Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pneumatosis intestinalis in association with connective tissue diseases is an unusual combination whose pathogenesis is not yet understood. Furthermore, steroid medication, often used to treat these diseases, may itself cause pneumatosis. Three cases of scleroderma, systemic lupus erythematosus, and amyloidosis in association with pneumatosis and without prior steroid therapy are presented. The small vessel occlusive pathologic processes in these diseases may cause focal areas of mucosal ischemia resulting in small, perhaps transient ulcerations that allow gas to enter the gut wall from the lumen.
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PMID:Pneumatosis intestinalis in association with connective tissue disease. 101 66

A patient with primary amyloidosis and the nephrotic syndrome had diarrhea and gastrointestinal bleeding probably due to intestinal ischemia. He died with extensive intestinal infarction. The infarction was most likely caused by decreased splanchnic perfusion secondary to the chronic hypotension of the nephrotic syndrome and to amyloid deposition within the walls of the small blood vessels supplying the gut. Although amyloidosis was suspected prior to death, a fixation artifact probably prevented the correct antemortem biopsy diagnosis.
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PMID:Persistent hypotension and intestinal infarction in a patient with primary amyloidosis. 113 38

As patients with amyloidosis and polyneuropathy often have signs and symptoms of circulatory disturbances in the extremities, especially the legs, we have examined such patients and controls with oscillometry and digital pulse plethysmography in order to estimate the occurrence of any arterial circulatory insufficiency. No signs of significant obliterative arterial changes were found. Skin temperature was also determined in fingers and toes during body-cooling and at subsequent indirect heating. At low environmental temperature the skin temperature was higher in patients than in controls. In a few patients there was almost no decrease in skin temperature, despite a long period of cooling and a low rectal temperature. Indirect heating elicited a marked increase in the skin temperature of the toes and fingers of the controls. In most patients this reaction was completely absent in the toes and absent or reduced in the fingers. These deviations can be explained by nerve damage caused by amyloid deposition in the nerves. Amyloid deposits in the wall of small blood vessels may be an additional factor. Maximum blood flow in the anterior tibial muscle after combined ischemia and exercise, investigated with radioactive xenon, was reduced in half of the patients.
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PMID:Peripheral circulation, particularly heat regulation reactions, in patients with amyloidosis and polyneuropathy. 125 99

A 68-year-old man with known coronary heart disease experienced rapidly progressive cardiac dysfunction and was found to have occult cardiac amyloidosis at autopsy. The amyloidosis was undiagnosed during life and initially at autopsy. Marked diffuse involvement of the intramural coronary arteries by amyloid deposits resulted in severe luminal compromise of numerous medium and small vessels. The myocardium proper was virtually spared from amyloid deposits. Amyloid-related coronary narrowing contributed to cardiac ischemia and sudden death. The significance of amyloid coronary disease in this patient relates primarily to the difficulty in considering the diagnosis when other reasons for cardiac signs and symptoms preexist. Also, the adverse effects of amyloid coronary disease may be profound without direct myocardial involvement.
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PMID:The clinical problem of occult cardiac amyloidosis. Forensic implications. 147 28

Endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) is a valuable diagnostic procedure for rejection surveillance in heart allograft recipients and is widely used for evaluation of native heart disease. However, the spectrum and incidence of diagnoses encountered on a heart failure/cardiac transplant service deserve clarification. Of 2300 consecutive EMBs performed during a 2.5-yr period, 79.9% had been performed for rejection surveillance in heart allograft recipients. Of these, 1281 (69.7%) were negative for rejection; 536 (29.1%) were positive (18.9% mild, 9.7% moderate, 0.5% severe); 21 (1.1%) were not interpretable due to insufficient samples. Endocardial lymphocytic infiltrates ("Quilty" effect) were present in 86 (4.7%), ischemia in 12 (0.7%), myocardial calcification in five (0.3%), foreign body giant cells in two (0.1%), valvular tissue in two (0.1%), and liver tissue in one (0.05%). Of the 20.1% of EMBs performed in patients with native heart disease, 298 (64.5%) were abnormal. A total of 239 (51.7%) had myocyte hypertrophy and/or fibrosis, while 37 (8.0%) had active or ongoing myocarditis, two of which were of the giant cell type. Other diagnoses included anthracycline cardiotoxicity in 11 (2.4%), amyloidosis in five (1.1%), hemochromatosis in two (0.4%), healed infarct in two (0.4%), scleroderma in one (0.2%), and foreign body granuloma in one (0.2%). A total of 159 (34.4%) samples had no diagnostic abnormalities; five (1.1%) were insufficient samples. As the number of EMBs performed grows, pathologists must develop expertise in the detection of morphological features pertaining to various cardiac conditions which may have similar clinical presentations.
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PMID:Pathological findings in 2300 consecutive endomyocardial biopsies. 192 75

