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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Herbal medication has gathered increasing recognition in recent years with regard to both treatment options and health hazards. Pyrrolizidine alkaloids have been associated with substantial toxicity after their ingestion as tea and in the setting of contaminated cereals have led to endemic outbreaks in Jamaica, India and Afghanistan. In Western Europe, comfrey has been applied for inflammatory disorders such as arthritis, thrombophlebitis and
gout
and as a treatment for diarrhoea. Only recently was the use of comfrey leaves recognized as a substantial health hazard with hepatic toxicity in humans and carcinogenic potential in rodents. These effects are most likely due to various hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids such as lasiocarpine and symphytine, and their related N-oxides. The mechanisms by which toxicity and mutagenicity are conveyed are still not fully understood, but seem to be mediated through a toxic mechanism related to the biotransformation of alkaloids by hepatic microsomal enzymes. This produces highly reactive pyrroles which act as powerful alkylating agents. The main liver injury caused by comfrey (Symphytum officinale) is
veno-occlusive disease
, a non-thrombotic obliteration of small hepatic veins leading to cirrhosis and eventually liver failure. Patients may present with either acute or chronic clinical signs with portal hypertension, hepatomegaly and abdominal pain as the main features. Therapeutic approaches include avoiding intake and, if hepatic failure is imminent, liver transplantation. In view of the known serious hazards and the ban on distributing comfrey in Germany and Canada, it is difficult to understand why comfrey is still freely available in the United States.
...
PMID:The efficacy and safety of comfrey. 1127 98
Blood uric acid levels and purine metabolism are affected in many ways after bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Although BMT is usually performed when patients have a low residual disease burden, a proportion of them are still at risk of tumor lysis syndrome, even with limited disease or after nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens; moreover, an alteration in uric acid turnover can also be observed in patients with persistently normal uric acid blood levels. Apart from this obvious complication, multiple physiopathological events occurring after transplantation may derange uric acid homeostasis. Although there is only indirect evidence (derived from obstetric eclampsia and experimental
gout
arthritis), a transplant-related increase in cytokine production (particularly TNF, IL-1 and IL-6) may activate xanthine oxidase which, in turn, may be responsible for a further cytokine bout: deranged cytokine homeostasis is involved in the pathogenesis of some of the main acute post-BMT complications, such as hepatic veno-occlusive disease (
VOD
) and acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD). Hyperuricemia is also a well-known side effect of cyclosporine A, the reference drug for the prevention of post-BMT GVHD, which may affect uric acid turnover by reducing glomerular filtration and/or affecting tubular handling; the available evidence favors the former explanation. Hyperuricemia is found in long-term transplanted patients as part of a metabolic pattern reminiscent of the so-called 'X' or 'metabolic'syndrome related to insulin resistance: there is still no precise interpretation of this post-transplant complication nor any definite data concerning its real incidence and outcome. Hyperuricemia is frequently regarded as a marginal finding in the context of X syndrome, but it is pathogenetically linked to the other component of the syndrome and has proved to be autonomously responsible for tissue and vessel damage. Finally, BMT is a possible therapeutic strategy for some inherited forms of hyperuricemia, particularly Lesch- Nyhan disease, although there is still some perplexity concerning the possibility of preventing the development of neurological impairment.
...
PMID:Hyperuricemia and bone marrow transplantation. 1560 10