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)

A 30-year-old black woman with biopsy-proven sarcoidosis and sickle cell anemia had peripheral retinal neovascularization. Elevated fibrovascular proliferations and distal retinal ischemia with nonperfused ghost vessels passing through the area of neovascularization were found at the temporal periphery. No signs of intraocular inflammation were present. Both diseases occur in black patients and should always be considered in the presence of peripheral retinal neovascularization.
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PMID:Peripheral retinal neovascularization in sarcoidosis and sickle cell anemia. 84 45

Postmortem findings within the cardiac conduction system are described from the case of a black woman with sarcoid heart disease who died suddenly. Her clinical course had been characterized by recurring ventricular arrhythmias and bouts of syncope. Both the sinus node artery and the atrioventricular (A-V) node artery were sites of focal fibromuscular dysplasia, which thickened slightly the wall of the former but markedly narrowed the lumen of the latter. Small foci of sarcoid infiltration were present in the sinus node and the A-V node. Fatty replacement within the His bundle was attributable to the probable ischemia caused by narrowing of the A-V node artery. Sarcoid granulomata and infiltration with epithelioid cells were present throughout the ventricular myocardium, but were conspicuously less prevalent in the atria. All the large coronary arteries were normal. Many small coronary arteries in the ventricular myocardium were involved by the sarcoidosis and their lumen were narrowed. These findings and analogous ones reported by others are discussed relative to the pathogenesis of syncopal attacks and sudden death which seem to peculiarly prevalent in sarcoid heart disease.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic correlations. De subitaneis mortibus. XXV. Sarcoid heart disease. 87 28

We describe an 18-year-old white male who developed lower extremity ischemia requiring amputation. He presented at 14 with pulmonary infiltrates, hepatosplenomegaly, fever, rash, adenopathy, uveitis, and arthralgias; clinical and laboratory findings were consistent with Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. Despite adequate treatment with antibiotics, he developed chronic arthralgias and fevers, with rash and pericardial effusion. Criteria for the diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus were not met; juvenile rheumatoid arthritis was diagnosed presumptively. Over the subsequent 4 years he developed lymphadenopathy with biopsy-proven nonnecrotizing granulomas, chronic leg ulceration with granulomatous histology, and acute-onset impending gangrene of the left foot. A biopsy of the posterior tibial artery demonstrated giant cell arteritis. Although the histologic features were consistent with Takayasu's arteritis, complete aortic arteriography was normal. Examination of the amputated leg showed multifocal segmental giant cell arteritis. Clinicopathologic features suggested, but were not fully consistent with, juvenile systemic granulomatosis. His disease may represent a separate sarcoid-like entity in the broad spectrum of vasculitis.
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PMID:Giant cell vasculitis with extravascular granulomas in an adolescent. 205 10

Sarcoidosis is an idiopathic systemic granulomatous disease which occasionally causes fluctuating auditory and vestibular dysfunction. The temporal bones from a 32-year-old man deaf for 5 years from CNS sarcoidosis were examined histologically and compared with other nervous system tissues. It was found that the acoustic, vestibular, and facial nerves were involved in a striking perivascular lymphocytic infiltration resulting in myelin and axonal degeneration. The cochlear and labyrinthine neuroepithelium and stria vascularis had degenerated. It is hypothesized that neurosensory deafness and vestibular dysfunction in sarcoidosis starts as a reversible neuropathy. In some patients, an ischemia secondary to the vasculitis results in irreversible damage to the inner ear neuroepithelium.
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PMID:Histopathology of neurosensory deafness in sarcoidosis. 646 82

