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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency of adverse reactions (
dermatitis
,
myositis
, and gastroenteritis) to cromolyn sodium in asthmatic patients was 2% (B/375). Reactions were non-life-threatening and completely reversible. Immunologic evaluations, including skin and serum tests for immediate and delayed reactivity, all were negative. Adverse reactions to cromolyn do not appear to be based on an immunologic mechanism. Cromolyn appears to be a safe drug for the treatment of asthma.
...
PMID:Adverse reactions to cromolyn. 15 80
The inoculation of equine herpesvirus type 3 (EHV3) strain 65/61 into the amniotic cavity of a mare 6-7 months pregnant resulted in abortion 11 days later. Following abortion typical lesions of coital exanthema were not observed in the genital tract of the mare, nor was EHV3 isolated from her. Serological evidence, however, indicated that the mare was infected with EHV3 following inoculation. Grossly the foetal disease was characterised by placentitis, focal ulcerative
dermatitis
, focal necrosis of the lungs and a striking diptheritic gastritis. Histological findings were interstitial pneumonia, diffuse hepatitis, generalised
myositis
, extensive vascular necrosis and degeneration of a range of epithelial cells. EHV3 was isolated from the placenta and placental fluids, stomach fluid, pooled thoracic and abdominal fluid, skin, lung, spleen and small intestine of the foetus.
...
PMID:Equine herpesviruses: type 3 as an abortigenic agent. 18 3
Two cases of granulomatous
dermatitis
with eosinophilla (Wells' syndrome) are reported. With Wells' original four cases, these two cases define a distinctive dermatosis with onset as cellulitis and formation of solid edema and either final spontaneous resolution or resolution with steroid therapy. Microscopic study showed diffuse tissue eosinophilia and fibrinoid flame figures, evolution of associated focal necrobiosis, and formation of focal microgranulomas associated with eosinophils. Biopsy of muscle and fascia showed comparable fasciitis and eosinophilic
myositis
. Immunofluorescence in one case disclosed fibrin in the dermis and lgM, lgA, and C3 in the blood vessels of the muscle. Recurrences of the lesions often appeared to be related to drug administration or surgery.
...
PMID:Wells' syndrome. Recurrent granulomatous dermatitis with eosinophilia. 44 39
Histologic sections and case histories from 23 dogs with proven fatal toxoplasmosis-like illness at the Angell Memorial Animal Hospital were reviewed. Toxoplasma gondii was identified in 13 dogs. A newly identified parasite, Neospora caninum, structurally distinct from T gondii, was found in 10 dogs. The newly discovered organism, belonging to a new genus and new species, formed meronts in many tissues of the dogs, especially the brain and spinal cord. Neospora caninum was located directly in the host cell cytoplasm without a parasitophorous vacuole; it divided by endodyogeny, contained more than 11 rhoptries, and did not react with the anti-T gondii serum in the immunoperoxidase test. Meningoencephalomyelitis and
myositis
were the main lesions associated with N caninum. Ulcerative and fistulous
dermatitis
was the major lesion in 1 dog.
...
PMID:Newly recognized fatal protozoan disease of dogs. 339 51
Familial canine dermatomyositis in collie dogs is a newly recognized spontaneous disease that resembles dermatomyositis in children. A litter of 9 collie dogs was studied from birth to 7.5 months of age. The onset and severity of
dermatitis
and
myositis
correlated with elevated serum levels of circulating immune complexes (CICs) and IgG. The immunoglobulin component of the CICs consisted principally of IgG. All dogs developed elevated levels of CIC before or concurrent with the onset of
dermatitis
.
Myositis
developed later. The CIC tended to peak between 14-18 weeks of age in all dogs except the most severely affected dog, in which the CICs continued to increase to 238 micrograms/ml (controls 30 micrograms/ml) at 7 months of age. In the moderately affected dogs the CICs tended to stabilize at the levels reached at 14-18 weeks, and in the mildly affected dogs the CICs tended to decrease to normal levels after 14-18 weeks. Although the dogs had electromyographic and repetitive nerve stimulation abnormalities, the abnormalities did not correlate with severity of dermatomyositis or degree of elevation of CICs or IgG. Necropsy at 7.5 months of age revealed that all dogs had
myositis
and 8 of 9 had
dermatitis
. Except for 1 dog, the severity of dermatomyositis correlated positively with higher levels of CICs. A strong positive association between elevated levels of CICs and IgG, but not IgM or IgA, was generally present. Elevated levels of CICs appear to be involved in the mechanisms that control the development, severity, and progression of dermatomyositis in collie dogs.
...
