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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of
myopathy
induced by daily administration of colchicine. A 65-year-old man with
gout
and renal dysfunction had taken 1 mg of colchicine daily for 3 years. The dose was raised to 2 mg per day and two months later, he developed progressive weakness of the proximal limbs and had difficulty in rising from squatting and climbing stairs. Five months after the development of weakness, neurological examination showed proximal muscle weakness without wasting, generalized hyporeflexia and mild sensory loss and dysesthesia of the toes. Serum creatine kinase level was elevated to 788 IU/L and creatinine level was 2.1 mg/dl. Electromyography demonstrated myogenic changes with spontaneous activity. HE preparations of biceps muscle biopsy showed mild increase of variation in fiber size, small vacuoles with and without basophilic rims in some fibers and a few fibers with unevenly stained sarcoplasm. NADH-TR preparations showed numerous moth-eaten and targetoid fibers. The small rimmed vacuoles stained positively for acid phosphatase. Electron microscopy showed accumulation of lysosomes and autophagic vacuoles, and architectural changes and disruptions of myofibrils. After the discontinuation of colchicine, his strength and serum CK level normalized within two masquerading as polymyositis, may occur when customary doses of colchicine are given daily to patients with renal dysfunction.
...
PMID:[Chronic human colchicine myopathy]. 226 97
Tarui disease is a rare, genetically determined glycogen storage
myopathy
caused by the total lack of phosphofructokinase (PFK) enzymatic activity in the muscles and partially deficient enzymatic activity in the erythrocytes. We describe a patient with this disorder, who presented with exercise intolerance, painful cramps, elevation of muscle enzyme levels in the serum, compensated hemolysis with paradoxically elevated hemoglobin levels and
gout
with overproduction of uric acid. This patient had a partial hepatic uridine diphosphoglucuronate-glucuronyltransferase deficiency (Gilbert's syndrome). The coexistence of these two enzymatic deficiencies resulted in a complex clinical picture, especially during and after muscular effort. Screening of the patient's family revealed asymptomatic PFK deficiency in the erythrocytes of both parents and sister.
...
PMID:Phosphofructokinase deficiency (Tarui disease) associated with hepatic glucuronyltransferase deficiency (Gilbert's syndrome): a case and family study. 238 35
Although colchicine has been used for centuries, its neuromuscular toxicity in humans is largely unrecognized. In this report we describe a characteristic syndrome of
myopathy
and neuropathy and present 12 new cases of the condition. Colchicine
myopathy
may occur in patients with
gout
who take customary doses of the drug but who have elevated plasma drug levels because of altered renal function. It usually presents with proximal weakness and always presents with elevation of serum creatine kinase; both features remit within three to four weeks after the drug is discontinued. The accompanying axonal polyneuropathy is mild and resolves slowly. Electromyography of proximal muscles shows a
myopathy
that is marked by abnormal spontaneous activity. Because of these features, colchicine myoneuropathy is usually misdiagnosed initially, either as probable polymyositis or as uremic neuropathy. The
myopathy
is vacuolar, marked by accumulation of lysosomes and autophagic vacuoles unrelated to necrosis or to the mild denervation in distal muscles. The morphologic changes in muscle suggest that the pathogenesis involves disruption of a microtubule-dependent cytoskeletal network that interacts with lysosomes. Correct diagnosis may save patients with this disorder from inappropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Colchicine myopathy and neuropathy. 303 72
There has been an explosion of knowledge in disorders of purine and pyrimidine metabolism during the last 20 years. During this time, more than 10 diseases have been discovered and their metabolic bases studied. Hyperuricemia and
gout
remain the most common clinical disorder. Rarely these disorders are explainable by an inherited enzyme abnormally, such as hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency, phosphoribosyl-pyrophosphate synthetase deficiency, or glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency. The description of immunodeficiency syndromes in association with purine enzyme deficiency has led to a novel area of investigation encompassing the biochemical basis for immune function. Although less information is available concerning the other diseases associated with renal calculi,
myopathy
, anemia, and central nervous system dysfunction, further research will elucidate important metabolic relationships. These will no doubt expand our understanding of the pathogenesis of these disorders and provide innovative therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Disorders associated with purine and pyrimidine metabolism. 609 39
Purine nucleotide degradation refers to a regulated series of reactions by which human purine ribonucleotides and deoxyribonucleotides are degraded to uric acid in humans. Two major types of disorders occur in this pathway. A block of degradation occurs with syndromes involving immune deficiency,
myopathy
or renal calculi. Increased degradation of nucleotides occurs with syndromes characterized by hyperuricemia and
gout
, renal calculi, anemia or acute hypoxia. Management of disorders of purine nucleotide degradation is dependent upon modifying the specific molecular pathology underlying each disease state.
...
