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

Strongyloides stercoralis is an intestinal nematode which infects a large portion of the world's population. Individuals with infection confined to the intestinal tract are often asymptomatic but may have abdominal pain, weight loss, diarrhea, and other nonspecific complaints. Enhanced proliferation of the parasite in compromised hosts causes an augmentation of the normal life-cycle. Resultant massive invasion of the gastrointestinal tract and lungs is termed the hyperinfection syndrome. If the worm burden is excessive, parasitic invasion of other tissues occurs and is termed disseminated strongyloidiasis. A variety of underlying conditions appear to predispose to severe infections. These are primarily diseases characterized by immunodeficiency due to defective T-lymphocyte function (Table 1). Individuals with less severe disorders become compromised hosts because of therapeutic regimens consisting of corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive medication. The debilitation of chronic illness or malnutrition also predisposes to systemic stronglyloidiasis. The diagnosis of strongyloidiasis can be readily made by microscopic examination of concentrates of upper small bowel fluid, stool, or sputum. Important clues suggesting this infection include unexplained gram-negative bacillary bacteremia in a compromised host who may have vague abdominal complaints, an ileus pattern on X-ray, and pulmonary infiltrates. Eosinophilia is helpful, if present, but should not be relied upon to exclude the diagnosis. The treatment of systemic infection due to Strongyloides stercoralis with either thiabensazole 25 mg/kg orally twice daily is satisfactory if the diagnosis is made early. Because of several unusual features of this illness in compromised hosts, the standard recommendation for 2 days of therapy should be abandoned in such patients. Immunodeficiency, corticosteroids, and bowel ileus reduce drug efficacy. Thus a longer treatment period of at leuch as blind loops or diverticula necessitate longer treatment. Stool specimens and upper small bowel aspirates should be monitored regularly and treatment continued several days beyond the last evidence of the parasite. In particularly difficult situations where either worm eradication is impossible or reinfection is probable, short monthly courses of antihelminthic therapy seem to be effective in averting recurrent systemic illness. Finally, prevention of hyperinfection or dissemination due to Strongyloides stercoralis can be accomplished by screening immunocompromised hosts with stool and upper small bowel aspirate examinations. These would be especially important prior to initiating chemotherapy, or before giving immunosuppressive medications or corticosteroids to patients with nonneoplastic conditions such as systemic lupus erythematosus, nephrotic syndrome, or renal allografts.
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PMID:Overwhelming strongyloidiasis: an unappreciated opportunistic infection. 36 22

A case of SLE with the unique association of gastric polyps and vasculitis is reported. Gastrointestinal symptoms, surgical indications, and complications of SLE with gastrointestinal involvement are reviewed. The unusual patterns of ileus or lupus peritonitis secondary to mesenteric vasculitis must be differentiated from a true surgical emergency. Corticosteroids may be expected to produce rapid clinical improvement in the two former instances. Surgical exploration is reserved for those cases with clinical or radiologic evidence of uncontrollable hemorrhage, bowel perforation, or mesenteric infarction.
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PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus: unusual presentation with gastric polyps and vasculitis. 126 20

A 33-year-old woman presented with chronic diarrhea, vomiting and anasarca due to systemic lupus erythematosus with protein-losing enteropathy, interstitial cystitis and glomerulonephritis. Methylprednisolone could not prevent aggravation of diarrhea, obstructive uropathy, and nephrotic syndrome, and prolonged intestinal ileus developed. Because of this steroid-resistance, bolus injections of cyclophosphamide (1 g i.v. monthly) were decided. Protein-losing enteropathy and ileus both disappeared rapidly following the first injection. Protein-losing enteropathy, intestinal ileus and interstitial cystitis are exceptional manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus; steroid-resistance of the digestive manifestations has only been reported in one case and our observation is the first reporting the efficacy of cyclophosphamide.
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PMID:[Exudative enteropathy and interstitial cystitis due to systemic lupus erythematosus]. 226 25

Strongyloides stercoralis hyperinfection is a unique opportunistic infection in which the nematode disseminates widely to cause a multisystem illness. We treated a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus in whom ileus and fever developed and who later lapsed into coma. A xenon Xe 133 cerebral blood flow study showed a global reduction in flow, compatible with CNS vasculitis. The patient's condition failed to improve with high-dose steroid therapy, but he recovered rapidly after Strongyloides larvae were found in stool and sputum and treatment with thiabendazole was begun. We believe that hyperinfection explained the patient's symptoms and should be considered as a cause of diminished cerebral perfusion and mentation in immunosuppressed patients.
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PMID:Strongyloides stercoralis hyperinfection masquerading as cerebral vasculitis. 648 8

A 45-yr-old male patient developed acute abdominal pain, ileus, and microscopic hematuria with biochemical evidence of pancreatitis and a marked increase in liver alkaline phosphatase; CT demonstrated swelling of the pancreas, bilateral adrenal hemorrhage, and a suggestion of renal hemorrhage. ERCP was negative and renal arterial and venous blood flow normal. A coagulation profile demonstrated the presence of lupus anticoagulant, but tests for anticardiolipin antibodies and collagen vascular diseases were negative. Treatment with corticosteroids and anticoagulation resulted in improvement in clinical and all biochemical indices. Thus, lupus anticoagulant syndrome may masquerade as an acute abdominal illness with multiorgan involvement.
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PMID:Lupus anticoagulant masquerading as an acute abdomen with multiorgan involvement. 773 97

