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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (systemic lupus erythematosus)
44,322 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eleven patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) also had headaches and/or visual hallucinations typical of those found in migraine. These migrainous symptoms were commonly associated with exacerbations of SLE and abated as disease activity subsided. In some cases corticosteroids were more effective than conventional antimigraine therapy in controlling headaches and scotomas. The data suggest that migraine-like phenomena may arise as a result of vascular dysfunction in SLE.
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PMID:Migrainous phenomena in systemic lupus erythematosus. 62 96

We examined the prevalence of the antibodies to cardiolipin measured by solid-phase enzyme immunoassay during a prospective study of patients with subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus (SCLE). Seven of 44 (16%) consecutive patients with SCLE had positive anticardiolipin antibodies; of these only three satisfied the American Rheumatism Association's revised criteria for the classification of systemic lupus erythematosus. Clinical findings probably associated with the positive anticardiolipin antibodies were found in four cases, including clotting abnormalities, thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia, livedo reticularis, chilblain lupus erythematosus lesions, migraine, leg venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism after surgery, and spontaneous abortion. Our data suggest that it is reasonable to screen SCLE patients for these antibodies to confirm the presence of the antiphospholipid syndrome.
Lupus 1992 Aug
PMID:Prevalence of anticardiolipin antibodies in subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus. 130 91

As many as 30 patients suffering from systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with the clinical signs of central nervous system derangement were examined. The mean age of the patients was 31.1 years. Using EIA, antibodies against cardiolipin (a-CL) were detected in 21 patients (70%). A-CL were revealed in all the patients with cerebral circulation impairment (CCI), choreic hyperkinesis, and convulsive syndrome. A-CL were discovered in 12 out of 18 SLE patients suffering from migraine-like headaches and in 4 out of 5 patients with mental disorders. Antibodies reacting with cardiolipin were mostly represented by the IgM isotype (80%) whereas a-CL-IgG were only identified in 13% of the patients, being associated in all the cases with a-CL-IgM. The high level of a-CL-IgG in blood serum was recorded in patients with the gravest patterns of nervous system derangement: CCI, occlusion of the retinal artery, psycho-organic and convulsive syndromes. All these patients demonstrated generalized reticular livedo. The high levels of a-CL-IgM were observed in SLE patients with choreic hyperkinesis and migraine-like headaches. Thus, the studies made it possible to trace the relationship between the development of certain neurological disorders (CCI, chorea, convulsive syndrome) in SLE patients and a-CL.
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PMID:[The clinico-immunological characteristics of central nervous system involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus: the relationship with antibodies to cardiolipin]. 145 60

Migraine is a common condition with, usually, stereotyped symptomatology, suggesting that it is a specific disease entity (a morbus sui generis). However, occasionally a migraine sufferer will exhibit atypical manifestations of the condition; also, some specific diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus and arteriovenous malformations, may exactly mimic the symptoms of migraine. These latter considerations raise the possibility that migraine is a syndrome rather than a disease. The recent delineation of the trigeminovascular system allows a conception of migraine as being neither disease nor syndrome, but rather a constitutional predisposition of the neurovascular system to react excessively to internal or external stimuli by a pattern of hyperactivity of the brain and of the trigeminovascular apparatus. Activation of the trigeminovascular system, whether by neural impulses from the brain or humoral factors in the circulation, results in vascular headaches, while associated activity in the brain may produce such typically migrainous symptomatology as prodrome and aura, and nonspecific symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and dizziness. In this model specific diseases may gain access to the trigeminovascular apparatus, detonating it to produce vascular headaches and neurological symptomatology which may more or less exactly mimic migraine.
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PMID:Migraine--disease or syndrome? 149 11

It has been reported that migraine is common in systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) and an association with phospholipid antibodies has been suggested. The incidence of migraine and non-migrainous headache was prospectively studied in 90 patients with SLE and 90 age- and sex-matched controls. A history of migraine was commoner in SLE patients than in controls [31(34%) vs 15(16%); P less than 0.05], and the mean age of onset was higher in the SLE group (26.8 vs 17.2 years). Within the SLE group an association was found between migraine and SLE disease activity. Non-migrainous headaches were also more common (non-significant) in the SLE group, and there was a close temporal relationship between onset of both headache and SLE in many patients. Both migraine and non-migrainous headaches in SLE patients often responded to specific SLE treatment. No association was found between migraine or other headaches and antibodies to phospholipids.
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PMID:Migraine and headache in systemic lupus erythematosus and their relationship with antibodies against phospholipids. 154 68

We carried out a prospective study of the prevalence and characteristics of anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) and migraine on 103 consecutive patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) derived from three European referral university centers. We also included a control group of 58 patients with migraine not associated with SLE. We interviewed all patients using a data collection form designed to provide a complete record of the clinical characteristics of headache. Fifty-four (52%) patients with SLE suffered recurrent headache. We diagnosed migraine in 32 patients, tension headache in 21, and cluster headache in one. Thirty (29%) patients with SLE had aCL. Migraine was present in five patients with aCL and in 27 patients without aCL (17% versus 37%, p = 0.07). No migraine control patient had aCL. Our study highlights the frequency of headache in SLE, but does not support an association between the presence of aCL and migraine in this disease.
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PMID:Lack of association between anticardiolipin antibodies and migraine in systemic lupus erythematosus. 154 39

