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)

For arthritis or arthralgia there is no simple system for diagnostic analysis, but whether it is polyarthritis or monoarthritis, acute or chronic in onset, some general rules apply. Common causes include osteoarthritis (primary and secondary) and viral infection. Drugs should be considered, including those inducing gout. It is still imperative not to miss rheumatic fever, sepsis and tuberculosis in assessment. We may encounter more cases of Lyme disease presenting as arthritis.
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PMID:Arthralgia: a diagnostic strategy. 224 64

This investigation was undertaken to define prospectively the clinical characteristics of patients with crystal-documented gouty arthritis simultaneously involving multiple joints. Of 106 consecutive patients with gouty arthritis (GA), 42 (40%) had articular inflammation at 2 or more sites. Comparison of these 42 patients with GA with the 64 patients with GA who presented with monoarthritis yielded the following conclusions: 1) Polyarticular gout represents one end of a generally predictable spectrum of GA, reflecting chronicity associated with poor patients understanding, poor patient compliance, and suboptimal physician management. 2) Polyarticular patients with GA tend to develop attacks of more smoldering onset and increasing duration, while joint involvement tends to occur in an ascending but asymmetrical fashion, with upper extremity joints later added to repeatedly active lower extremity sites. 3) There may be a significant discrepancy between the site (or sites) of the GA patient's chief complaint and clinically involved joints on careful physical examination. 4) Recognition of polyarticular joint involvement increases the number of sites for potential joint and/or tophus aspiration, permitting greater ease of establishing a definitive diagnosis. 5) No single laboratory or synovial fluid value meaningfully distinguishes patients with polyarticular from those with monoarticular gout.
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PMID:Polyarticular versus monoarticular gout: a prospective, comparative analysis of clinical features. 341 75

Ninety-two females with gout are reported. The preliminary ARA criteria for acute gout classified 60% of the patients. Forty patients were diagnosed by finding tophi or urate crystals in the synovial fluid, 16 patients had the ARA clinical criteria for gout, and a further 36 patients were considered to have good clinical grounds for gouty arthritis. Classification of the patients was difficult. A subacute pauci-/polyarthritis was the presenting feature in 64 (70%) patients and in 49 (77%) there was no history of a preceding recurrent monoarthritis. Seventy-two patients (78%) were on diuretics. Tophi were usually indolent and showed little surrounding inflammation. 87% of the patients had an associated disease.
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PMID:Gout in females: an analysis of 92 patients. 401 6

Frozen, unstained sections of synovial tissue of a 38-year-old man with recurrent monoarthritis and hyperuricemia were studied. Negatively birefringent crystals in a spherulite form were detected by using a compensated polarized light microscope. It is postulated that in some cases of gout the first stage of crystallization is in the spherulite form.
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PMID:Spherulite crystals in synovial tissue of a patient with recurrent monoarthritis. 653 12

A retrospective study was carried out to determine the frequency, age of onset, mode of presentation, pattern of joint involvement, and incidence of primary and secondary gout in black patients with gout who were admitted to the King Edward VIII Hospital in Durban, South Africa. Nineteen patients were admitted to hospital with gout over a 5-year period from 1977 to 1981. The admission rate was found to be 4.7/100 000 hospital admissions. Five patients (26%) presented with monoarthritis and 14 patients (74%) had polyarthritis on admission. The joints most frequently involved were the knees (74%), the first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint (58%), and ankles (42%). The serum uric acid (SUA) was increased in 94%, and tophi were noted clinically in 47%. Eight patients (42%) with hypertension were on treatment with diuretics and 7 of these patients had a raised blood urea. These 8 patients (42%) were considered to have secondary gout, while no secondary causes were noted in the remaining 11 patients (58%) who had primary gout.
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PMID:Gout in South African blacks. 674 1

A cross-sectional study of arthritis was conducted in the Rheumatology Department of the Brazzaville Teaching Hospital, Congo. A total of 473 patients with arthritis seen between 1989 and 1991 were subjected to the limited tests available. Gout was the leading diagnosis (n = 83). Septic arthritis (n = 82) and infectious discitis (n = 55) were the most common reasons for admission. Tests often failed to identify the causative organism; Staphylococcus was the most commonly recovered organism. Tuberculous discitis was less common than discitis due to pyogenic bacteria. HIV-related arthritis (n = 57) usually manifested as severe, febrile, asymmetrical, nonerosive, polyarthritis. Cases of rheumatoid arthritis (n = 29) fit the classical description of the disease. In 83 patients with monoarthritis, oligoarthritis, or polyarthritis, no etiology could be identified.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of arthritis in black Africa. Apropos of 473 cases in Congo]. 792 May 24

A 34-year-old woman, 12 weeks pregnant, presented with an acute monoarthritis. Gout was proven by joint aspiration. The gout was multifactorial in origin. Only 2 cases of gout during pregnancy have been described previously.
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PMID:Gout during pregnancy. 796 87

A basic approach to the patient presenting with acute monoarthritis includes a careful history, a physical examination and a selected battery of laboratory tests and radiographs. Because of the possibility of septic joint, rapid assessment and treatment are required. The most common causes of acute monoarthritis are trauma, crystals (gout and pseudogout) and infection. The most important cause of acute monoarthritis is infection, which must be excluded through the use of diagnostic joint aspiration and culture of synovial fluid.
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PMID:Acute monoarthritis: a practical approach to assessment and treatment. 894 Sep 57

The clinical features and laboratory findings of 91 Thai patients (33 males and 58 females) with CPPD crystal deposition disease were studied. Their average age was 71.54 years. Acute monoarthritis and oligoarthritis were the two most common forms of presentation and were seen in 89 per cent of cases. The knee, wrist and ankle were the three most common joints involved. Associated diseases were common and included hypertension (30 cases), renal insufficiency (23 cases), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (17 cases), coronary heart disease (13 cases) and diabetes mellitus (12 cases). Eleven patients had malignancies. Five patients had concomitant gout and CPPD crystal deposition disease. The knee and the wrist were the two most common sites of chondrocalcinosis. Of 67 patients who had thyroid function tested, 2 had hyperthyroidism and 5 had hypothyroidism. Hypomagnesemia was seen in 19 per cent. None had hypercalcemia, hypophosphatasia, hemochromatosis or hyperparathyroidism. In contrast to the western series, acute arthritis in our series responded well to oral colchicine alone.
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PMID:Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition: a clinical and laboratory analysis of 91 Thai patients. 1044 78

A 47 year old man undergoing immunotherapy for metastatic melanoma with autologous dendritic cells pulsed with autologous tumour peptide and hepatitis B surface antigen developed acute left ankle arthritis. Gout and acute infection were excluded, and an autoimmune aetiology or occult metastasis were considered. The arthritis initially subsided with indomethacin, but the symptoms recurred 2 months later, and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated metastatic melanoma of the left talus. Immunohistochemical staining of a cerebral metastatic deposit biopsied 1 week after the onset of arthritis demonstrated T-cell and macrophage infiltration of the tumour. In addition, the patient developed melanoma-specific delayed type hypersensitivity and cytotoxic T-cell responses after vaccination. Thus, the monoarthritis represented an 'appropriate' inflammatory response directed against metastatic melanoma.
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PMID:Metastatic lesions in the joint associated with acute inflammatory arthritis after dendritic cell immunotherapy for metastatic melanoma. 1133 27


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