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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
SLE
is a multifaceted disease; over the past 20 years, as survival has improved dramatically, new challenges have emerged. It is now clear from the results of studies at several centers that
SLE
is associated with at least a fivefold increased risk of CAD, which is accelerated at its onset and seems to abolish a female premenopausal protection against CAD. Several groups have also found by various techniques that subclinical disease occurs at a frequency of about 35% to 40%. The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis in this context seems to be a complex interaction of factors associated with the disease, its therapy, and traditional risk factors. Indeed, experimental models suggest a synergy of these different dimensions in
plaque
formation. Hypercholesterolemia has been identified as predictive of both future CAD events and sub-clinical disease. This is mainly the case in those patients in whom hypercholesterolemia is a sustained phenomenon. In addition,
SLE
itself seems to be a strong risk factor for CAD over and above the effects of the known traditional CAD risk factors. There is a lot that is still unknown about the pathogenesis of CAD in
SLE
. Current knowledge is sufficient to justify the belief that an aggressive approach to management of traditional CAD risk factors in patients with
SLE
is likely to have a major impact on morbidity and mortality in this population. For this to happen, patients must be educated about this issue and be encouraged to play an active role in lifestyle modifications. In addition, clinicians who care for patients with
SLE
need to assume a primary role in screening and coordinating the management of CAD risk factors in these high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Premature atherosclerosis in systemic lupus erythematosus. 1076 12
The modern view of atherosclerosis is of a chronic inflammatory disorder. In accord with this paradigm, the process of uninhibited influx of fat to the vessel wall results from an 'adequate' response to various forms of injury (i.e. turbulence, infections, modified lipoproteins). This idea has been further extended by several groups, to assume that the atherosclerotic lesion can be the target of an autoimmune mediated attack. According to this hypothesis, the site of initiation of the
plaque
should bear/express the target autoantigen, whereas concomitantly a respective immune response is generated in the periphery. The examples illuminating this notion are beta2GPI as a target autoantigen, HSP60/65 an oxidized-LDL. Herein we present evidence to support the involvement of autoimmune mechanisms in atherogenesis based on the experience from experimental models and human studies.
Lupus
2000
PMID:Autoimmunity in atherosclerosis: lessons from experimental models. 1080 92
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory demyelinating disease of unknown cause that afflicts the central nervous system. MS is typified by a highly clonally restricted antigen-driven antibody response that is confined largely to the central nervous system. The major antigenic targets of this response and the role of antibody in disease pathogenesis remain unclear. To help resolve these issues, we cloned the IgG repertoire directly from active
plaque
and periplaque regions in MS brain and from B cells recovered from the cerebrospinal fluid of a patient with MS with subacute disease. We found that high-affinity anti-DNA antibodies are a major component of the intrathecal IgG response in the patients with MS that we studied. Furthermore, we show DNA-specific monoclonal antibodies rescued from two subjects with MS as well as a DNA-specific antibody rescued from an individual suffering from
systemic lupus erythematosus
bound efficiently to the surface of neuronal cells and oligodendrocytes. For two of these antibodies, cell-surface recognition was DNA dependent. Our findings indicate that anti-DNA antibodies may promote important neuropathologic mechanisms in chronic inflammatory disorders, such as MS and
systemic lupus erythematosus
.
...
PMID:Anti-DNA antibodies are a major component of the intrathecal B cell response in multiple sclerosis. 1117 30
In 1998, a dengue outbreak (serotype 2) occurred in Salta province in Northern Argentina, following the first detection of dengue in the same area in 1997. We classified the serologic response of cases from 1998 as primary or secondary, since the risk of severe disease is greater for secondary cases. We studied 154 cases by
plaque
reduction neutralization and hemagglutination inhibition tests. Thirty-eight cases (25%) were classified as primary serologic responses and 84 cases (54%) as secondary responses. Thirty-two cases (21%) with borderline IgG titers could not be classified. Previous exposure to potentially cross-reacting flaviviruses (Saint Louis Encephalitis [
SLE
] and Yellow Fever [YF] viruses) was analyzed, as a possible cause of the secondary response pattern. Our results indicated that among cases classified as dengue secondary response, 83% could be attributed to previous
SLE
or YF exposure or serologic cross-reactivity. Vaccination against YF virus was at most a minor contributor to the secondary response pattern. The finding of a positive YF serologic result among persons not vaccinated may indicate silent circulation of YF in a region that can support both urban and jungle cycles. Other cases showing dengue secondary responses remained unexplained, suggesting the unrecognized occurrence of a previous infection with other dengue serotypes or of flaviviruses other than
SLE
or YF.
...
PMID:[Secondary serologic responses to dengue epidemic in 1998 in Salta, Argentina, where other flavivirus co-circulate]. 1137 33
Choroidal involvement in
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) occurs infrequently. We report a 45-y-old woman with bilateral chorioretinopathy associated with
SLE
. Diagnosis was performed using indirect ophthalmoscopy, retinal fluorescein angiography (FA) and green indocianin angiography (ICG). In this patient chorioretinopathy and discoid-like
plaque
of the lids represented the only signs of
SLE
progression after 15 y of apparent remission of systemic disease.
