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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although peripheral metastases of many malignancies to bone are common, metastases to the hand and carpus are rare. This is the first report of a silent primary malignancy of the lung presenting as a metastasis to the carpal navicular bone. Only eight instances of carpal bone metastases secondary to all tumor sources were revealed in a search of the literature. The presentation of metastatic disease in the hand in an occult malignancy may be deceptive, often mimicking pulp space infection, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis,
gout
, acute rheumatoid monoarticular arthritis, tenosynovitis, or sympathetic dystrophy. These lesions often present as radiolucent lesions; histologic findings are consistent with the tumor of origin. Treatment is palliative and consists of resection or amputation. Radiotherapy should be avoided in the hand due to secondary fibrosis and scarring.
Clin Orthop Relat Res 1984
Sep
PMID:Presentation of malignancy by metastasis to the carpal navicular bone. 646 20
The alcohol intake and drinking behaviour of 24 patients who presented with acute
gout
in a family practice over a 5-year period were compared with these features of a control population matched for sex, age, weight and use of hyperuricemia-inducing diuretics. The average weekly alcohol intake of the group with
gout
was twice that of the control group (p less than 0.02), and a statistically significant relation was found between alcohol abuse and acute
gout
(p less than 0.05). About half of the patients with
gout
drank excessively. Acute
gout
should be considered a possible clinical sign of alcohol abuse.
Can Med Assoc J 1984
Sep
15
PMID:A case-control study of alcohol consumption and drinking behaviour in patients with acute gout. 647 39
Crystal deposition in asymptomatic knee and first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joints has been studied in 31 patients with previously proven
gout
. All had had clinical
gout
in their MTP joints but their knee joints had never been the site of acute
gout
. Knee arthroscopy was performed permitting synovial membrane inspection, photography and biopsy. Crystalline material was seen in 9 knees (28%) and confirmed histologically as monosodium urate (MSU) in 4 (12.5%). Synovial fluid analysis on 26 samples using a polarizing light microscope demonstrated MSU crystals in 4 (12.5%) and calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) in 2 (6%). Fluid aspirated from 27 of the metatarsophalangeal joints revealed MSU crystals in 14 (52%) and no CPPD crystals.
J R Soc Med 1984
Sep
PMID:Crystal deposition in the knee and great toe joints of asymptomatic gout patients. 648 56
Symmetric, sometimes monstrous fat deposits occur in this rare benign disease. They can extend from the neck to the shoulders and from the mandible to the clavicle. The authors have treated 3 patients during the last 4 years. One of them was sent as an inpatient with the diagnosis of lymphadenitis. The aetiology is unknown. Some metabolic disorders (
gout
, diabetes mellitus, hypertriglyceridemia) are discussed as causes. Alcoholism seems to be an important factor. Surgical removal of the fat deposits is the therapy of choice despite the tendency to recur which is described in the literature.
HNO 1984
Sep
PMID:[Madelung's disease--the problem of treating benign growths of the adipose tissue]. 650 Oct 10
Alterations in several specific enzymes have been associated with increased rates of purine synthesis de novo in human and other mammalian cells. However, these recognized abnormalities in humans account for only a few percent of the clinical cases of hyperuricemia and
gout
. We have examined in detail the rates of purine production de novo and purine excretion by normal and by mutant (AU-100) murine lymphoma T cells (S49) 80% deficient in adenylosuccinate synthetase [IMP:L-aspartate ligase (GDP-forming), EC 6.3.4.4]. The intracellular ATP concentration of the mutant cells is slightly diminished, but their GTP is increased 50% and their IMP, four-fold. Compared to wild-type cells, the AU-100 cells excrete into the culture medium 30- to 50-fold greater amounts of purine metabolites consisting mainly of inosine. Moreover, the AU-100 cell line overproduces total purines. In an AU-100-derived cell line, AU-TG50B, deficient in adenylosuccinate synthetase and hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.8), purine nucleoside excretion is increased 50- to 100-fold, and de novo synthesis is even greater than that for AU-100 cells. The overexcretion of purine metabolites by the AU-100 cells seems to be due to the primary genetic deficiency of adenylosuccinate synthetase, a deficiency that requires the cell to increase intracellular IMP in an attempt to maintain ATP levels. As a consequence of elevated IMP pools, large amounts of inosine are secreted into the culture medium. We propose that a similar primary genetic defect may account for the excessive purine excretion in some patients with dominantly inherited hyperuricemia and
gout
.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1982
Sep
PMID:Purine oversecretion in cultured murine lymphoma cells deficient in adenylosuccinate synthetase: genetic model for inherited hyperuricemia and gout. 695 54
Serum urate levels and history of
gout
were obtained from 4 663 men aged 20-44 who were employed by a Parisian government agency. Serum urate levels, mean value 62,8 mg/l (374 mumol/l), did not vary with age but were strongly correlated with weight. For constant weight, urate levels decreased with age. By our definition: typical history of
gout
and either efficacity of colchicine during and attack or serum urate level over 70 mg/l (417 mumol/l) at examination, there were 57 cases of
gout
, giving a prevalence of 1,1% among men 35-39 and 2,0% among men 40-44 years old. Using the definition by the New York criteria which do not include serum urate level, there were 51 cases of
gout
, giving a prevalence of 1,5% in the 35-44 year age group. This is about 3 times the prevalence found by O'Sullivan, using the same criteria, in an American town. The higher serum urate levels in the present study may account for much of this difference. The incidsence of new cases of
gout
was estimated to be 1,6% over 5 years for men 40-44 years old. The site was the great toe in 57% of gouty men with only one attack and in 92% of those with more than one attack. It was not related to the amount of standing or activity at work. Comparison with a study made 7 years earlier showed an augmentation in serum urate values and probably in prevalence of
gout
. These results are discussed in terms of dietary modification over this time period.
