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)

A poor prognosis was observed in patients who had end-stage renal disease (ESRD) as a result of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This was true even in patients in whom SLE disease activity was transiently quiescent during the period of hemodialysis. Six of 9 patients with ESRD and SLE died with active SLE and/or sepsis 1-28 months following the onset of dialysis. In 5 of the 6 patients, acute inflammatory activity of SLE flared within 1 month of the patient's death. Four patients died with superimposed sepsis, but only 2 of the 4 were receiving high-dose concomitant immunosuppressives for more than 1 week prior to death. Infected hemodialysis vascular access sites were implicated as the source of septicemia in 3 of 4 infectious deaths. The 3 surviving patients had minimal lupus activity prior to the development of ESRD, a possible marker for stability in SLE patients who require hemodialysis. Our results suggest that hemodialyzed lupus patients with nonautologous vascular access sites may be at continued increased risk for life-threatening inflammatory and septic complications.
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PMID:Poor prognosis in end-stage lupus nephritis due to nonautologous vascular access site associated septicemia and lupus flares. 281 17

Initially, poor long-term prognosis in patients with SLE and fear of recurrent disease dissuaded renal transplantation in this group of patients. However, in 1975 the Advisory Committee to the Renal Transplant Registry reported satisfactory 1-2-year results in 56 patients with SLE from 36 institutions. Subsequently, renal transplantation for SLE patients with end-stage renal disease has become more accepted, though it has been recommended that transplantation be postponed for at least one year after initiating dialysis. Five cases of recurrent lupus nephritis have been reported in the literature. However, since the long-term outcome after transplantation in this group of patients is not well established, we have examined the long-term outcome in SLE patients who underwent renal transplantation at the University of Minnesota. Thirty-two SLE patients receiving 33 transplants between December 1969 and December 1987 were studied retrospectively and compared with controls matched for age, sex, donor source, HLA match, date of transplant, and diabetic status. A total of 69% (22/32) of patients underwent less than 1 year of dialysis prior to transplantation, and 50% (16/32) experienced biopsy-proved acute rejection, which was reversible in 67% (11/16). Actuarial graft function and patient survival rate in SLE patients were not significantly different from those in the matched control group. Duration of prior dialysis did not affect outcome. Surviving grafts have excellent function as measured by serum creatinine (1.3 +/- 0.4 mg/dl, means +/- SD). Causes of death were sepsis (5) and myocardial infarction (1). One patient lost the graft from rejection after withdrawal of immunosuppression because of a malignancy one month posttransplant. Three patients lost graft function due to chronic rejection. To date no patients have had evidence of recurrent SLE nephritis.
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PMID:Single-center 1-15-year results of renal transplantation in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 305 93

Fatal pneumococcal sepsis due to functional asplenia in a child with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and transient hyposplenism in a 2nd child during an acute flare of SLE are described. Splenic ultrasound examinations and radionuclide spleen scans in 11 other children with SLE were normal. Splenic atrophy and dysfunction is an uncommon but potentially fatal complication of SLE in childhood.
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PMID:Functional asplenia in childhood onset systemic lupus erythematosus. 307 28

A circulating lupus anticoagulant factor was detected in a 38-year-old man with end-stage renal disease and a 'lupus-like' syndrome with a diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis. When treated with steroids, the 'lupus' complications were controlled and the anticoagulant factor disappeared; however, renal function did not recover and the patient commenced regular haemodialysis. Four months later the patient received a cadaver kidney transplant. At transplantation and during follow-up there was neither clinical nor laboratory evidence of lupus activity, but 19 months after transplantation, when steroids were tapered to a low dose, the lupus anticoagulant factor was detected, and renal-vein thrombosis complicated by sepsis led to the patient's death. A membranous glomerulonephritis was found on autopsy. This is the first time in which a (probably 'de novo') membranous glomerulonephritis has been detected in the allograft of a patient with circulating lupus anticoagulant factor.
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PMID:Allograft membranous glomerulonephritis and renal-vein thrombosis in a patient with a lupus anticoagulant factor. 314 30

