Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe a patient with advanced acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) who presented with evidence of carditis, arthritis, and
chorea
in the setting of fever, and serologic evidence for recent streptococcal infection. Several features atypical for rheumatic fever were present and included persistently high titer of antistreptolysin O, the simultaneous occurrence of
chorea
and arthritis, and the presence of
chorea
in a sexually mature adult man. The differential diagnosis of arthritis in a host at risk for human
immunodeficiency
virus should be expanded to include acute rheumatic fever, which may manifest atypical features.
...
PMID:The co-occurrence of acute rheumatic fever and AIDS. 903 6
A 1.5-year-old girl developed high frequency tremors and
chorea
after receiving a dose of 120 mg/kg/d trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) for the treatment of Pneumocystis pneumonia. The child was human
immunodeficiency
virus-negative but immunocompromised because of prolonged immunosuppressive therapy. These symptoms disappeared 3 days after TMP-SMX was discontinued. Pediatricians should be aware of tremors and
chorea
among the potential adverse effects of high doses of TMP-SMX.
...
PMID:Tremors and chorea induced by trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in a child with Pneumocystis pneumonia. 1622 Jan
Delusional parasitosis (DP) is a psychotic condition in which a person has the unshakeable and mistaken belief (delusion) and/or aberrant perception (hallucination) of being infested with parasites. The disorder will be usually classified in a primary DP-group without a detectable cause (so-called pure forms), while secondary DP-groups are associated with general organic conditions, psychiatric illnesses and drugs (substance induced). Etiology and pathophysiology of DP remain however unknown. In the present paper we hypothesize for the first time a decreased striatal dopamine transporter (DAT)-functioning (corresponding with an increased extracellular dopamine-level) as etiologic condition for DP (primary and secondary groups). The DAT as key regulator of the dopamine-reuptake in the human brain is well known (regulation of the extracellular dopamine concentration). It is a presynaptic plasma membrane protein highly dense represented in the striatum. The hypothesis of a decreased DAT-functioning as etiologic condition by DP is revealed in case reports which show that DAT-inhibitors, such as cocaine, pemoline, methylphenidate and other amphetamine-derivatives can induce the clinical expression of DP. Several other associated causes of secondary DP-groups (medications, parkinson,
chorea
huntington, multiple system atrophy, diabetes, cerebrovascular diseases, alcoholism, traumatic brain injury, hyperuricemia, human
immunodeficiency
virus, iron deficiency, schizophrenia, depression) suggest that the clinical expression of DP may be related to a decreased striatal DAT-functioning (blocking, reduced ligand binding, reduced density, reduced activity). Our examined DP-cases (2-females) show means of magnetic resonance imaging a structurally damaged striatum. Furthermore, we presume that by the primary DP-group, the physiologically age-related decline of the DAT-density is pathologically elevated. Based on this hypothesis we show in the present paper the relation between DP and decreased striatal DAT-functioning, trying to give a new insight into the pathophysiologically mechanism involved. The hypothesis provides supporting evidence that increased levels of extracellular dopamine in the striatum of DP-patients is likely to be the result of decreased DAT-functioning and not increased rates of release. The hypothesis can be investigated simply by dopamine transporter imaging in patients with DP.
...
PMID:Delusional parasitosis and the dopamine transporter. A new insight of etiology? 1713 47
Viral infections of the central nervous system often result in a spectrum of movement disorders, ranging from slowness and rigidity to hyperkinetic movements such as
chorea
, ballism, dystonia, and myoclonus. The basal ganglia are especially susceptible to some viruses, because of their intrinsic neurotropism, a predilection of opportunistic infections for the deep gray matter of the brain, and possibly the mounting of an autoimmune response against basal ganglia antigens. Viral encephalitides reviewed here include those caused by the human
immunodeficiency
virus, influenza A virus, the Flavivirus family (such as West Nile virus, Japanese encephalitis virus), and herpes simplex. Hyperkinetic movement disorders associated with prion diseases will also be discussed. The clinical features, etiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of the underlying infections and ensuing movement disorders will be reviewed.
...
PMID:Hyperkinetic movement disorders associated with HIV and other viral infections. 2149 92
Juvenile-Takayasu arteritis (j-TA) is a difficult diagnosis and some patients develop uncommon manifestations and associated diseases that may contribute to the delayed diagnosis. Our aim was to identify the misdiagnoses, the associated diseases and the atypical manifestations observed in a j-TA Brazilian multicentre study. 71 children and adolescents who met the classification criteria for j-TA were included. The misdiagnoses, the associated diseases and the atypical manifestations were evaluated. 19 (26.8%) patients had misdiagnoses. The most common of them was aortic coarctation in six (8.4%) patients, followed by rheumatic fever in five (7.0%) and one patient presented with both former diagnoses. Limb pain (two patients), spondyloarthropathy, juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), spinal arteriovenous malformation, polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) and fever of unknown origin (FUO) were other misdiagnoses. Patients who had misdiagnoses previously to j-TA diagnosis presented a trend to have a longer diagnosis delay. 11 (15.5%) patients had 14 TA-associated diseases, such as pulmonary tuberculosis (5 patients), rheumatic fever (2 patients), spondyloarthropathy, polyarticular JIA, Crohn's disease, Prader-Willi disease, diabetes mellitus, Moyamoya and primary
immunodeficiency
. 7 (9.9%) patients presented 10 atypical manifestations, such as pyoderma gangrenosum, erythema nodosum, myositis,
chorea
, enthesitis, episcleritis, uveitis, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and necrosis of extremities. Our study emphasizes the main misdiagnoses, associated diseases and atypical manifestations that occur in patients with j-TA and warns of the features that may alert paediatricians to this diagnosis, such as constitutional symptoms and elevated inflammatory markers.
...
PMID:Takayasu arteritis in childhood: misdiagnoses at disease onset and associated diseases. 2968 55