Lupus
2001
PMID:Chorioretinopathy and discoid plaque-like lesions of the eyelids as useful indicators of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) progression. 1153 Oct
The dermal-epidermal junction contains a network of structural proteins that link epidermis and dermis. A central component of this complex is the cell membrane-associated hemidesmosomal
plaque
. Formation of autoantibodies against different components of this hemidesmosomal anchoring complex can lead to subepidermal blisters. Such autoantibodies have been frequently used to characterize the target antigens at the molecular level. Autoimmune subepidermal blistering diseases include bullous pemphigoid, pemphigoid gestationis, lichen planus pemphigoides, linear IgA disease, cicatricial pemphigoid, anti-p450-, anti-p200- and anti-p105-pemphigoid, epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, bullous
systemic lupus erythematosus
and dermatitis herpetiformis Duhring. Differences in the clinical picture of these diseases can be attributed, at least in part, to the different specificity of the autoantibodies involved. The autoimmune response is further modulated by inflammatory cells and other inflammatory mediators. Native and recombinant forms of the autoantigens are increasingly used for the diagnosis of these diseases.
...
PMID:[Autoantigens of subepidermal bullous autoimmune dermatoses]. 1191 Aug 57
Cardiovascular diseases secondary to accelerated atherosclerosis are now accepted as a cause of mortality and morbidity in patients suffering from
systemic lupus erythematosus
and rheumatoid arthritis. More recently, atherosclerosis is emerging as one of the most serious complications in the anti-phospholipid syndrome, although large epidemiological studies, such as those performed in
lupus
and rheumatoid arthritis patients, have not been performed up to now. Classical risk factors (dislipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, smoking, etc.) and steroid therapy cannot completely explain the high prevalence of cardiovascular complications in systemic autoimmune diseases. Since the modern view defines atherosclerosis as a chronic inflammatory disorder, it has been suggested that systemic inflammation and soluble immune mediators (circulating autoantibodies, immune-complexes, complement activation products) might play a role in accelerating vessel pathology. The main target appears to be the endothelium because of its ability to switch to a pro-adhesive, pro-inflammatory and pro-coagulant surface in response to these mediators. Recent advances in the knowledge of the pharmacology of statins have indicated that these drugs rather than to be simple cholesterol lowering molecules display a pleiotropic effects on several mechanisms involved in the atherosclerotic
plaque
formation. Their anti-inflammatory activity and particularly their ability to downregulate endothelial cell activation induced by different stimuli strongly suggest their possible use in conditions in which the systemic inflammation and the endothelial activation/damage are thought to represent key pathogenic mechanisms.
...
PMID:Anti-inflammatory and immunomodulating properties of statins. An additional tool for the therapeutic approach of systemic autoimmune diseases? 1240 12
Mosquitoes collected during the epidemic of West Nile virus (WN) in Staten Island, NY, during 2000 were identified to species, grouped into pools of up to 50 individuals, and tested for the presence of WN by using TaqMan reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to detect West Nile viral RNA, Vero cell
plaque
assay to detect infectious virus, and VecTest WNV/
SLE
Antigen Panel Assay. A total of 10,866 specimens was tested in 801 pools. Analysis of results indicated that TaqMan RT-PCR detected 34 WN-positive pools, more than either of the other techniques. The
plaque
assay detected 74% of the pools positive by TaqMan, and VecTest detected 60% of the pools positive by TaqMan. The VecTest assay detected evidence of West Nile viral antigen in 67% of the pools that contained live virus detected by
plaque
assay. A WN enzyme immunoassay performed similarly to the VecTest WN assay. Differences in performance were related to relative sensitivity of the tests. Infection rates of WN in Culex pipiens and Cx. salinarius calculated by the 3 techniques varied, but each estimate indicated a high infection rate in the population. Positive and negative attributes of each procedure, which may influence how and where they are used in surveillance programs, are discussed.
...
PMID:Comparison of vero cell plaque assay, TaqMan reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction RNA assay, and VecTest antigen assay for detection of West Nile virus in field-collected mosquitoes. 1254 86
Cutaneous tuberculosis is a rare form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis primarily occurring in developing countries. The recent increase in the incidence of tuberculosis, especially due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections, has led to a resurgence of extrapulmonary forms of this disease. We describe a case of
lupus
vulgaris in a 33-year-old woman who had a 5-year history of a slowly growing
plaque
on her neck. The lesion was located at the site of surgery repairing the scar resulting from the incision of a subcutaneous abscess during childhood. This lesion was misdiagnosed as bacterial abscess. Histopathologic examination of the
plaque
revealed non-caseating tuberculoid granulomas consisting of lymphocytes, epithelioid and giant cells. Staining for acid-fast bacilli and culture from biopsied tissue was negative. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA, performed on a skin biopsy specimen, was positive. A diagnosis of
lupus
vulgaris developing at the site of a previous misdiagnosed scrofuloderma was made. Conventional antitubercular therapy with rifampicin, isoniazid and ethambutol was administered for 6 months, resulting in resolution of the lesion.
...
PMID:Lupus vulgaris developing at the site of misdiagnosed scrofuloderma. 1270 74
We describe an 11-year-old boy who had several, asymptomatic, erythematous papules in the oropharynx and larynx with recent onset, two cervical lymphadenopathies, and a painless, erythematous
plaque
on the right wrist with a 2.5-year history of slow growth. Histologic examination of the mucocutaneous lesions revealed a submucous infiltrate of lymphocytes and Langhans giant cells in the papules and granulomatous dermatitis in the
plaque
. The cervical lymph node was biopsied and on the surgical scar, an erythematous, nodular lesion developed. A biopsy specimen of this lesion showed tuberculoid granulomas with prominent caseation necrosis, and culture was positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The Mantoux test was strongly positive with a vesicular response. A diagnosis of mucocutaneous
lupus
vulgaris and scrofuloderma secondary to cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis was made. Two months after initiation of antituberculosis therapy there was a complete resolution of mucous lesions and healing with atrophic scars on the neck and wrist. This is a rare presentation in the literature and reminds clinicians that tuberculosis should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of oral cavity lesions.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis in a child presenting as asymptomatic oropharyngeal and laryngeal lesions. 1452 63
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