Primary amyloidosis and myeloma associated amyloidosis causes neuropathy in 10% of the cases, and hemodialysis associated amyloidosis causes carpal tunnel syndrome. However, most severe amyloid neuropathy is observed in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP). FAP type I is an autosomal dominant systemic amyloidosis characterized by sensory dominant systemic amyloidosis characterized by dissociated sensory disturbance and autonomic dysfunction. Amyloid deposition is noted universally in endoneurium of peripheral nerve, especially prominent in sural, sciatic nerve, dorsal root ganglia and sympathetic ganglia. Moderate deposition was also noted in dorsal spinal root. Amyloid was absent in CNS. The number of small myelinated fibers is decreased. Unmyelinated axons are severely depleted and amyloid fibrils are observed around the wall of small vessels. Amyloid fibril protein consists of variant transthyretin (TTR:prealbumin) with one amino acid substitution of methionine-for-valine at position 30. Other types of FAP show another one point mutation in TTR molecule. Transgenic mouse model of FAP was produced by microinjecting cloned human variant TTR gene into mice. Amyloid were demonstrated in thyroid, kidney and intestine and so on, but not in peripheral nerve in these mice. Pathogenesis of neuropathy of FAP is not known, but mechanical compression to the nerve, ischemia and metabolic abnormality may play some role combined to cause of nerve fiber damage. The effect of deposition on physiochemical functions of the neuron and mechanism to accumulate in nervous system of the TTR remain to be elucidated.
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PMID:[Amyloid neuropathy]. 196 18

Review of the English literature revealed 21 cases describing abnormalities on barium enema secondary to amyloidosis of the colon. These cases were categorized as to frequency of specific barium enema findings and distribution within the colon. The most common radiologic findings were luminal narrowing (11 of 21), loss of haustrations (10 of 21), thickened mucosal folds (8 of 21), mucosal nodularity (8 of 21), and ulceration (6 of 21). The most frequent locations of disease within the colon were the descending and rectosigmoid portions (13 of 21). We present a case of primary amyloidosis that demonstrates the findings of bowel wall thickening and luminal narrowing on double-contrast barium enema and computed tomography (CT). Pathologic examination in our case, in addition to similar observations from the literature, suggests that at least a part of the radiologic changes of colonic amyloid can be attributed to bowel ischemia.
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PMID:Amyloidosis of the colon presenting as ischemic colitis: a case report and review of the literature. 201 25

Diastolic heart failure is characterized by increased resistance to diastolic filling of one or both cardiac ventricles. Although some degree of diastolic failure exists in most patients presenting clinically with heart failure, a substantial subset of patients have relatively pure diastolic heart failure with normal systolic function. Diastolic heart failure can be due to structural abnormalities that increase resistance to ventricular inflow, and these structural abnormalities can be extramyocardial (e.g., constrictive pericarditis and mitral stenosis) or intramyocardial (e.g., fibrosis and amyloidosis). In addition to structural abnormalities, physiological derangement of myocardial inactivation and relaxation can contribute importantly to diastolic dysfunction in patients with heart failure. There is mounting evidence that advanced myocardial hypertrophy is associated with increased resistance to ventricular diastolic inflow due to both structural alteration (increased wall thickness and altered collagen matrix) and impaired diastolic relaxation of the hypertrophied myocardium. Physiological mechanisms for impaired relaxation in advanced hypertrophy remain controversial but can include disordered function of myocardial sarcoplasmic reticulum, subendocardial ischemia, and altered adenylate cyclase function. Diastolic dysfunction can play an important role in the genesis of flash pulmonary edema seen in patients with ischemic heart disease because myocardial ischemia is associated with a decline in relaxation rate, increased resistance to early diastolic filling, and in some cases, a striking upward shift in the left ventricular diastolic pressure-volume relation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Diastolic dysfunction and congestive heart failure. 213 51

From 1982 to 1986, 1230 sudden death cases were autopsied in Osaka Medical Examiner's Office. Among them, 810 cases were sudden cardiac deaths (SCD) including coronary heart disease (77%), cardiomyopathy (7%), valvular disease (3%). All SCD cases were dead within 24 hours of the appearance of the fatal symptoms, and most of them (72%) were considered instantaneous death. Many of the fatal symptoms began in bed (31%), at bath (17%), at toilet (8%), or at work (8%). Thirty-four percent of them were thought by themselves or by their families to be healthy before the death. Hypertension (38%), coronary heart disease (13%) and diabetes mellitus (11%) were the major past history recorded. Microscopic observation of the hearts of 200 cases autopsied in 1986 showed various cardiac lesions: hypertrophy, atrophy, degenerations of myocytes, cellular and fatty infiltrations of the interstitium. According to their cardiac lesions and degrees of severity of coronary sclerosis, patients who died suddenly were divided into 8 groups as follows: 1. myocardial infarction (41) 2. myocarditis (6) 3. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (19) 4. chronic ischemia with severe coronary sclerosis (65) 5. chronic ischemia with moderate coronary sclerosis (27) 6. small vessel disease (18) 7. amyloidosis (1) 8. unknown (23). These results suggest that coronary heart disease and hypertension play an important role in SCD.
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PMID:An epidemiologic and histopathological study of sudden cardiac death in Osaka Medical Examiner's Office. 263 29

We retrospectively analyzed the small bowel radiographies, performed by enteroclysis in 73 patients presenting a malabsorption disease. The etiology are: celiac disease (44 cases), abetalipoprotidemia (2 cases), Whipple's disease (7 cases), mastocytosis (1 case), amyloidosis (1 case), ischemia enteritis (4 cases), radiation injury (4 cases), lymphangiectasia (4 cases), Crohn's disease (4 cases) and NH lymphoma (2 cases). With enteroclysis, the radiological diagnosis of malabsorption disease is improved and it is able to differentiate malabsorption diseases based on radiological features: increased or decreased number of folds (celiac disease, mastocytosis, abetalipoprotidemia), nodularity of folds (Whipple's disease) and wall thickness (amyloidosis, lymphangiectasia, ischemic enteritis and radiation injury). It is no possible to differentiate NH lymphoma from Crohn's disease.
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PMID:[Enteroclysis in malabsorption syndrome in adults. Apropos of 73 cases]. 273 73


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