Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (gout)
5,192 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A statistical method was used in the evaluation of alpha-1-antitrypsin, acid alpha-1-glycoprotein, and haptoglobin in patients with rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, periarthritis, arthrosis with inflammation, and primary arthrosis. A highly significant increase was noted in rheumatic fever and rheumatoid arthritis, less so in arthrosis with inflammation and acute gout, while increases were poorly significant for periarthritis and not significant for primary arthrosis. It can be concluded that the determination of these serum sialoglycoproteins serves to distinguish inflammatory and degenerative rheumatism. Haptoglobin proved the most sensitive of the three. Moreover, there was a distinct correlation between ESR and the three indices. It is felt that sialoglycoproteins act as an indirect pointer to acute inflammation, since their degree of increase is related to the formation of inflammatory proteases.
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PMID:[Value and significance of the immunologic determination of various serum sialoglycoproteins in rheumatic diseases of inflammatory nature]. 11 11

Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis is a special form of an erosive, destructive arthropathy. It can be distinguished from other forms of erosive polyarthropathies by the characteristic x-ray appearances, although the final proof of the diagnosis is histological in association with the clinical features and the presence of nodular skin lesions. A case of multicentric reticulohistiocytosis is described. The typical radiological appearances are discussed and the differential diagnosis from other forms of chronic polyarthritis, such as gout, psoariatic arthropathy, Reiter's disease and erosive osteoarthritis is considered.
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PMID:[Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis as a cause of an erosive, destructive arthropathy (author's transl)]. 15 71

It is fairly frequent to encounter hyperlipemia on a rheumatic unit. Firstly the symptoms of certain idiopathic hyperlipemias sometimes include rheumatic changes. The latter include firstly, arthritis and tendinitis, above all observed in Type II hyperlipoproteinemia but also mentionned in Type IV, and secondly, exceptional bony lesions (generally of xanthoma type) which seem to occur exclusively in severe hyperglyceridemia. A few bone and joint diseases, such as gout or aseptic necrosis, frequently coexist with dyslipemia. Furthermore, various diseases may be simultaneously responsible for secondary hyperlipemia and involvement of the locomotor apparatus. Finally, the iatrogenic manifestations of the locomotor system appear mainly due to hypolipemic drugs, e.g. the muscle disorders seen in a few patients treated with clofibrate.
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PMID:[Hyperlipemias and their manifestations in the rheumatological sphere]. 19 31

Needle-shaped crystals of 75 to 250 A diameter have been identified by transmission electron microscopy in clumps within synovial fluid mononuclear cell vacuoles in a variety of joint diseases. These crystals, similar to those previously associated with calcific periarthritis, were seen in acute undiagnosed arthritis and in exacerbations of osteoarthritis where they may be inducing a synovitis similar to that seen with urate and pyrophosphate crystals in gout and pseudogout. By light microscopy purple staining cytoplasmic inclusions or extracellular globules can suggest the presence of clumps of these crystals. Apatite clumps can also occasionally appear as small birefringent chunks or rods and thus might mimic urate or calcium pyrophosphate. Ultrastructural appearance, electron probe analysis, and X-ray diffraction pattern were those of apatite. Experimental injection of hydroxyapatite crystals into dog knee joints produces inflammation supporting the potential role for these crystals in joint disease.
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PMID:Arthritis associated with apatite crystals. 19 97

Naproxen is a propionic acid derivative with analgesic and anti-inflammatory activity which has been widely used in the treatment of rheumatic diseases. Naproxen has been well studied in rheumatoid arthritis and is as effective as aspirin but better tolerated, thus enabling more patients to continue with treatment. For this reason some clinicians now prefer to try propionic acid derivatives, such as naproxen, before aspirin in arthritic patients. In comparative studies with other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as indomethacin, ibuprofen, fenoprofen and others, all drugs were usually of similar overall efficacy although naproxen was sometimes preferred: but as with other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, not all patients will respond to naproxen and in such cases other agents should also be tried until the most satisfactory drug is found for each patient. Naproxen is also effective in degenerative joint diseases of the hip and knee, although further well designed studies are needed to more clearly define its relative place compared with newer drugs such as diclofenac or diflunisal. Results of other comparative studies have shown that naproxen is a suitable alternative to phenylbutazone or indomethacin in ankylosing spondylitis and to aspirin in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Naproxen appears to be effective in reducing pain and swelling in acute gout and is an effective analgesic in patients with pain following surgery or trauma and in pain of dysmenorrhoea. Naproxen has generally been better tolerated than aspirin or indomethacin at the dosages used. Because of its relatively long plasma half-life, naproxen can with convenieice be given twice daily, and there is some evidence that once daily dosage is as effective in rheumatoid arthritis.
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PMID:Naproxen up to date: a review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic efficacy and use in rheumatic diseases and pain states. 38 72

