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)

We report a rare case with multiple renal infarction associated with lupus anticoagulant and SLE. A 20-year old woman presented with remitent fever, butterfly rash and, abdominal pain. Laboratory findings showed leukopenia, positive antinuclear and anti-DNA antibodies, and biological false positive for syphilis. Despite a therapy with prednisolone 25 mg/day, the patient showed hypocomplementemia, high titer of anti-DNA antibody and a development of proteinuria and an elevation of serum creatinine. Renal biopsy revealed no abnormalities. She presented abdominal pain with an elevation of serum LDH. Abdominal dynamic computed tomography demonstrated multiple perfusion defects in both kidneys indicating multiple renal infarction. Brain MRI showed multiple micro infarction in the anterior lobes. She was treated with 80 mg of aspirin and have been in remission for two years. Although there have been reported 18 cases with renal infarction associated with antiphospholipid syndrome, this is the first report in Japan. Renal infarction should be differentiated from renal involvement in patients with SLE who have antiphospholipid antibodies.
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PMID:[Multiple renal infarction associated with lupus anticoagulant in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 1043 52

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multisystemic disease with varied clinical manifestations. Focal cortical brain infarcts and CNS infections are the most common neuropathological features reported in most studies. This report describes a 32-year-old woman who had repeated episodes of strokes over 5 years. In view of polyarthritis, oral ulcers, presence of high titres of serum antinuclear antibodies, high titres of double-stranded DNA and strokes, she was treated as SLE. Despite prolonged immunosuppressive therapy with azathioprine and pulse cyclophosphamide, she succumbed to a brainstem stroke. Complete body autopsy showed multiple cerebral cortical and brainstem infarcts with fibrinoid necrosis of the vessel wall. Renal infarction with healed vasculitis and systemic vasculitis involving small vessels was seen. Extensive thrombosis was remarkable by its absence. Active necrotizing vasculitis of cerebral and renal vessels is a rare complication of SLE, which contributed to a fatal outcome in this patient.
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PMID:Active necrotizing cerebral vasculitis in systemic lupus erythematosus. 1802 77

Acute renal infarction is still an underdiagnosed pathology. Most cases are secondary to arterial embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation or other cardiac illnesses; however, a less known etiology is the vascular affection of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Renal infarction in lupus patients normally appears with positive antiphospholipid antibodies or lupus anticoagulant in the context of an antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). This is characterized by a state of hypercoagulability potentially affecting all segments of the vascular bed with thrombosis. A differential diagnosis with lupus nephritis, a very common pathology in SLE patients, must be carried out. We have to suspect this pathology in patients with SLE and APS who come to the emergency department complaining of abdominal pains or a renal colic. We present the case of a 69-year-old woman who was diagnosed of bilateral segmental renal infarction in the context of recently diagnosed SLE with no other vascular manifestations.
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PMID:Bilateral renal infarction in a lupus patient: an unusual pathology. 2376 87