Although an acute abdomen often occurs in lupus patients, definitive treatment is commonly delayed due to the difficulty in diagnosis. We performed an abdominal ultrasound (US) in two patients with severe abdominal pain and recognized mural thickenings of intestinal walls. In the first case high dose prednisone was given for severe abdominal pain, with subsequent perforation of sigmoid colon. Pathological specimens showed a thrombotic vasculitis in the mesenteric artery and arteriole of intestinal walls. In the second case physical examination elicited a rebound tenderness. An abdominal X-ray demonstrated a gasless ileus and US also showed marked thickening of intestinal walls, 16 mm in thickness. A CT scan revealed the same findings in the entire bowel. After high dose methylprednisolone was administered, her symptoms markedly improved. The mural thickenings disappeared within 10 days as seen by abdominal ultrasound examination. The US is very useful in order to make an early diagnosis of intestinal vasculitis, showing as edema (but non-specific) of intestinal wall and we can use it safely and repetitively without exposure to radiation, compared with other examinations, such as CT scan and gastrointestinal contrast study etc. The US is not only useful in diagnosis, but also helpful for follow up of patients after the initiation of treatment.
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PMID:[Vasculitis-related acute abdomen in systemic lupus erythematosus--ultrasound appearances in lupus patients with intra-abdominal vasculitis]. 834 66

A 37-year-old woman underwent an emergency operation at our hospital because of severe abdominal pain and ileus. Most of her small intestine and ascending colon were observed to have become necrotic due to occlusion of her superior mesenteric artery (SMA). Pathological findings of the resected intestine revealed that her SMA was completely thrombosed 2 cm distal from its origin with smooth muscle proliferation. Post-surgical blood analysis of her pre-operative serum was positive for lupus anticoagulant and antinuclear antibodies. She noticed vaginal bleeding due to missed abortion on the 31st day after the operation. We diagnosed her acute abdominal pain to be that of antiphospholipid syndrome associated with her pregnancy.
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PMID:Antiphospholipid syndrome complicated by thrombosis of the superior mesenteric artery, co-existence of smooth muscle hyperplasia. 924 May 7

Lupus cystitis was rare but frequently resulted in obstructive uropathy and had a strong association with gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms. We treated six patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and obstructive uropathy from January 1996 to December 2001 in a university hospital. Evidence of cystitis was obtained from cystoscopic biopsy or the presence of thickened bladder wall in image study. Similar to other reports, five patients had GI manifestations such as abdominal pain, nausea/vomiting, diarrhoea or ileus. In addition, mesenteric lymphadenopathy or pancreatitis was noted in three patients. Two patients had been treated for idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP), four and 20 years ago, respectively. All six patients had antibodies to double-stranded DNA (dsDNA). Five patients each had antibodies to cardiolipin (IgG aCL) or SSA. The high prevalence of anti-SSA had also been reported in Chinese lupus patients with intestinal pseudo-obstruction, a clinical manifestation frequently associated with bilateral ureterohydronephrosis. Two patients died of intractable infection after the surgical procedures for persistent ureterohydronephrosis and both patients had antibodies to ribosomal P proteins. Lupus cystitis might not be so rare in Chinese patients with SLE. The diagnosis should be kept in mind when lupus patients have urinary and/or GI symptoms.
Lupus 2004
PMID:Is there an ethnic difference in the prevalence of lupus cystitis? A report of six cases. 1517 63

A case of systemic lupus erythematosus with jaundice and vague abdominal pain which did not respond to steroid pulse therapy is presented. Noninvasive examinations and imaging studies showed ileus. Two weeks later, an emergency laparotomy was performed because of severe refractory abdominal pain and hemodynamic decompensation. An ischemic part of the terminal ileum was resected. It was pathologically determined to be ischemic bowel disease because of mechanical strangulation resulting from adhesion band, but without evidence of vasculitis, atherosclerotic change, or thrombosis. After intensive postoperative care, the patient gradually recovered. This unusual case shows that nonlupus-related mechanical strangulation should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdomen in lupus patients, particularly in those who have received steroid therapy or have a history of previous abdominal operation.
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PMID:Mechanical bowel strangulation mimicking mesenteric vasculitis in a systemic lupus erythematosus patient. 1836 Mar 24

A 24-year-old woman with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) was admitted to our hospital because of diarrhea, vomiting, and epigastralgia. When she was diagnosed as SLE 5 years earlier, her renal function was normal and her urine protein excretion was 0.15 g/day. Renal biopsy revealed class V lupus nephritis, and she was treated with intravenous steroid (1 g methylprednisolone per day) for 3 days. The prednisolone dose was then reduced from 30 mg/day to 5 mg/day and maintained at that level until she was admitted to our hospital. Her abdominal X-ray, and CT scan showed massive ascites and excessive colonic gas. She was diagnosed as having ileus resulting from lupus peritonitis. The dose of prednisolone was increased up to 50 mg/day. After 1 week, the ascites disappeared and serum albumin and complement levels, lymphocyte count, and urine protein level returned to the normal range. When the prednisolone dose was reduced to 40 mg, however, UCG and an abdominal CT scan revealed thrombus in her right atrium, and inferior vena cava. Urokinase, argatroban and heparin were administered intravenously and warfarin was administered thereafter. Her thrombus gradually disappeared and she was discharged. These findings suggest that anticoagulation therapy is crucial for SLE patients with multiple complications receiving high-dose steroids.
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PMID:[Case of lupus peritonitis with thrombus in the right atrium]. 2041 37


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