Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (systemic lupus erythematosus)
44,322 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary lymphoma of the spleen is characterized by predominant splenomegaly. Lymphoplasmacytic malignant lymphoma of the spleen, of low malignancy in the Kiel classification, low and intermediate grade in the National Cancer Institute Working Formulation (NCIWF), is rare. It is often associated with a monoclonal immunoglobulin M (IgM). Four patients presenting with primary splenic lymphoma of plasmacytic type associated with a high level of monoclonal IgM and a lupus anticoagulant (LA) are described. This association has not previously been reported. In contrast with the usual heterogeneity of LA, this LA is relatively homogeneous with an important prolongation of the prothrombin time (greater than 18 sec for a control of 12), more prolonged partial thromboplastin time (PTT) of the mixture patient + control plasma than PTT of the patient plasma. Despite the important coagulation abnormalities, none of these four patients has presented any hemorrhagic or thrombotic complications, even during major surgery such as splenectomy. The lupus-like anticoagulant effect ran parallel with the monoclonal IgM. Survival, after splenectomy and chemotherapy, appears to be favourable: three patients are alive with survivals of greater than or equal to 7 years. The follow-up is as yet too short for the last patient.
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PMID:Lupus anticoagulant associated with primary malignant lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma of the spleen: a report of four patients. 174 35

Although nephritis remains a very important clinical disease manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), the focus has shifted from issues of mortality to morbidity. An improved method for measuring renal function is presented, and the value of renal biopsy, specifically the chronicity index, is confirmed as a predictor of end-stage renal disease. Several studies detailing the generally favorable course in SLE patients with renal failure who have eventually required chronic dialysis or renal transplantation are discussed. A high frequency of cardiovascular manifestations, often subclinical, is documented, including abnormalities of ventricular and valvular function. The clinical course and response to treatment of SLE patients with diffuse interstitial lung disease and pulmonary hypertension are outlined. Cases of the unusual gastrointestinal presentation of protein-losing enteropathy in SLE have been described by several authors. The clinical correlates and significance of persistent rheumatoid-like arthritis and radiologic erosive and cystic bony lesions in SLE are discussed. Serologic markers of specific SLE disease manifestations and general predictors of disease activity are evaluated. Complications related to infection, malignancy, and pregnancy are described.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of disease activity, its measurement, and associated morbidity in systemic lupus erythematosus. 175 10

Lupus anticoagulant was present in this case of paraneoplastic scleroderma revealed by hemolytic-uremic syndrome, suggesting that the autoantibody played a significant role in the sequence of events leading to anuria. Reviewing the literature we found several observations of paraneoplastic scleroderma, and in other series cases of scleroderma-linked (and in rare instances cancer-linked) antiphospholipid autoantibodies. Search for antiphospholipid antibodies should be considered in patients with systemic scleroderma as well as in patients with metastatic cancer. Presence of such procoagulant autoantibodies might predict future complications and should influence treatment strategy.
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PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome with anticardiolipin antibodies revealing paraneoplastic systemic scleroderma. 175 45

To reassess the epidemiology and treatment of listeriosis in the United States, we reviewed greater than 120 cases of listeriosis from four medical centers in three geographically separated cities: Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center (LAC-USCMC); Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago; the University of Illinois Hospital, Chicago; and Vanderbilt University Hospital, Nashville, Tennessee. The epidemiological pattern at LAC-USCMC was relatively narrow; more than two-thirds of the cases occurred during the perinatal period. Cases at Vanderbilt University Hospital represented the opposite end of the spectrum; the majority of these occurred in nonpregnant, older adults who had received organ transplants. An intermediate pattern of cases was observed at the two medical centers in Chicago. Potential risk factors included pregnancy, neonatal status, organ transplantation, renal failure, malignancy, systemic lupus erythematosus, steroid therapy, and AIDS (two cases). Antimicrobial agents noted to be effective were, as expected, penicillin and ampicillin; the cephalosporins were ineffective. The mortality associated with listeriosis occurred mainly among premature infants and stillbirths delivered from infected pregnant women and was markedly less among neonates and adults.
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PMID:Epidemiological spectrum and current treatment of listeriosis. 177 44