A 19-year-old female manifested severe bilateral panuveitis with neovascularization in the iris, optic disc, and retina. Fluorescein fundus angiography showed dye leakage from the optic disc and retinal blood vessels, and a large non-perfused area was present in the peripheral retina of the right eye. Sarcoidosis was diagnosed histologically by conjunctival and skin biopsy. Although the patient was given a large dose of a corticosteroid systemically and received panretinal photocoagulation, a dense vitreous hemorrhage and cataract were apparent in the right eye. The right visual acuity decreased to hand motions. A pars plana lensectomy and vitrectomy were performed. After vitrectomy, inflammation and neovascularization regressed and the visual acuity improved to 20/100. Proliferative membrane obtained during vitrectomy was histopathologically studied by light and electron microscopy. Many new vessels containing neutrophils were observed. A direct effect of inflammation as well as ischemia in the retina may have been the stimulus for the proliferative changes.
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PMID:[A case of sarcoidosis with proliferative retinopathy]. 920 43

Sarcoidosis often involves the liver with mild elevation of serum enzymes and granulomas histologically. Rarely, chronic cholestasis, portal hypertension, cirrhosis, or nodular hyperplasia may be found. The pathogenesis of the portal hypertension and of the cirrhosis are not understood, in part because large samples of tissue have seldom been described. We describe the clinical and anatomic findings of four patients with sarcoid liver disease in whom the whole livers were available for examination. One patient had cirrhosis, one had diffuse nodular hyperplasia, and two had small regions of parenchymal fibrosis. The first two of these had a history of variceal bleeding and healed portal vein thrombosis. One had chronic cholestasis without cirrhosis. We suggest that the cirrhosis and focal fibrosis were caused by ischemia secondary to primary granulomatous phlebitis of portal and hepatic veins. The portal hypertension in two patients was likely secondary to portal vein thrombosis, because cirrhosis was absent at the onset of variceal bleeding.
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PMID:The role of granulomatous phlebitis and thrombosis in the pathogenesis of cirrhosis and portal hypertension in sarcoidosis. 930 82

Sudden cardiac death due to ventricular arrhythmias remains a significant problem. In most studies about 50% of all death related to coronary artery disease and heart failure are sudden and unexpected and are caused by acute fatal ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation. Most of the patients suffering sudden cardiac death have some kind of structural heart disease but 80% of SCD events are associated with coronary artery disease, 10-15% with dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and only small fraction with the less common disorders as valvular heart disease, ventricular dysplasia and cardiac involvement in sarcoidosis or amyloidosis. In some patients the anomaly responsible for sudden cardiac death is not structural but mainly electrical as in patients with the long QT syndrome, WPW syndrome or in patients with a proarrhythmic effect from antiarrhythmic drugs. In this review, data from clinical trials and other studies on on antiarrhythmic therapies have been evaluated in order to determine effective strategies for the prevention sudden cardiac death in high risk patients. Taken together with the mortality data routine prophylactic use of class I antiarrhythmic drugs in the patients survivors of acute myocardial infarction and patients with heart failure is associated with increased risk of death. Conversely beta-blockers are associated with significant reduction in nonfatal cardiac arrest in the short term trials and sudden cardiac death in long term trials. These benefits are likely due to relief ischemia, reduction of heart rate and maintenance favourable autonomic nervous system balance. Overall trial data on amiodarone suggests that this agent is effective in reducing the risk of death in survivors of cardiac arrest, post infarction patients, and patients with heart failure but the routine prophylactic use of amiodarone remains of uncertain efficacy. The physician who considers the use of antiarrhythmic medications in patients with ventricular arrhythmias must be aware of which arrhythmias are malignant or potentially malignant and which are benign and the decision to initiate antiarrhythmic therapy should be based on consideration of the patients absolute mortality risk.
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PMID:[Antiarrhythmic agents in the prevention of sudden cardiac death]. 1036 92

Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) after fetal development is uncommon and is most often seen in patients who have hematologic disorders. EMH unassociated with hematologic disease is rare. After the recent observation of EMH in a myocardial infarct, we sought to determine the frequency and clinicopathologic setting of EMH in myocardial tissues submitted for pathologic examination. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained sections from 805 consecutive myocardial samples (207 surgical specimens, 598 autopsy specimens) were examined retrospectively. The presence of immature erythroid or myeloid cell clusters in intramyocardial capillaries or stroma was considered sufficient for the diagnosis of EMH. Immunoperoxidase studies confirming the nature of the hematopoietic cell infiltrate were performed in selected cases. Foci of EMH (often multiple) were identified in 15 of 207 surgical hearts (7.2%) and in 22 of 598 autopsy hearts (3.7%). Patient ages (exclusive of premature infants) ranged from 2 weeks to 73 years (median, 13 years). Twenty-four of 37 (65%) EMH-positive cases were associated with infarcts in various stages of repair (accounting for 11 of 68 [16.2%] of all infarcts in surgical specimens and 13 of 86 [15.1%] of infarcts in autopsy specimens). Acute infarcts less than 72 hours old, excluding those with acute extension, were not associated with EMH. Viral myocarditis and myocardial hypertrophy with fibrosis accounted for primary diagnoses in the nonischemic, EMH-positive surgical cases, whereas seven of nine nonischemic, EMH-positive autopsy cases involved premature or term infants with no obvious myocardial disease. Another autopsy patient had sarcoidosis with myelophthisic involvement of her bone marrow and represented one of only two cases overall in which a hematopoietic disorder was coexistent or suspected. Myocardial EMH is relatively common after myocardial infarct but is rarely encountered in normal or nonischemic myocardium. Its presence in healing but not early acute stages of infarct suggests that EMH results from inflammation- or repair-associated trophic factors, not from ischemia itself.
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PMID:Myocardial extramedullary hematopoiesis: a clinicopathologic study. 1091 38

Peripheral retinal neovascularization occurs in approximately 10% of cases of sarcoidosis. Its pathogenesis is unknown, but it probably results from retinal ischemia and/or inflammation. In cases of peripheral retinal neovascularization associated with sarcoidosis, sickle cell disease should be considered, even if sarcoidosis is histologically proved: new vessels seen in sickle cell disease and sarcoidosis may have a very similar pattern. We present two cases with histologically proven sarcoidosis who developed peripheral neovascularization: the first one had no associated disease and new vessels were likely to be related to sarcoidosis; in the second case, hemoglobin electrophoresis revealed hemoglobin SC, and provided diagnosis of sickle cell hemoglobinopathy.
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PMID:[Peripheral retinal neovascularization and sarcoidosis: two case reports]. 1194 Dec 57

To clarify the mechanism of muscle fiber destruction in sarcoid myopathy, muscle biopsy specimens were examined from patients with sarcoid myopathy, polymyositis, or dermatomyositis. In sarcoid myopathy, noncaseating granulomatous lesions were located in the perimysium or endomysium or both. Little fiber atrophy, caused by mechanical compression of the granuloma, was seen, and there was no evidence of ischemia-induced changes (i.e., perifascicular atrophy) due to microangiopathy in muscles. Immunoreactivity for membrane-associated cytoskeletal proteins such as dystrophin and merosin was detected homogeneously along the surface of many small granulomas in intrafascicular lesions. These granulomas showed a characteristic phenotypic cellular distribution: CD68(+) and CD4(+) cells were present in the center, and some CD8(+) cells were found at the periphery, indicating typical sarcoid granuloma formation in each muscle fiber. Strong expression of proteases such as cathepsin B, calpain II and ubiquitin-proteasome was observed in macrophages and epithelioid cells but not in lymphocytes in granulomas within muscle fibers or those in the endomysium or perimysium. The expression intensity was stronger in premature-stage granulomas than in late-stage granulomas. Weak expression of these proteases was detected mainly in some muscle fibers invaded by epithelioid cells and macrophages and in a few atrophic or necrotic fibers adjacent to inflammatory foci but not in fibers of fascicles without granuloma formation or in fibers in perifascicular areas. Our results suggest that muscle fiber destruction in sarcoid myopathy is caused mainly by direct invasion of granulomatous inflammatory cells into muscle fibers during the process of granuloma formation rather than by mechanical compression or ischemia. Furthermore, the proteases derived from epithelioid cells and macrophages may play an important role in muscle fiber destruction.
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PMID:Cellular distribution of proteolytic enzymes in the skeletal muscle of sarcoid myopathy. 1207 Jun 62


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