occurred in an outdoor colony of 63 Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus) at the San Francisco Zoo. Affected penguins presented with inappetence, lethargy, and light green urates. Hematologic and serum biochemical findings were consistent with chronic inflammation. Penguins did not respond to initial supportive and antimicrobial therapy, and 3 died. Necropsy results of the 3 birds revealed hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, and histologic lesions included necrotizing
hepatitis
, splenitis, and vasculitis. Chlamydophila psittaci infection was confirmed by results of Gimenez staining, immunohistochemistry, and tissue polymerase chain reaction assay. As additional birds continued to present with similar clinical signs, the entire colony of penguins was prophylactically treated with a 30-day minimum course of doxycycline, administered orally or intramuscularly or as a combination of both. Despite treatment, 9 additional penguins died during a 3-month period. Pathologic results from these birds revealed renal and visceral
gout
(n = 4), cardiac insufficiency (n = 2), sepsis from a suspected esophageal perforation (n = 2), and no gross lesions (n = 1). During the outbreak, 4 birds presented with seizures, 5 developed dermatitis, and nearly 90% of birds in the colony showed severe keratoconjunctivitis, believed to be related to drug therapy with doxycycline. We report the clinical and pathologic features of Chlamydophila psittaci infection in an outdoor colony of penguins and the associated challenges of treatment.
...
PMID:An outbreak of Chlamydophila psittaci in an outdoor colony of Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus). 2340 34
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
Next >>