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)

Patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) suffer from serious and life-threatening infections. These patients often present with pyrexia but without localizing signs. Despite its high sensitivity in identifying focal infection 67Ga citrate scintigraphy lacks specificity; lymphoma and solid tumours may also be imaged. This presents particular problems in HIV-positive patients with pyrexia where the differential diagnosis is often between infection and lymphoma. In an attempt to improve the specificity of radionuclide imaging in these patients a combination of 67Ga citrate and the new agent 99Tcm-labelled human immunoglobulin (99Tcm-HIG) was used in 25 patients who were sequentially imaged with the two agents. Fourteen patients had 29 sites of microbiologically confirmed infection; 67Ga citrate identified 27 sites and 99Tcm-HIG identified 16 sites. Seven of the nine sites visualized with 99Tcm-HIG, but positive with 67Ga citrate, were intrathoracic. Abnormal concentration of 67Ga citrate, not due to infection, occurred at eight sites; five lymphoma, one gout, one recent fracture and one patient with prominent bone marrow islands. 99Tcm-HIG showed increased concentration of tracer in only one of the patients with lymphoma. A combination of 67Ga citrate and 99Tcm-HIG imaging in HIV-positive patients with pyrexia of unknown origin enables a differentiation between infection and lymphoma to be made more readily. The poor sensitivity of 99Tcm-HIG in the chest will limit its sole use in this patient group.
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PMID:Combined 67Ga citrate and 99Tcm-human immunoglobulin imaging in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients with fever of undetermined origin. 192 50

Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) deposition disease is a relatively common condition primarily affecting the elderly. Various clinical presentations ranging from an acute arthritis resembling gout (pseudogout) to fever of unknown origin have been reported. We describe four elderly patients with fever and altered mental status. Each patient underwent an extensive unrevealing work-up. An acute arthritis missed by the health-care team in their initial evaluation was later identified, leading to rheumatologic consultation and subsequent diagnosis of CPPD disease after joint aspiration and synovial fluid analysis. Defervescence and resolution of mental status changes occurred after improvement of the arthritis. Awareness that CPPD disease may present with systemic symptoms, including fever and altered mental status, may assure careful examination of joints and can prevent unnecessary testing and diagnostic delay.
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PMID:Fever with acute arthritis in calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate deposition disease: a missed explanation for altered mental status in elderly patients? 1703 63

A 61-year-old man was referred to our hospital due to a 3-month history of fever of unknown origin, and with right knee and ankle joint pains. At another hospital, extensive investigations had produced negative results, including multiple sterile cultures of blood and joint fluids, and negative autoantibodies. His serum uric acid level was not elevated. However, after admission to our hospital, we performed right knee arthrocentesis, which revealed uric acid crystals. These findings, combined with the results of imaging tests, which showed joint degeneration, led to a diagnosis of advanced erosive gout. After receiving a therapeutic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug and a maintenance dose of colchicine for prophylaxis against recurrence, the patient's symptoms subsided and did not return. Advanced erosive gout should be considered a possible cause of fever of unknown origin and diagnostic arthrocentesis should be performed in patients with unexplained arthritis.
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PMID:Advanced erosive gout as a cause of Fever of unknown origin. 2601 65