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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pulmonary hemorrhage is a rare and often fatal manifestation of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
), and enters the differential diagnosis of diffuse
lung disease
in patients with
SLE
. Pulmonary hemorrhage results from deposit of immune complexes in the alveolar basement membrane, which in turn damages capillary endothelium. Similar immune-complex deposition is present in the glomerular basement membrane of patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
and pulmonary hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hemorrhage in systemic lupus erythematosus. 64 Nov 8
To determine the prevalence of pulmonary dysfunction in lupus erythematosus, 24 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) and 5 patients with discoid lupus erythematosus (DLE) were studied. Diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide was abnormal in 17 (71 percent)
SLE
patients. A restrictive ventilatory defect was present in 6 (25 percent) and arterial hypoxemia in 4 of 23 (17 percent). The mean ratio of forced expiratory volume in one second to forced vital capacity (FVC) was 83 percent. To test for the presence of small airways disease, maximum expiratory flow rate at 50 percent of FVC was measured on air and on an 80 percent helium-20 percent oxygen mixture. Ten patients (5 smokers and 5 nonsmokers) with
SLE
were nonresponders to helium suggesting small airways disease. Pulmonary dysfunction was present in 90 percent (9/10) of
SLE
patients with a previous history of pleuritis and/or pneumonitis, and in 71 percent (10/14) without respiratory symptoms or history of
lung disease
and with a normal chest radiograph. Pulmonary function tests were normal in DLE patients except for an abnormal response to helium and/or mild arterial hypoxemia in two patients, all of whom were smokers. These data indicate that there is a high prevalence of pulmonary function abnormalities in
SLE
including patients without clinically evident pleuropulmonary disease.
...
PMID:Systemic and discoid lupus erythematosus: analysis of pulmonary function. 68 97
1.1. Diffusing capacity of the lungs was measured by using a Mark 4 Resparameter. The single-breath diffusing capacity (D) for carbon monoxide was found to be dependent on the lung volume (VA) during the breath-hold. The same applied to D/VA and to the time constant (tau) for carbon monoxide uptake. This confirms the theoretical considerations and the results of other investigators. This effect should be taken into account especially when making serial determinations of D on the same subject. 1.2. The repeatability of the method was found to be reasonably good; the coefficient of variation was about 4% in normal subjects, as well as in a series of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. 1.3. The effect of the correction for haemoglobin concentration was calculated and tabulated for a set of possible values of DM/Vc and haemoglobin. This correction did not reduce the scatter of D values in normal subjects, but it was adopted for clinical use for theoretical reasons. Caution in its use and interpretation of the correction is emphasized. 2.1. Healthy males and females, 20-69 years of age, were examined to establish reference values for the D measurement. Multiple linear regression equations were calculated stepwise, and equations based on age and height were then used in the clinical prediction equations. Similarly, prediction equations were calculated for clinical spirometry. 2.2. The prediction equations were compared with some published reference values. The equations provide a basis for the evaluation of the effect of various factors, such as age and smoking, in different populations. 3.1. Respiratory function, clinical symptoms and chest x-ray findings were examined in patients with connective tissue diseases. Three different investigations were thus formed: a) consecutive patients (free of
lung disease
other than that possibly due to a connective tissue disease) with definite rheumatoid arthritis (RA, 21 cases),
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
, 18 cases) or scleroderma (SCL, 6 cases) were subjected to detailed tests. b) 129 patients from the Rheumatism Foundation Hospital, Heinola, Finland, were subjected to measurement of diffusing capacity and vital capacity in addition to chest radiography and routine clinical assessment c) the histological findings on 12 patients subjected to a needle biopsy of the lung in order to exclude other conditions were compared with the results of diffusing capacity and x-ray examinations. 3.2. Restrictive impairment of the respiratory function was the general finding in all of these groups. The reduction in diffusing capacity was out of proportion to the reduction in lung volume, however, in most cases with abnormally low values. Low D values were encountered in about half of the RA and
SLE
and in all of the SCL patients in group a, and in 13% of the "average" RA patients studied in Heinola. The typical histological finding in patients with reduced D was a thickening of the alveolar wall...
