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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 26-year-old woman with
systemic lupus erythematosus
developed massive rectal bleeding that failed to respond to medical treatment. X-rays and proctoscopy indicated that she had universal
colitis
. She underwent emergency subtotal colectomy because of a rapidly declining clinical course. The small intestine appeared normal. Pathological examination demonstrated a gangrenous large intestine, ischemic ulcerations, and extensive fibrinoid vasculitis that was typical of systemic
lupus
. The patient has had no further gastrointestinal complaints for 2 years since surgery.
...
PMID:Diffuse ischemic colitis associated with systemic lupus erythematosus--response to subtotal colectomy. 71 Aug 67
A 46-year-old woman previously diagnosed as having
systemic lupus erythematosus
presented with severe hypoalbuminemia and anasarca. She was demonstrated to have protein-losing enteropathy without any other active symptoms of
SLE
. Her bowel habit was normal and endoscopic examination revealed non-specific
colitis
and a small ulcer in the duodenum. Serum biochemistry showed an abnormal profile of the serum protein, including severe hyperlipoproteinemia and hyperfibrinogenemia. The process of protein-losing was not selective in terms of the molecular size. All of these symptoms and the abnormalities in laboratory data were improved by corticosteroid therapy.
...
PMID:A patient with protein-losing enteropathy associated with systemic lupus erythematosus. 163 62
A case of urticarial vasculitis syndrome is described in which the gastrointestinal disease was the main clinical manifestation. The gastroduodenal barium meal demonstrated signs compatible with intestinal ischemia which reversed upon medical treatment. The colonoscopy with biopsy showed changes compatible with unspecific
colitis
. The role of reversible acute vasculitis as a pathogenic factor implicated in the gastrointestinal manifestations in this entity is discussed. Although the response to treatment with corticoids and cochicine was not constant, there was good response to dapsone in successive relapses of the disease. Despite some antibodies becoming positive during the third year of follow up, the patient did not fulfill the clinical criteria for the diagnosis of
systemic lupus erythematosus
.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal involvement and the response to dapsone in a case of the urticarial vasculitis syndrome]. 177 Aug 22
A patient is described with stable primary biliary cirrhosis and recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding due to angiodysplasias in the gastrointestinal tract. This is a very rare disease association. In addition this patient showed two other disease associations, not known in the literature. She also suffered from eosinophilic
colitis
and had the
lupus
anticoagulant. These associations have not yet been described in the literature.
...
PMID:Primary biliary cirrhosis associated with recurrent angiodysplastic lesions in the gastrointestinal tract, the lupus anticoagulant and eosinophilic colitis. 196 45
The efficacy and safety of ganciclovir were evaluated for the treatment of 39 life-threatening or sight-threatening cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections in recipients of bone marrow transplants (15 patients), recipients of liver or renal transplants (8 patients), patients with AIDS (11 patients), and one patient each with lymphoma or
systemic lupus erythematosus
. Twenty-eight (72%) of 39 CMV infections improved during ganciclovir therapy, which was associated with elimination of CMV from cultures. Improvement occurred more frequently in patients with viremia, fever, and wasting (8 of 8), hepatitis (3 of 4), retinitis (5 of 5), or
colitis
(1 of 1), than in patients with pneumonia (11 of 21). Only two of nine marrow transplant recipients with CMV pneumonia survived, as compared with nine of 12 other immunosuppressed patients with pneumonia. However, all six marrow transplant recipients who were treated for CMV viremia, fever, and wasting without pneumonia survived. Neutropenia was the only adverse reaction associated with ganciclovir therapy and was more frequent in patients with AIDS (6 [55%] of 11) than in transplant recipients (5 [20%] of 25). These results suggest that ganciclovir is of clinical benefit for immunosuppressed patients with serious CMV infections. For bone marrow transplant recipients, ganciclovir may be more effective when used prophylactically or earlier in the course of CMV infection before the development of pneumonia.
...