From 1982 to 1988, 20 patients with pulmonary nocardiosis were diagnosed at the Department of Medicine, Chulalongkorn Hospital University. The infection was found to be common in immuno-compromised hosts particularly in patients who were suffering from lymphoreticular malignancy, systemic lupus erythematosus, nephrotic syndrome, pulmonary alveolar proteinosis and in patients who were receiving corticosteroids. The clinical manifestations were usually nonspecific. Diagnosis of pulmonary nocardiosis in cases who presented with a short duration of fever and productive cough was often delayed because they were considered to have acute bacterial pneumonia. The findings on chest roentgenogram were nonspecific as nonhomogeneous airspace infiltrates, cavitary lesions, nodule, or miliary infiltrates. The complete blood count frequently showed leukocytosis and neutrophilia. The diagnosis of nocardiosis was suspected if the staining of specimens obtained from the lesions showed typically weakly gram-positive and modified acid-fast branching filament organism and the diagnosis was confirmed by culture. The skin and the central nervous system were the most common hematogenous disseminations. Sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim in combination were the drugs of choice. The treatment for a minimum of 6 months was appropriate in order to prevent relapse. Poor prognostic factors in nocardiosis were acute infection, Cushing's disease; and disseminated infection involving the central nervous system.
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PMID:Pulmonary nocardiosis in Chulalongkorn Hospital. 178 75

Photopheresis, the process by which peripheral blood is exposed in an extracorporeal flow system to photoactivated 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP), is an effective new treatment for certain disorders caused by aberrant T lymphocytes. It has become a standard therapy for advanced cutaneous T cell lymphoma and shows promise in the treatment of four autoimmune disorders (pemphigus vulgaris, the progressive systemic sclerosis form of scleroderma, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus) and in reversal of immunologic rejection of transplanted organs. Positive immunologic alterations observed in patients with AIDS-related complex merit further investigation, and preliminary trials in the management of patients with multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis and autoimmune insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus have recently been initiated. The inability of the treatment to meaningfully alter the course of the B cell malignancy, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, suggests that B cell proliferations, at least those involving malignant cells, may be more resistant to this treatment. The mechanism of action of photopheresis is likely to be multifaceted, but at least in experimental systems appears to involve an immunization against the pathogenic T cells, in a highly specific manner. Photoactivated 8-MOP initiates a cascade of cellular events by forming covalent photoadducts with nuclear DNA, with cell surface molecules and possibly with other cytoplasmic components of the ultraviolet exposed leukocytes. For reasons not yet clear, exposure of populations of T cells containing expanding a clone(s) of pathogenic T cells to photoactivated 8-MOP alters these cells so that their reinfusion induces a therapeutically significant immunologic reaction that targets unirradiated T cells of the same pathogenic clone(s). It is suggested that the specificity of the induced immunologic reaction may result, in sequence, from the exquisitely titratable damage that 8-MOP inflicts upon cells of the pathogenic clone(s), the return of these cells to an immunocompetent individual, the removal of the photo-damaged cells from the blood by the reticuloendothelial system and the preferential induction of an immune response against cells of the pathologically expanded clone(s).
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PMID:Photopheresis: a clinically relevant immunobiologic response modifier. 179 5

1. Clinical investigations at the University of Cincinnati have focused primarily on infection control, methods to increase donor-specific unresponsiveness, improvement in immunosuppression, donor maintenance and evaluation, posttransplant monitoring, and reduced-size livers for children. 2. Donor specific unresponsiveness (DSU) can be achieved frequently in recipients of both cadaver donor and living related donor kidneys by giving a single donor specific transfusion and CsA only 24 hours preoperatively with continuing triple immunosuppressive therapy. 3. Prednisone can be withdrawn from almost all patients with no rejection by 1 year with significant improvement in blood pressure, daily insulin requirement in diabetics, total blood cholesterol, and low density lipoproteins (LDL). 4. Oral ketoconazole 200 mg/day can be used safely to block the hepatic metabolism of CsA and reduce the amount of CsA administered by an average of 77-88%. This is of great economic consequence to lower income patients and patients with poor drug absorption. 5. Eighteen patients with SLE who received 23 kidney transplantations had an increase in graft loss in the first 6 months but the rate of graft loss after 6 months was almost identical to other ESRD patients. 6. The Cincinnati Transplant Tumor Registry has data on about 8,000 patients. Except for those with CNS tumors, patients with active cancers should not be used as donors. However, donors with previous curative procedures should not be excluded automatically. Cancers arising in immunosuppressed transplant recipients that have a higher incidence than the general population (expressed as percentage of treated cancers) are: lymphomas (22% vs 5%), lip cancers (7% vs 0.3%), Kaposi's sarcoma (6% vs less than 0.1%), vulva and perineal cancers (4% vs 0.6%), hepatobiliary cancers (2.5% vs 1.0%) and sarcomas (1.8% vs 0.5%). Other cancers have about the same-distribution. 7. Immunologic monitoring during OKT3 therapy is particularly useful in re-treatment and treatment of pediatric liver patients when increased doses of the drug may be necessary. 8. The MEGX test has been found to be a major predictor of primary non-function of the transplanted liver, and it is also useful in predicting the risks of dying from liver disease. 9. Reduced-size livers have been used in 37 patients, representing almost half of all pediatric liver transplants. Survival with reduced-size grafts (91% at 1 year) compared favorably with survival of whole organs (79% at 1 year). The benefit is particularly dramatic in infants with biliary atresia (100% 1-year graft survival in 24 patients, median age 11 months).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Recent contributions to transplantation at the University of Cincinnati. 182 Jan 14