...
PMID:Single-breath pulmonary diffusing capacity. Reference values and application in connective tissue diseases and in various lung diseases. 107 26
Restrictive ventilatory defects characterized by a reduction in lung volumes and an increase in the ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 second to forced vital capacity occur when lung expansion is limited because of alterations in the lung parenchyma or because of abnormalities in the pleura, chest wall, or neuromuscular apparatus. Few studies have examined pregnant women with carefully defined restrictive lung disorders. The majority of pulmonary diseases have their onset after the childbearing years. When present, most do not alter fertility. Further, these disorders are only a relative contraindication to pregnancy because both the fetus and mother are able to survive without a high risk of increased morbidity or mortality. The clinical course of sarcoidosis is generally not altered by pregnancy. Factors indicative of a poor prognosis in sarcoidosis and pregnancy include parenchymal lesions on chest radiography, advanced roentgenologic staging, advanced maternal age, low inflammatory activity, requirement for drugs other than corticosteroids, and the presence of extrapulmonary sarcoidosis. Pregnancy seldom has a significant effect on the course of the connective tissue diseases. In PSS with significant renal involvement, pregnancy has the potential for poor fetal prognosis and the risk of maternal death due to a lethal progression of renal failure. Worsening of
SLE
is uncommon in pregnancy, and prophylactic therapy is generally not necessary. Most women with LAM are advised to avoid pregnancy or the use of estrogens because of the concern that it will lead to worsening of their disease. The incidence of kyphoscoliosis in pregnancy is relatively high. Premature birth rates are higher than that in the normal population. The risk of progression of the abnormal curve in a scoliotic patient appears low. However, women with unstable scolioses at the time of pregnancy can demonstrate progression of the curve with the pregnancy. Respiratory complications during pregnancy in patients with kyphoscoliosis have been reported but in general are not serious if appropriately managed. As a rule, patients with severe restrictive
lung disease
(i.e., vital capacity < 1 L) should be advised to avoid pregnancy or consider therapeutic abortion. If such a patient decides to continue the pregnancy she should be provided with optimal medical management of her underlying disease and should consider delivery by cesarean section.
...
PMID:Restrictive lung disease in pregnancy. 147 21
Postmortem examination of 21 patients showed a vacuolar myelopathy resembling that associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Underlying diseases included six cases of leukemia or lymphoma, five of carcinoma, three of
systemic lupus erythematosus
, two of chronic
lung disease
, and one each of cadaveric renal transplant, cirrhosis, diabetes, hemophagocytic syndrome, and viral encephalitis. Fourteen patients were on long-term steroid therapy and 10 of these also had immunosuppressive chemotherapy. No patient had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, although one received blood transfusions in 1978. Signs and symptoms consistent with myelopathy included paraparesis in seven patients, ataxia in one, and bilateral extensor plantar reflexes in one. Microscopic examination showed vacuolation in spinal cord white matter primarily located in posterior and lateral columns. Lipid-laden macrophages and axonal changes were proportional to the severity of the vacuolation, which was severe in five patients, moderate in 10, and mild in six. Eight patients had coexistent viral diseases elsewhere in the central nervous system, but viral-associated antigens or genomic material was not found in regions of vacuolated spinal cord white matter. Although the etiology of these myelopathies is unknown, their association with immune suppression and coexistent viral infection of the central nervous system suggests that an opportunistic viral infection may be important.
...
PMID:Idiopathic myelopathies with white matter vacuolation in non-acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients. 186 65
Pulmonary symptoms as the initial or primary manifestation of
SLE
are rare. When pulmonary symptoms are present, they occur most commonly when other organ systems are involved. The absence of skin and renal involvement, the presence of normal serum complement, and the poor response to corticosteroids in this patient are of interest.
