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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pediatric cases of
systemic lupus erythematosus
with an unfavorable outcome (terminal renal failure requiring chronic hemodialysis, or death) assembled during a retrospective multicenter study of pediatric
SLE
in the Paris metropolitan area were analyzed. Seven patients (6 girls, 1 boy) were entered into a chronic hemodialysis program. Four had diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis, the pattern of glomerular disease classically responsible for end-stage renal failure. The other three patients had membranous glomerulonephritis with active segmental lesions, a form of glomerulopathy whose severe prognosis deserves to be emphasized. Nine other patients (8 girls, 1 boy) died. In six patients, death occurred as a result of a flare with malignant hypertension and progressive renal failure (1 case), pancreatitis (1 case), encephalopathy (2 cases) or cardiomyopathy (2 cases). An infectious disease (tuberculosis, mumps) was apparently the cause of the two cases of encephalopathy. One girl died as a result of a hemorrhagic syndrome with a
cerebral hematoma
. Two other girls died at home. Overall, among 111 children with
SLE
14% had an unfavorable outcome. Sex and age at onset seemed to have no bearing on prognosis. Patients with renal involvement were apparently more likely to have an unfavorable outcome. Lastly, although the influence of ethnic origin is unproven, children living in foreign countries of French overseas territories, but treated in France have an increased risk for unfavorable outcomes.
...
PMID:[Unfavorable outcomes in disseminated lupus erythematosus in children. Cooperative study in the Paris region]. 192 11
We describe a 36-year-old man with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome complicated by cerebral hemorrhage. In December 1991 he was brought to another hospital with sudden onset of left hemiparesis and status epilepticus. He had been well previously. A CT scan and MRI showed a
cerebral hematoma
located in the right frontoparietal region. Twelve days later he was transferred to our hospital. Although a CT scan, MRI, and cerebral angiography were repeated, they did not reveal any abnormality regarding an etiology. Only persistently abnormal finding in laboratory studies was positive for
lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibody, i.e. antiphospholipid antibodies. There was no serological evidence of
SLE
or other autoimmune diseases. Stereotactic biopsy of the hematoma wall and scalp artery showed no abnormality. Based on above findings we conclude that antiphospholipid antibodies have played an important role for the hemorrhage. Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome should be considered in a case of an unexplained cerebral hemorrhage especially in a young and normotensive patient.
...
PMID:[Cerebral hemorrhage in a case of antiphospholipid antibody syndrome]. 832 20