Pathol Biol (Paris) 1980
Sep
PMID:[Serum urate and gout in a young male workforce (author's transl)]. 699 29
In a study to assess the effects of the Futuro wrist brace (Adcock-Ingram) in 22 patients with osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, tenosynovitis and
gout
of the wrist, grip and pinch dynamometers were used to measure improvement in function. The study confirmed the efficacy of the wrist brace by demonstrating an average of 23.7% improvement in grip strength over the 10-day study, as well as a significant average improvement in pinch strength of 14.8% (P less than 0.05). In the subgroup of 8 rheumatoid arthritis patients a significant average increase in grip strength of 48.9% (P less than 0.025) was obtained. Both day and night pain was reduced and there was improvement in patients' ability to carry out their daily activities. The brace was found to be comfortable and easy to use.
S Afr Med J 1981
Sep
05
PMID:The effect of the Futuro wrist brace in pain conditions of the wrist. 728 Aug 83
Clinical
gout
and renal failure was seen in a 9-year-old girl. The family tree showed that 9 out of 11 young females in three generations suffered from hyperuricaemia and normal (n = 1), or impaired (n = 8), renal function. One set of twins occurred in each generation and there is only one living male subject. In members with renal failure there was no improvement in renal function after treatment of hyperuricaemia, and in 2 sisters oral contraceptives appeared to precipitate hypertension. This clinical picture may be more common than is generally realised because of failure to compare blood uric acid values with suitable age- and sex-matched controls. The evidence from this family suggests that hyperuricaemia preceded the development of renal failure.
Arch Dis Child 1981
Sep
PMID:Familial gout and renal failure. 729 73
DNA levels were measured in synovial fluids and sera of 106 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA),
gout
, pseudogout, and posttraumatic arthritis (TRA). In synovial fluids, the highest concentration was found in rheumatoid arthritis (mean +/- SE 18 +/- 3 microgram/ml for seropositive and 9 +/- 1 microgram/ml for seronegative variants),
gout
and pseudogout (17 +/- 3 microgram/ml). In contrast, the levels in patients with OA or acute TRA were very low: 0.8 +/- 0.1 microgram/ml an 1.1 +/- 0.2 microgram/ml, respectively. The differences between the means of the first disease group and OA or TRA is statistically significant. A similar pattern was observed for DNA levels in the circulation: in rheumatoid arthritis, the mean concentration was 135 +/- 28 ng/ml and 164 +/- 39 ng/ml for seropositive and seronegative RA, respectively. Again the levels in OA and TRA were much lower, 52 +/- 18 ng/ml and 0 ng/Ml, respectively. The latter are not significantly different from the mean levels of 95 normal, healthy controls (14 +/- 3 ng/ml), whereas the concentration of DNA in the serum of RA patients is significantly higher than in OA, TRA, or normal controls. Serial determinations of DNA and other criteria of disease activity (leukocytes and protein levels in synovial fluid, blood sedimentation rate) in individual patients revealed a strong correlation of elevated values with active episodes. THe results suggest that these parameters reflect tissue damage.
Arthritis Rheum 1981
Sep
PMID:DNA in synovial fluid and the circulation of patients with arthritis. 730 36
The effect of intracellular and extracellular pH on potassium conductance (GK) was examined in isolated amphibian (Rana pipiens) proximal tubule cells under whole cell voltage clamp conditions. Internal perfusion of the patch pipette was used to precisely control intracellular pH. In the region of normal resting potential (-51 +/- 3 mV), raising cell pH from 6.5 to 8.0 did not significantly increase GK (1.1 +/- 0.3 vs. 1.3 +/- 0.3 nS; P > 0.08, n = 8). Similar elevations in external (bath) pH had even less of an effect on GK. In contrast, when cells were voltage clamped to 30 mV more negative than the resting potential, raising internal pH from 6.5 to 8.0 did increase GK from 1.05 +/- 0.3 to 1.8 +/- 0.5 nS (P < 0.04; n = 8). These results suggest that modest changes in pH have little effect on GK, except at large negative potentials. In the process of examining the pH dependence of GK, a slowly activating, voltage-dependent conductance of 7.5 +/- 1 nS (n = 20; for 20 microns cells) was observed during cell depolarization. Although the instantaneous current-voltage relation of this conductance was linear, its marked voltage dependence produced an apparent steady-state rectification, with Gm = 0.5 +/- 0.2 nS and
Gout
= 9.0 +/- 1 nS (n = 11). Outward current was reversibly blocked by 3 mM Cu, Cd, or Co. In the absence of Na, K, and Ca (and only trace amounts of Cl), rapid changes in bath pH from 6.5 to 8.0 shifted the steady-state reversal potential (Erev) by -37 +/- 4 mV (n = 9) and the instantaneous Erev by -56 +/- 4 mV (n = 9). These shifts in Erev were consistent with a hydrogen ion conductance (GH), similar to what has been reported for snail neuron, neutrophils, alveolar epithelial cells, and phagocytes. Since the magnitude of this GH would be insignificant at resting cell pH and membrane potential, its role in renal proximal tubule under normal conditions is somewhat obscure. Nonetheless, in pathological situations, GH could function to prevent acid overload during any process that depolarizes the cell, such as low temperature or metabolic inhibition.
Am J Physiol 1995
Sep
PMID:Effect of pH on potassium and proton conductance in renal proximal tubule. 757 77
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