In 108 women over 80 (mean age 88,4 years, extremes 80 and 99 years) hospitalized in a geriatric service for various reasons, radiograms were made of both knees in the frontal aspect on standard film to detect calcinosis of the meniscus and chondrocalcinosis of the joint. In 25 women (23.1%) the radiographs revealed calcinosis of the meniscus with or without chondrocalcinosis. In these 25 cases a lateral X-ray was also made of the two knees, frontal X-rays were made of the pelvis, thumbs and shoulders. In 22 cases (88%) these revealed calcification of the fibrocartilages or articular cartilages in joints other than the knee. Seven of the 25 women had at least one attack of articular inflammation (especially of the knee) resembling a pseudo-gout crisis. The frequency of chronic arthropathies resembling arthroses was high in the 25 patients with chondrocalcinosis: 8 (32%) had an internal or external femoro-tibial arthrosis, as against 11 of the 83 patients (13%) of the same age without chondrocalcinosis, a significant difference. Eleven of the 25 women had signs of femororotular arthrosis on the lateral X-rays of the knees, 5 had coxarthrosis (with in 3 cases a radiological image of fibrocartilaginous or coxofemoral cartilaginous calcification). One women had chronic radiocarpal arthropathy evocative or chondrocalcinosis. Ten had a scaphotrapezoidal arthrosis, 5 arthrosis of the shoulder, 3 with radiological aspect of glenohumeral chondrocalcinosis.
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PMID:[Articular chondrocalcinosis after 80 years of age]. 64 41

During observation of 250 patients with gout in the Institute of Rheumatology in Warsaw in the years 1962-1975 several patterns of joint destruction stages in gouty arthropathy have been recognized on the basis of serial roentgenograms. Histological examination of joints and bones suggests with a considerable probability that the progression of arthropathy depends on the extension of sodium urate deposits in articular tissues. Histological documentation of consecutive stages of joint distruction corresponding to the above mentioned patterns of radiological changes is presented.
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PMID:Consecutive stages of arthropathy progression in patients with gout. 86 Jun 4

The authors confirm the great rarity of joint complications in patients with Kahler's disease. Among the records of 1953 cases the following complications were the only one found: 2 cases of proved articular amylosis, 2 cases of probable articular amylosis, 3 cases of possible articular amylosis, 20 cases of arthropathy that were impossible to classify, 27 cases of compression of the median nerve in the carpan canal, 6 cases of gouty arthritis, and 3 cases of septic arthritis. The data on symptoms obtained in the course of this enquiry are in conformity with the data in the literature. Articular amylosis often takes on the appearance of a polyarthritic syndrome of progressive installation and extension, involving in particular the hands and the wrists, but sometimes involving in a symmetrical bilateral manner the elbows, the shoulders, and the knees. The affected joints are swollen, stiff, and painful. Local signs of inflammation are, however, often absent. The deformations characteristic of rheumatoid arthritis do not develop. The joints do not show radiological signs for most of the time. In addition, it is not possible to detect the rheumatoid factor in the serum. The arthropathies can also assume an oligo-articular topography. Articular discharges are very frequent: they are usually of a mechanical nature. Whatever the clinical appearance, an exact diagnosis can be established only by means of anatomo-pathological examination of the synovial membrane or of certain para-articular amyloid nodules. Myelomas complicated by amyloid articular deposits are often light chain, with only little increase in the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, discrete hyperproteinaemia, moderate medullary plasmocytosis, and rare or limited radiological lesions. The carpal canal syndrome is either isolated or included within the framework of a polyarthropathy. Compression of the median nerve is due to amyloid infiltration into the synovial sheath of the tendons of the finger flexors, proof of which is not always easy. Gout is rare despite the frequency of hyperuricacidaemia caused by renal insufficiency. Septic arthritis is often caused by renal insufficiency. Septic arthritis is often caused by pneumococci to which those with a myeloma appear particularly suceptible.
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PMID:[Articular complications of Kahler's disease. Results of a survey of 1953 cases of plasmocytic myelomas]. 112 74

Gout may present in such atypical forms as "primary-chronic", "masked", or "asymptomatic gout at all stages affecting almost any joint. These uncharacteristic presentations were found in 22 out of 124 patients observed. The disease of 4 patients is described as casuistics. Important conclusions of practical use for early diagnosis and early treatment are drawn. Every arthropathy in a male where the diagnosis is not certain, must be suspected as being due to gout. The diagnosis can be assured by detecting urate deposits in the tissue. Determinations of the serum uric acid level can only be indicative since they are subject to a variety of influences. In early disease the x-ray appearances may be described as normal; in later disease as "degenerative" in the joints or in the vertebral column. In an acute relapse the colchicine-test is of high specifity, but its interpretation may be difficult in the primary chronic forms. The other clinical manifestations of the gout syndrome are of high value for the selection of patients in whom urate deposits in the tissue must be sought.
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PMID:[Uncharacteristic symptoms of the motor apparatus in gout]. 121 Jul 93

Microcrystalline arthropathies of the wrist include three main forms of microcrystalline pathology: gout, chondrocalcinosis and apatite calcifications. Gout of the wrist is now rare and may be missed, particularly in its chronic form, occasionally associated with tophi and large, often asymmetrical erosions on the X-rays. Chondrocalcinosis is frequent and easy to diagnose in the wrist and may be responsible for a very typical arthropathy predominantly involving the radiocarpal joint, while the frequency and specificity of scapho-trapezoid involvement are controversial. Apatite deposits in the wrist involve various tendons and ligaments, especially the tendon of flexor carpi ulnaris, but may also be responsible for intra-articular pathology.
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PMID:[Microcrystal deposit arthropathies of the wrist]. 133 92


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