Antiphospholipid antibodies are a relatively heterogeneous mix of immunoglobulins with binding specificities for negatively charged or neutral phospholipids. Currently, the most commonly detected antiphospholipid antibodies include the anticardiolipin antibody, the lupus anticoagulant, and an antibody implicated in false-positive VDRL testing. Recently, a clinical syndrome of vaso-occlusive disorders associated with antiphospholipid antibodies has been identified and may result from immune-mediated disruption of endothelial function. This clinical syndrome encompasses arterial and venous thrombosis, recurrent fetal loss, neurologic dysfunction (eg, migraine, chorea, and encephalopathy), systemic and pulmonary arterial hypertension, and endocardial disease. Although most commonly associated with systemic lupus erythematosus, the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome also has been identified in patients with vaso-occlusive disease without systemic lupus erythematosus. Recently, identification of antiphospholipid antibodies has been facilitated by the development of a more sensitive assay for anticardiolipin antibody. In this article, case histories of three patients with arterial thrombosis and associated anticardiolipin antibodies, including the first associated case of terminal aortic thrombosis, are reviewed and the subject of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome is discussed.
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PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies and arterial thrombosis. Case reports and a review of the literature. 155 Apr 84

Twenty-three patients with the 'primary' antiphospholipid syndrome were studied over 2-6 years. Twenty-two (96%) had antiphospholipid antibodies detected by ELISA (87% had antibodies to thromboplastin and 70% to cardiolipin), and 18 out of the 21 tested patients (86%) had lupus anticoagulant activity by coagulative assays. Mean age of the cohort was 29.9 years and the sex ratio (female:male) 4.75:1. Eleven patients presented 18 venous and/or arterial thrombosis and 13 had 25 foetal losses (84% occurred during the second and third trimester). Other clinical features were migraine, livedo reticularis, and epilepsy. Three patients had relatives with systemic lupus erythematosus. Thrombocytopaenia was seen in 33%, antinuclear antibodies in low or moderate titre in 30%, and haemolytic anaemia in 13%. During the follow-up, two patients presented recurrent thrombosis despite anticoagulant therapy, one of them dying because of recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism. Four patients achieved successful term pregnancies after treatment with aspirin and a further patient after treatment with aspirin and low dose prednisolone. No patient developed systemic lupus erythematosus or any other definable connective tissue disease. The 'primary' antiphospholipid syndrome may exist as a distinct clinical entity and all younger patients presenting with thrombotic events, foetal losses and/or thrombocytopaenia, without any evidence of a well defined disease, should be tested for antiphospholipid antibodies in order to rule out this syndrome.
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PMID:The 'primary' antiphospholipid syndrome: antiphospholipid antibody pattern and clinical features of a series of 23 patients. 166 49

A prospective study of the neurological manifestations in all patients with systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) was conducted between February 1985 to January 1989. Excluding herpes zoster infection of peripheral or cranial nerves, post-herpetic neuralgia and migraine, 36 neurological episodes occurred in 33 patients. The presenting symptoms were mental confusion (10), psychosis (five), seizures (six), focal neurological deficit (three), coma (two), headache (five), blurring of vision (three), neuropathy (one) and myelopathy (one). Of these manifestations, only eight episodes were due to primary involvement by SLE: psychosis (two), seizure (two), multiple cerebral infarcts (one), papillitis (one), neuropathy (one) and myelopathy (one). Infection was the most common secondary cause of neurological episodes: all 10 episodes of mental confusion (fungal seven, pyogenic two, tuberculous one, nocardial one); two of six seizures (tuberculous one, pyogenic one); all five headaches (tuberculous meningitis three, cryptococcal meningitis two). The other secondary causes included steroid psychosis (two), hypertensive encephalopathy with seizure (one) and hypertensive retinopathy (one). Three of five cases of focal neurological deficit were due to macrovascular disease rather than to vasculitic infarction. We concluded that cerebral psychosis was a relatively rare presentation in our patients with SLE. In patients who presented with a neurological problem, especially mental confusion, efforts should be made to ascertain the underlying cause, especially if this may be an infection.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus: a prospective study. 180 Oct 58

Recently, the association between anti-phospholipid antibodies (false positive VDRL, lupus anticoagulant or anti-cardiolipin antibody) and diverse clinical manifestations has been termed antiphospholipid syndrome. We report 6 female patients with "primary" antiphospholipid syndrome, not related to connective tissue disorders. Their age ranged from 23 to 66 years and they were followed from 1 to 27 years (mean 9.2). Venous occlusion developed in 4, arterial occlusion in 4 (TIA, convulsive episode and cutaneous thrombotic microangiopathy). Three of 5 had fetal loss and 3/6 developed thrombocytopenia. Leg ulcer, migraine and mitral valvulopathy and peripheral facial paralysis were isolated manifestations in different patients. High titers for type IgG anticardiolipin antibodies were present in all patients. Low titers for IgM antibodies were present in 2. The pathogenesis of this syndrome is discussed.
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PMID:[Primary antiphospholipid syndrome: clinical experience of 6 patients]. 184 92


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