Pulmonary disease
produced by childhood
SLE
may represent, as in adults, a subgroup of
SLE
disease. Our report emphasizes the importance of recognizing diffuse interstitial infiltrates as an initial symptom of childhood
SLE
even in the absence of more obvious signs.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus: pulmonary presentation in childhood. 219 71
Several reports have linked the presence of certain serum autoantibodies with particular clinical manifestations of autoimmune disease. For example, the Jo-1 antibody is now established as a marker for fibrosing alveolitis in polymyositis. To investigate the possible association of further autoantibodies or idiotypes with fibrosing alveolitis in autoimmune rheumatic disease a panel of autoantibodies was measured in serum samples from 28 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) (10 with and 18 without lung involvement), 21 patients with scleroderma (12 with fibrosing alveolitis and nine without), and 41 patients with 'lone' fibrosing alveolitis. Antibodies measured were IgM and IgG anti-dsDNA and anti-ssDNA antibody; IgG and IgM anticardiolipin antibody; anti-poly (ADP-ribose) antibody; antibodies to two common idiotypes of anti-DNA antibodies, designated 134 and 16/6; and IgM, IgG, and IgA isotypes of rheumatoid factor. None of these antibodies was specifically associated with lung involvement in
SLE
or scleroderma, but a trend was found towards an increase in all autoantibodies in association with
lung disease
in
SLE
, while the reverse trend was seen in scleroderma.
...
PMID:Autoantibody and idiotype profile of lung involvement in autoimmune rheumatic disease. 232 27
Pleuropulmonary disease in childhood onset
SLE
is common. It may be insidious or present as a life threatening event. North American Indian children in our population appear to be at high risk for severe
lung disease
. Pulmonary symptoms are present in the majority of children at some time during their disease course and pulmonary function studies are abnormal in the majority of patients. The pulmonary manifestations and frequency of occurrence in childhood appear to be similar to that described in adult onset
SLE
. Although pulmonary function studies do not correlate well with pulmonary symptoms, these studies provide objective quantification of the type and severity of the functional lesion. Serial tests may be helpful in monitoring disease activity in childhood
SLE
.
...
PMID:The pulmonary manifestations of childhood onset systemic lupus erythematosus. 235 71
Drug-induced pleural side effects are rare and not usually identified. They may be a fibrous thickening of the pleura or an effusion, generally associated with an interstitial
pneumopathy
. Sometimes the pleural fluid is clear, sometimes hemorrhagic, and of varied cytological composition. The effusion can be uni- or bilateral. In the majority of cases, the pleural involvement stops when the causative agent is withdrawn. The pathology is usually attributed to a hypersensitivity mechanism when the following drugs have been given: nitrofurantoin, salazopyrine, erythromycin, ampicillin, gold salts, phenytoin, methysergide, ergotamine and bromocriptine. Some pleural lesions resemble
lupus
(induced by beta-blockers, hydralazine or procainamide). Amiodarone can cause fibroses or effusions via a toxic or hypersensitivity mechanism. In some instances, the mechanism remains unknown (1 case with imipramine, 1 case of fibrosis with perhexiline, 1 case of effusion with ibuprofen, 4 cases of effusion induced by dandrolene).
...
PMID:[Drug-induced pleural pathology (excluding antineoplastic chemotherapy)]. 269 90
A 47-year-old housewife presented with nonproductive cough, progressive breathlessness and intermittent fever during gold treatment, originally prescribed for seropositive polyarthritis, which later fulfilled the criteria for
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
). An open lung biopsy showed abundant interstitial edema with mononuclear inflammatory cells and some eosinophils, and slight bronchiolitis. The picture was nonspecific but suggestive of hypersensitivity pneumonitis. Electron microscopy revealed splitting and local disappearance of the basal laminae of the alveolar capillaries, venules and alveolar epithelium. This injury was confirmed by immunohistochemical staining for type IV collagen and laminin, the major components of basal laminae. In most macrophages there was lysosomal electron dense granular material, i.e. aurosomes, which gave the spectrum of gold in electron microprobe analysis. After the gold treatment was stopped the pulmonary symptoms gradually decreased during several months and no permanent
lung disease
remained. Whereas the pulmonary manifestation could have been due to her underlying disease we discuss in this study the possibility of its being gold induced.
...
PMID:Bronchiolo-alveolitis with pulmonary basal lamina injury in a rheumatoid patient during gold treatment. 312 4
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