A 56-year-old woman with a 12-year history of systemic lupus erythematosus presented with severe optic-disc swelling and blepharitis. At the same time, she developed acute pancreatitis and ultimately died of gram-negative sepsis. Although it appeared that the ocular and systemic disorders were manifestations of lupus, her serum antinuclear antibody and complement levels remained normal throughout her hospital course. Optic neuritis may be secondary to lupus, but the diagnosis is difficult to make when the serology is negative.
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PMID:Lupus optic neuritis with negative serology. 320 10

Critical conditions had been established in 21 (23.1%) of 91 patients with systemic connective tissue diseases for a 12 year period: renal failure (most often), sepsis, pericarditis with cardiac tamponade, hemorrhagic diathesis, terminal arteritis with gangrene, gastrointestinal perforations with peritonitis, etc. The corticosteroids applied in high doses and predominantly parenterally and the immunosuppressors are the main drugs used in the treatment of these conditions. Plasmapheresis when possible is a useful supplement. The prognosis of the acute critical conditions depends mainly on the affected organ (more favorable in pericarditis with tamponade and unfavorable in renal failure and gastrointestinal perforations with peritonitis (and on the basic disease) more optimistic in systemic lupus erythematodes and very pessimistic in nodal periarteritis and other allergic vasculitis).
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PMID:[The problems of treating acute critical states in diffuse connective tissue diseases]. 321 40

We examined a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and sepsis due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Early in the infection, she developed skin lesions that consisted of indurated tender nodules and hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic bullae. Blister fluid contained gram-negative rods, which were identified as P. aeruginosa on culture. Bullae and nodules, as well as ecthyma gangrenosum, can be early cutaneous signs of pseudomonal sepsis.
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PMID:Pseudomonas septicemia with nodules and bullae. 329 25

Fifty-five computed tomography scans in 27 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were reviewed. The most frequent indication for scanning was suspected intraabdominal sepsis, and the most frequent finding was mild lymphadenopathy. Renal abnormalities were: subcapsular hematoma, focal defects, overall enlargement, and diminution of size. Other findings included serositis, bowel wall thickening with pneumatosis intestinalis, pancreatic pseudocyst, and hepatic and splenic enlargement. Five abscesses were found that were indistinguishable from other fluid collections. Computed tomography was helpful in clinical evaluation and in some cases changed management.
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PMID:Body computed tomography findings in systemic lupus erythematosus. 334 4

Streptococcal pneumoniae septicemia was responsible for the deaths of 3 patients with chronic systemic lupus erythematosus. The absence of a spleen likely contributed to sepsis in 2 patients. One patient had been immunized with 14-valent pneumococcal vaccine with a doubling of serum antibody concentrations at one month to all vaccine capsular polysaccharide types except for Types 1 and 12. The patient died 74 months after immunization of pneumococcal Type 1 sepsis.
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PMID:Rapidly fatal pneumococcal septicemia in systemic lupus erythematosus. 343 27

Five children (11.5-17.5 years of age) with severe systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) were treated with plasma exchange. Three children suffered from renal failure and hypertension, one adolescent girl from gastrointestinal and arthritic pains with fever, and one patient from generalized paresis. All patients had excessive serological signs of disease activity. Forty-five sessions of plasma exchange were performed without serious complications. Four children showed improvement of SLE after initiation of plasma exchange in combination with immunosuppressive therapy in two of them renal replacement therapy could be stopped. In the 2 patients with non-renal SLE-complications a dramatic rapid improvement of the symptoms was observed. One girl succumbed to severe hypertension with cerebral bleeding and fungal sepsis after pulsE therapy a few days after start of plasma exchange. Plasma exchange should be started before observation of life threatening complications of SLE. Further information is needed about indication, frequency and duration of plasma exchange in children with SLE.
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PMID:[Plasma exchange therapy in children and adolescents with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)]. 349 96


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