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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (
graft-versus-host disease
)
18,032
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A blood transfusion is a special kind of transplantation, with the transfer of living tissue from one person to another. Reactions can occur with as little as 10 to 15 ml of incompatible blood. The onset of a reaction may be misleading or delayed, and its detection requires astute assessment. Responsibility for recognition of a transfusion reaction lies with the transfusionist, who is often a nurse. The following types of response can occur: hemolytic reactions, transfusion-induced
graft-versus-host disease
, hemoglobinuria, purpura, fever, circulatory overload, thrombophlebitis,
urticaria
, hyperkalemia, asymptomatic hemoglobinuria, pulmonary edema, and allergic and anaphylactic reactions. Critical care nurses need to be aware of the dangers of blood and blood product transfusions and to be prepared to react quickly.
...
PMID:Common reactions to transfusions. 189 31
The localization of transferrin and C3d receptors in various skin lesions and normal appearing skin have been studied on sections with the PAP technique. The transferrin receptor was recognized in the lower epidermis from psoriatic plaques. Here it was more evident than in other inflammatory or hyperproliferative disorders where it was mainly detected on the basal cells. In healthy skin or lesions of lichen planus, scleroderma and ichthyosis the transferrin receptor was not detected in the epidermis. The C3d receptor was in normal skin found on the basement membrane and on elastic fibres in the papillary dermis. The basement membrane was strongly marked in pemphigoid but was not seen in lichen planus and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. In patients with
urticaria
factitia, contact dematitis, psoriasis and Darier's disease the suprabasal cells also expressed C3d whereas in other dermatoses the epidermis was negative. Colloid bodies in lichen planus and
GVH
reactions expressed both the transferrin receptor and C3d.
...
PMID:Detection of transferrin and C3d receptors in the skin of patients with various dermatoses. 197 52
Spontaneous plaque-forming cells (S-PFC) were followed in 67 bone marrow transplantation (BMT) recipients and 41 controls. Patients with no acute
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) had decreased IgA and IgM S-PFC up to 7 weeks after BMT compared with controls. Patients with acute
GVHD
had increased IgG, IgA, and IgM PFC compared with controls and patients without
GVHD
during the first 4 weeks after BMT. The maximum number of S-PFC increased with increasing severity of acute
GVHD
. However, at diagnosis of
GVHD
there was no difference in S-PFC in patients who resolved their
GVHD
or in those who developed more severe
GVHD
. After 6 weeks, patients with acute
GVHD
had significantly decreased IgA and IgM S-PFC compared with normal. No major changes in S-PFC were induced during various infections. However, a patient who developed
urticaria
had a dramatic increase in S-PFC. Patients studied more than a year after BMT had reduced IgM S-PFC compared with controls. It is concluded that S-PFC are reduced after BMT, but markedly enhanced during acute
GVHD
.
...
PMID:Polyclonal antibody secretion during acute graft-versus-host disease. 282 43
The pathogenetic mechanisms underlying common, and less common but severe, adverse cutaneous drug reactions are reviewed. Pharmacogenetic variability may account for a susceptibility to serious drug reactions to sulphonamides and anticonvulsants, as well as to lupus erythematosus (LE)-like syndrome. Exanthematous drug reactions may have an immunological basis. Cell mediated cutaneous drug reactions, including lichenoid reactions, LE-like syndrome, fixed drug eruption, erythema multiforme, Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis, will inevitably involve elements of the skin immune system.
Graft-versus-host disease
provides a useful model for aspects of these drug-induced disorders.
Urticaria
, angioedema, anaphylaxis and anaphylactoid reactions may involve Type I immunoglobulin (Ig)-mediated or Type III hypersensitivity, or may be caused by pharmacological, non-allergic means. Drug-induced vasculitis, serum sickness and the Arthus phenomenon are manifestations of the immune complex disease. Drug-induced pemphigus may involve immune dysregulation, but several thiol-containing drugs are able to cause antibody-independent acantholysis directly.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of drug eruptions: Part I. 748 37
Nonhemolytic transfusion reactions, especially
urticaria
and anaphylactoid reaction, are believed to be due to plasma protein antigen in the blood products. We have investigated the frequency of transfusion reactions in 59 administrated patients who were interviewed after transfusion. 79(21.5%) of 367 transfusions were associated with transfusion reactions. Transfusion reactions were
urticaria
(41%), itching (34%) and fever (17%), and no hemolytic transfusion reaction, transfusion-associated
graft-versus-host disease
or anaphylactoid reaction was observed. We investigated the relationship between the nonhemolytic transfusion reactions and anti-C2,-C4, -albumin and -fibrinogen antibodies. The significant relationship between anti-C2 and -C4 antibodies, but not anti-albumin and -fibrinogen antibodies, were observed with transfusion reactions, especially with
urticaria
and itching.
