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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of
epidermolysis bullosa
acquisita (EBA) with negative direct immunofluorescence and
multiple myeloma
is reported. Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita has been associated with several systemic diseases, but only three cases diagnosed of EBA have been associated with
multiple myeloma
in the literature.
...
PMID:[Acquired bullous epidermolysis and multiple myeloma]. 226
Mouse monoclonal antibodies to various human epidermal and basement membrane components were formed by immunizing Balb/c mice with ME-180, a line of human cervical carcinoma cells. The spleen cells from hyperimmunized mice were fused with a nonsecreting mouse
myeloma
cell line using polyethylene glycol. The resulting hybrids were selected by growth in media containing 20% fetal calf serum, hypoxanthine, thymidine, and methotrexate in RPMI-1640 in 24-well Linbro plates. Wells producing antibodies of interest were grown and eventually cloned over an HGPRT- rat fibroblast feeder layer. These cultures were expanded and recloned. Two cloned antibodies of interest are DUX 5.2 and DUX 1.1.3. DUX 5.2 is the mouse IgG1 subclass and reacts with the membranes of ME-180 cells and the human skin epidermal basement membrane zone as shown by direct immunofluorescent microscopy. Ultrastructural localization using electron microscopic immunoperoxidase techniques showed localization of the DUX 5.2 antigen to be beneath the lamina densa; the reaction product may include the anchoring fibrils. Although DUX 5.2 reacts with the normal human basement membrane zone and the basement membrane zone in several diseases, there is no reactivity in the normal, never-blistered skin of patients with dystrophic
epidermolysis bullosa
(DEB). This suggests that the increased collagenase in the disease may be destroying antigenicity of the antigen recognized by DUX 5.2 or that the antigen may not be present in DEB. This antibody will thus allow early neonatal and prenatal diagnosis in DEB and allow isolation of the structural moiety which is deficient in DEB. DUX 1.1 is an IgM mouse immunoglobulin specific for the cytoplasm of human basal cells. Its reactivity with upper epidermis is significantly less than that seen in the basal layer. All cells of the basal layer stain uniformly. The slight amount of staining in upper cells probably represents dilution of antigen which is not synthesized beyond the basal layer. Basal cells of hair follicles and sweat glands are stained to some degree.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to normal and abnormal epithelial antigens. 619 49
A 63-year-old man presented with an intensely pruritic vesiculo-bullous eruption on the limbs and was subsequently found to have an IgA kappa
multiple myeloma
. The eruption clinically and histologically was suggestive of linear IgA disease (LAD), dermatitis herpetiformis (DH),
epidermolysis bullosa
acquisita (EBA), or bullous lupus erythematosus (LE), with the skin biopsy revealing subepidermal bullae and dermal papillary micro-abscesses. However, direct immunofluorescence showed a unique pattern of diffuse dermal IgA staining. Although chemotherapy produced a dramatic resolution of the lesions, which paralleled the fall in serum IgA paraprotein level, the
myeloma
later became progressive and the resulting paraprotein increase was accompanied by recurrence of the eruption. We propose that this patient's rash was the presenting manifestation of his
multiple myeloma
, and was a consequence of transudation of IgA paraprotein into the dermis.
...
PMID:IgA multiple myeloma presenting as an acquired bullous disorder. 1009 86
The coexistence in the same patient of
epidermolysis bullosa
acquisita (a rare, autoimmune, acquired mucocutaneous blistering disorder) and
multiple myeloma
(a
plasma cell neoplasm
) is extremely uncommon. We describe a patient in whom both of these diseases occurred simultaneously. Intravenous immunoglobulins were used to treat both diseases.
...
PMID:Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita and multiple myeloma. 1245 84
Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita is a rare acquired autoimmune subepidermal blistering disease that clinically resembles other vesiculobullous lesions such as pemphigus vulgaris and cicatricial pemphigoid.
Multiple myeloma
is the most common plasma cell malignant disorder characterized by a single clonal expansion and increased level of a single immunoglobulin. Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita has been reported with other systemic diseases such as lymphoma. In this case report, we present a patient with paraneoplastic
epidermolysis bullosa
acquisita associated with
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic epidermolysis bullosa acquisita associated with multiple myeloma. 1692 39