PMID:Prospective study of familial canine dermatomyositis. Correlation of the severity of dermatomyositis and circulating immune complex levels. 371
Postmortem evaluations were performed on 20 juvenile to young adult collie and collie-Labrador retriever crossbred dogs with dermatomyositis and 10 neonatal collies. Cutaneous, muscular, and vascular lesions were present in the juvenile and adult dogs and were most severe in areas of the head and distal extremities. In more severely affected dogs, lesions were more generalized, including
myositis
of esophageal muscle and arteritis of skin, muscle, bladder, and spermatic cord. Although viruses were not isolated from muscle, crystalline viral-like structures were present in cytoplasm of endothelial cells within skeletal muscle. The dogs with
dermatitis
and
myositis
consistently had lymphoid hyperplasia, especially of peripheral lymph nodes. More severely affected dogs were smaller than less severely affected littermates, and the more severely affected males had reduced weight of testicles and prostate glands, compared with body weight. The reduced weight of genital organs correlated positively with reduced fertility. A few lymphoid aggregates were present in or around thyroid glands of 6 of the 20 dogs. There was no histologic evidence of glomerular disease in any of the dogs. The neonatal collies had no evidence of dermatomyositis.
...
PMID:Postmortem findings in four litters of dogs with familial canine dermatomyositis. 371 1
Pasteurellosis was diagnosed in a red-fronted conure (Aratinga wagleri) that had been bitten on its breast by a cat 2 weeks before death. The wound spread rapidly, involving the skin over the entire breast and the underlying musculature. Septicemia that followed
dermatitis
and
myositis
was the cause of death. Pasteurella multocida was isolated in pure culture from the heart blood and liver. Diagnosis of Escherichia coli septicemia and enteritis in a hyacinth macaw (Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus) was based on lesions such as generalized hyperemia and hemorrhages in visceral organs, fibrinonecrotic lesions in the intestine, and isolation of E coli in pure culture from the heart blood, liver, and intestine.
...
PMID:Bacterial septicemias in two psittacine birds. 388 39
Three Collies with a skin disorder, 6 progeny from a breeding of 2 of the Collies (incross litter), and the 4 progeny from the breeding of an affected Collie male and a normal Labrador Retriever female (outcross litter) were examined. By 7 to 11 weeks of age, all 6 dogs in the incross litter developed a qualitatively similar, but variably severe,
dermatitis
of the ears, face, lips, tip of the tail, and over bony prominences of limbs. Later, myopathic signs characterized by bilaterally symmetrical skeletal muscle atrophy of the head, neck, trunk, and extremities; facial palsy; decreased jaw tone; stiff gait; and hyperreflexia were observed in the dogs more severely affected by the
dermatitis
. Of the 4 dogs in the outcross litter, 3 had similar, but milder, clinical manifestations of the
dermatitis
and myopathy. Cutaneous lesions consisted of intraepidermal and subepidermal vesicles or pustules with intradermal infiltration by leukocytes. Muscle lesions included
myositis
; myofiber degeneration, regeneration, and atrophy; and fibrosis. A generalized myopathy in the severely affected dogs was indicated by abnormal readings on needle electromyograms and normal motor nerve conduction velocities. Spontaneous needle electromyogram abnormalities were fibrillation potentials, positive sharp waves, and bizarre high-frequency discharges. Retrospective and prospective genetic analyses disclosed a definite familial tendency and indicated the condition has an autosomal dominant component.
...
PMID:Familial canine dermatomyositis: clinical, electrodiagnostic, and genetic studies. 405 Dec 92
Systemic pathological alterations were studied in thirty-seven autopsied patients with Kawasaki disease. Systemic vasculitis was the most characteristic pathological finding and was present in all the patients. In addition to the vasculitis, there was a high incidence of inflammatory lesions in various organs and tissues: in the heart, endocarditis, myocarditis, and pericarditis; in the digestive system, stomatitis, sialoduct-adenitis, catarrhal enteritis, hepatitis, cholangitis, pancreatitis, and pancreas ductitis; in the respiratory system, bronchitis and segmental interstitial pneumonia; in the urinary system, focal interstitial nephritis, cystitis, and prostatitis; in the nervous system, aseptic leptomeningitis, choriomeningitis, gangliontis, and neuritis; in the hematopoietic system, lymphadenitis, splenitis, and thymitis.
Dermatitis
, panniculitis or
myositis
were also observed in some patients. Therefore, Kawasaki disease is a systemic inflammatory disease which mainly affects the cardiovascular system. These systemic inflammatory lesions are considered to correspond to the variegated clinical manifestaitions. The relationship between Kawasaki disease and infantile polyarteritis nodosa (IPN) were discussed, based on the clinicopathological characteristics.
...
PMID:General pathology of Kawasaki disease. On the morphological alterations corresponding to the clinical manifestations. 744 9
Early in the course of myeloblastic leukemia a patient concurrently developed febrile neutrophilic dermatosis and sterile acute
myositis
. The
dermatitis
and
myositis
were unresponsive to antibiotic therapy but remitted within a few days of institution of steroid treatment. The patient died of myocardial infarction. At autopsy the dermis was normal. Previously effected muscles were scarred. The overlying fascia and subcutaneous septa were fibrotically thickened. In addition, segmental acute aortitis was detected. Acute
myositis
and aortitis may reflect further organ manifestations of the Sweet's reactivity pattern. It is proposed that Sweet's
myositis
and
dermatitis
may evolve into a fibrosing
myositis
and panniculitis.
...
PMID:Acute neutrophilic myositis in Sweet's syndrome: late phase transformation into fibrosing myositis and panniculitis. 777 2
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