...
PMID:[Transfusion reactions due to plasma protein antigens]. 930 Dec 96
Transfusion is an inevitable event in the life of many individuals. Transfusion medicine personnel attempt to provide blood products that will result in a safe and harmless transfusion. However, this is not always possible since no laboratory test gives totally accurate and reliable results all the time and testing in routine transfusion services is devoted primarily to the identification of red blood cell problems. Thus, when patients are transfused, several possible adverse effects may occur in the transfused patient even though quality testing indicates no potential problem. These adverse events include infectious complications, hemolytic reactions, anaphylaxis,
urticaria
, circulatory overload, transfusion-associated
graft-versus-host disease
, chills and fever, immunomodulation, and transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI).
...
PMID:Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI). 1531 87
Drugs may elicit a considerable variety of clinical signs, often affecting the skin and the mucous membranes. The most common are maculopapular exanthema,
urticaria
and angioedema. More rarely pustular, vesiculobullous, vasculitic and lichenoid lesions may be observed. Apart from the morphology, also the chronology of the occurrence and the evolution of the single skin lesions and the exanthema are paramount in the clinical diagnosis. Often, the skin is the only affected organ; however, it may herald a systemic involvement of internal organs, such as in severe drug-induced hypersensitivity syndromes or anaphylaxis. Cutaneous manifestations, particularly maculopapular exanthemas have a high incidence among patients treated with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. In many cases, a virus- or drug-induced origin or a combination of both is responsible. However, the transplantation itself may also induce similar skin changes. These exanthemas include most often
graft-versus-host disease
, and rarely engraftment syndrome or eruption of lymphocyte recovery. The elucidation of the underlying cause of the exanthemas occurring in immune compromised patients and the determination of the correct diagnosis remain challenging. An extensive differential diagnosis has to be put forward. This includes several groups of disorders with sometimes very similar cutaneous manifestations. Manifestations form the underlying disease, complications from therapy, infections and drug reactions are the most common differential diagnoses.
...
PMID:Drug hypersensitivity reactions during hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. 2237 27
Beside to traditional use, dermoscopy is more and more used in the assessment of other "general" dermatologic conditions, namely scalp and hair disorders (trichoscopy), nails abnormalities (onychoscopy), skin infections and infestations (entomodermoscopy), and cutaneous inflammatory diseases (inflammoscopy). Among the list of new applications of dermoscopy, the study of inflammatory dermatoses is probably the most promising topic in terms of development and usefulness, considering the large number of such disorders and the frequent problems in their differential diagnosis which the dermatologist encounters in own daily clinical practice. In this paper, we report selected relatively common clinical differential diagnosis issues concerning inflammatory dermatoses (and some clinically related noninflammatory conditions), analysing them by a dermoscopic point of view in order to assist their noninvasive resolution according to the available literature data and our personal experience, including papulosquamous dermatoses (guttate psoriasis, pityriasis lichenoides chronica, pityriasis rosea, lichen planus, lymphomatoid papulosis, classic pityriasis rubra pilaris, papulosquamous sarcoidosis, disseminated forms of porokeratosis and papulosquamous chronic
GVHD
), dermatoses presenting with erythematous-desquamative patches/plaques (plaque psoriasis, eczematous dermatitis, pityriasis rosea, mycosis fungoides, subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus), palmar psoriasis vs. chronic hand eczema, scalp psoriasis vs. seborrheic dermatitis, erythematous-desquamative disorders typically involving the elbows (psoriasis vulgaris, circumscribed juvenile pityriasis rubra pilaris, dermatomyositis/Gottron's sign), itchy papulonodular dermatoses (hypertrophic lichen planus, prurigo nodularis, nodular scabies and acquired perforating dermatosis), common facial inflammatory skin diseases (rosacea, seborrheic dermatitis and demodicidosis), lichen sclerosus vs. morphea,
urticaria
vs. urticarial vasculitis and common inflammatory cicatricial alopecia (discoid lupus erythematosus, lichen planopilaris and folliculitis decalvans).
...
PMID:The practical usefulness of dermoscopy in general dermatology. 2608 12