PMID:Metabolic basis for disorders of purine nucleotide degradation. 626 3
The presented case concerns a 77-year old man who had been chronically taking colchicine for treatment of
gout
. He was admitted because of a transient ischemic cerebrovascular attack with motor aphasia and complained of preexisting paraesthesias in the lower extremities. Neurological examination revealed a global muscular weakness, absent myotatic reflexes and a diminished sensation. Serum creatine kinase (CK) levels were increased and electromyography showed spontaneous fibrillations in deltoid muscles, positive spikewaves in deltoids and anterior tibial muscles. Motor and sensory conduction velocities were mildly reduced. Nerve biopsy findings were compatible with a chronic axonal neuropathy having produced a significant loss of myelinated axons and also denervation features of unmyelinated axons. In muscle, combined neurogenic and myogenic features were found. The former result from the axonal neuropathy. The latter were mainly characterized by focal myofibrillar disorganisation and accumulation of autophagic vacuoles in muscle fibres. The presented neuromuscular symptoms and signs, the increased CK values, the electromyographic and nerve conduction velocity findings as well as nerve and muscle biopsy observations, are consistent with the diagnosis of colchicine-induced
myopathy
and neuropathy. Furthermore, the disappearance of paraesthesias, normalisation of CK values, and disappearance of fibrillations and positive spike waves in deltoid and anterior tibial muscles on electromyography, after stopping of the colchicine therapy, supported the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Chronic colchicine-induced myopathy and neuropathy. 772 94
Conflicting data exist with respect to the existence and clinical manifestations of a hyperlipidemic arthropathy. Reasonable evidence supports the existence of a migratory polyarthritis similar to rheumatic fever in patients homozygous for type II hyperlipidemia. Although similar complaints have been described in patients heterozygous for this condition, findings have been inconsistent among various reports. It is possible that high lipid levels are required to induce rheumatic complaints, and these are found predominantly in homozygous patients. Even so, rheumatic syndromes appear to be more attributable to periarthritis because evidence of inflammatory arthritis is largely lacking. In contrast, Achilles tendinitis appears to be associated with heterozygous type II hyperlipidemia and presumably is based on lipid deposits within the tendon.
Gout
is an accepted association of type IV hyperlipidemia. In addition, oligoarticular symptoms have been described with type IV hyperlipidemia. However, no consistent clinical entity has emerged. Drugs used in the treatment of hyperlipidemia are associated with a variety of rheumatic problems, including proximal
myopathy
and lupus-like syndromes. The most commonly implicated drugs are the hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase inhibitors and the fibric acid derivatives.
...
PMID:Rheumatic manifestations of hyperlipidemia and antihyperlipidemia drug therapy. 826 12
We report a case of colchicine-induced
myopathy
related to short-term, customary administration of colchicine. A 49-year-old male was admitted because of muscle weakness and myalgia that had developed 10 days previously. He had received renal transplantation 5 years previously and took cyclosporine as an immunosuppressant. Two weeks before admission,
gout
was developed and he took colchicine (1.2 mg b.i.d) by himself for three days. Colchicine-induced
myopathy
was clinically suspected, and colchicine intake was stopped immediately. After that, clinical symptoms gradually improved and serum muscle enzyme returned to normal. In this case, mild renal dysfunction and drug interaction between cyclosporine and colchicine wee suggested to be the precipitating factors of colchicine-induced
myopathy
.
...
PMID:Acute myopathy induced by colchicine in a cyclosporine-treated renal transplant recipient--a case report and review of the literature. 917 24
This article reviews the associations of cancer with rheumatic diseases. Recent epidemiologic data linking the autoimmune connective tissue diseases with malignancy will be emphasized. Reports linking the occurrence of malignancy with rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, idiopathic inflammatory
myopathy
, scleroderma, and vasculitis are described. The effect of immunomodulating drugs in the development of malignancy is discussed. Mechanisms potentially responsible for malignant transformation in the lymphoproliferation of Sjogren's syndrome are described. The relationship of
gout
to cancer as well as direct effects of cancer on the musculoskeletal system is also reviewed.
...
PMID:The association of malignancy with rheumatic and connective tissue diseases. 920 90
Colchicine causes both muscle and peripheral nerve toxicity of subacute onset in patients with renal insufficiency. We report three cardiac transplant recipients, treated with colchicine for cyclosporin A (CyA)-induced
gout
, who developed acute weakness due to colchicine myoneuropathy. The onset of disabling weakness occurred over a 1-2 week period. All three patients had concomitant renal insufficiency and an elevated serum creatine kinase and two elevated CyA levels at the time of presentation. Electromyography revealed features of
myopathy
and motor axonal neuropathy in all three patients. Two underwent muscle biopsy which confirmed the presence of sarcoplasmic vacuoles characteristic of colchicine-induced
myopathy
. All patients rapidly improved with either colchicine dose reduction or drug discontinuation. In conclusion, cardiac transplant recipients treated with CyA and colchicine may be at increased risk of developing colchicine-induced myoneuropathy especially in the setting of concurrent renal insufficiency. In patients with post-transplantation gouty arthritis, other treatment modalities are suggested; and if colchicine is administered, the dose should be reduced, CyA levels should be monitored closely and patients should be assessed for signs of neuromuscular toxicity.
...
PMID:Acute onset of colchicine myoneuropathy in cardiac transplant recipients: case studies of three patients. 949 3
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