PMID:Ganciclovir therapy for cytomegalovirus infections in recipients of bone marrow transplants and other immunosuppressed patients. 284 92
Sulphasalazine, devised by Dr Nana Svartz for the treatment of 'infective polyarthritis', has been used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease for more than 40 years. Many controlled trials have shown that sulphasalazine 4g daily will induce remissions in between one-half and three-quarters of patients with acute attacks of ulcerative colitis. When given in a dosage of 2g daily it will prevent relapses in quiescent
colitis
. Relapses are 5 times more likely in untreated patients. It is less effective in Crohn's disease, where it exerts only a transient benefit in patients with active colonic disease and fails to prevent relapse or recurrence. Sulphasalazine is absorbed from the small intestine, re-excreted in bile and carried to the colon, where its azo bond is split by bacteria to release sulphapyridine, which is absorbed and is responsible for most of the drug's side effects, and 5-aminosalicylic acid, which is the active therapeutic moiety of the drug and exerts a beneficial topical action on the colonic mucosa. Side effects are common but are mainly reversible and not serious. Those related to high concentrations of sulphapyridine and to poor acetylation of the drug include gastrointestinal intolerance, malaise, headache, arthralgia, drug fever, effects on red blood cells and reversible male infertility. More serious, idiosyncratic side effects are skin rashes, leucopenia and agranulocytosis. Rarely, neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, polyarteritis, pulmonary fibrosis, a
lupus
-like syndrome and haemorrhagic
colitis
are produced. It is possible to desensitise most patients with drug-induced skin rashes. A number of less toxic alternatives to sulphasalazine have been devised and are undergoing trial. They either convey 5-aminosalicylic acid in a coated tablet to the colon or, when conjugated to a non-toxic carrier, release 5-aminosalicylic acid by bacterial cleavage there. Sulphasalazine remains a most useful drug in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease after 40 years of use.
...
PMID:Sulphasalazine: a review of 40 years' experience. 287 47
The computed tomography findings of 10 patients with neutropenic
colitis
are described and illustrated. Seven of these patients had leukemia, one had lymphocytic lymphoma, and two had
systemic lupus erythematosus
. All patients had colon wall thickening which was either isodense with the normal bowel tissue or showed areas of intramural low density. Air in the thickened bowel wall was seen in six patients. These computed tomography findings in neutropenic patients with fever, abdominal pain, and diarrhea should suggest the diagnosis in most instances, resulting in prompt treatment of this usually life-threatening entity.
...
PMID:Neutropenic colitis: evaluation with computed tomography. 304 3
A case of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) with focal involvement of the rectum is reported. The lesion roentgenologically resembled a malignant tumour and was resected. Histologic examination disclosed only typical
SLE
changes in a very restricted area, with the remaining gastrointestinal tract unaffected. This appears to be the first report of focal
colitis
as a complication of
SLE
. The case points the importance of suspecting symptoms from any organ system in patients with connective tissue disorders to be manifestations of that underlying pathology.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus with rectal stenosis simulating tumour or diverticulosis. Case report. 310 92
Sera with anti-mitochondrial autoantibodies detected by indirect immunofluorescence and/or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were examined by immunoblotting against pig heart mitochondria. Seven types of reactions were defined, according to the pattern of the labelled bands. Type I sera reacted with 12 bands located within four zones. The most intensively labelled bands were located at 70, 67, 58, 63 and 43 kDa. Other types gave decreasing band numbers. When beef heart mitochondria were used, sera belonging to each of the above types had a profile of labelled bands which sometimes differed from those obtained with pig heart mitochondria. When the chloroform extracted F1-ATPase from beef heart mitochondria was used to prepare the immunoblots, primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) sera with anti-mitochondria antibodies reacted with all the bands although zone A bands were less labelled. Rat liver mitochondria gave seven bands with type I sera among which the 57 and 35 kDa bands were specific for rat liver mitochondria, as shown by absorption tests. Sera of PBC patients were also tested in immunoblotting against rat liver subcellular fractions including mitoplasts, submitochondrial particles, inner membrane, outer membrane, matrix proteins and inter-membrane proteins. Antigenic bands of A and B zones were localized in the inner membrane and/or in the matrix proteins and the 35 kDa band in inter-membrane proteins. The outer membrane gave no reaction. The most frequent anti-mitochondrial autoantibody types in PBC were type II, then I, whilst for chronic active hepatitis type III was the most common. Type V was only seen in a patient suffering from a typical PBC. Some sera from patients with syphilis, collagenous
colitis
or progressive systemic sclerosis labelled one or two bands distinct from those labelled by the PBC sera. Sera from patients with drug-induced hepatitis with endoplasmic reticulum antibodies and with
systemic lupus erythematosus
were generally found negative by immunoblotting.
...
PMID:Use of immunoblotting to characterize the mitochondrial antigens recognized by anti-mitochondrial autoantibodies. 317 Nov 87
Antithrombin V as a pathological inhibitor of coagulation may occur in some rare cases as an accompanying symptom of various basic diseases. In the course of two years, antithrombin V could be identified in 8 patients, with plasmocytoma,
lupus
erythematodes visceralis, glomerulonephritis or
colitis
ulcerosa existing as basic diseases. Clinical findings in patients and those gained in analyzing coagulation, procedures of laboratory diagnostics for determining characteristic properties of antithrombin V as well as the therapeutic way of influencing the activity of antithrombin V are represented.
...
PMID:[Antithrombin V--a rare concomitant symptom in plasmacytoma and autoimmune diseases]. 619 61
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