Hydralazine caused site-specific DNA damage in the presence of Cu(II), Co(II), Fe(III), or peroxidase/H2O2. The order of inducing effect of metal ions on hydralazine-dependent DNA damage [Cu(II) greater than Co(II) greater than Fe(III)] was related to that of accelerating effect on the O2 consumption rate of hydralazine autoxidation. Catalase completely inhibited DNA damage by hydralazine plus Cu(II), but hydroxyl radical (.OH) scavengers and superoxide dismutase did not. On the other hand, DNA damage by hydralazine plus Fe(III) was inhibited by catalase and .OH scavengers. Hydralazine plus Cu(II) induced piperidine-labile sites predominantly at guanine and some adenine residues, whereas hydralazine plus Fe(III) caused cleavages at every nucleotide. Activation of hydralazine by peroxidase/H2O2 caused guanine-specific modification in DNA. ESR-spin trapping experiment showed that .OH and superoxide are generated during the Fe(III)- or Cu(II)-catalysed autoxidation of hydralazine, respectively, and that nitrogen-centered radical is generated during the Cu(II)- or peroxidase-catalysed oxidation. The generation of nitrogen-centered radical was also supported by HPLC-mass spectrometry. The results suggest that the guanine-specific modification by the enzymatic activation of hydralazine is due to the nitrogen-centered hydralazyl radical or derived active species, whereas .OH participates in DNA damage by hydralazine plus Fe(III). The mechanism of hydralazine plus Cu(II)-induced DNA damage is complex. The possible role of the DNA damage induced by hydralazine in the presence of Cu(II) or peroxidase/H2O2 is discussed in relation to hydralazine-induced lupus, mutation, and cancer.
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PMID:Free radical production and site-specific DNA damage induced by hydralazine in the presence of metal ions or peroxidase/hydrogen peroxide. 184 78

It has been almost 10 years since the observations on the efficacy of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) in patients with autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura. Over the next decade, IVIG was used in other types of autoimmune diseases. Much work has also been done on gaining a better understanding of the mechanism(s) by which IVIG exerts its effects in these autoimmune diseases. This review examines the proposed mechanisms of action of IVIG and establishes a rationale for the use of this type of therapy in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and other autoimmune connective tissue disorders. Currently, only anecdotal reports are available on the treatment of SLE with IVIG. Nevertheless, studies thus far suggest that IVIG may be useful in selected SLE patients with cytopenias and cutaneous vasculitis and may have a steroid-sparing effect in patients with SLE and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. In SLE patients with renal disease, it should be used cautiously because some patients have worsening of their renal function with IVIG infusions. These preliminary experiences suggest that multicenter controlled trials on the therapeutic use of IVIG in SLE and other connective tissue disorders would be important.
Cancer 1991 Sep 15
PMID:Mechanisms of action of intravenous immunoglobulin therapy and potential use in autoimmune connective tissue diseases. 187 41

A 19-year-old man with Philadelphia-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia treated with interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) therapy for 45 months had systemic lupus erythematosus disease features: malar rash, migratory arthralgias, elevated antinuclear antibodies, elevated antinative DNA, hypocomplementemia, lymphopenia, and proteinuria. After discontinuation of the IFN and initiation of corticosteroids, there was gradual recovery of symptoms, a decline in antinative DNA and antinuclear antibodies to normal levels, and a decrease in proteinuria. The potential association between IFN therapy and the development of systemic lupus erythematosus, and the role of IFN in other autoimmune diseases, is discussed.
Cancer 1991 Oct 01
PMID:Development of systemic lupus erythematosus after interferon therapy for chronic myelogenous leukemia. 189 53


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