Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifteen children with scleroderma have been presented. All had characteristic cutaneous abnormalities at onset and during the course of disease. All were girls. All had visceral involvement, primarily of the gastrointestinal tract, heart, and lungs. The presence of visceral disease might have been missed without specific and extensive diagnostic procedures, including gastrointestinal barium studies, esophageal motility, pulmonary function and carbon monoxide diffusing capacity, and plethysmography. Raynaud's phenomenon was frequent and accompanied by evidence of occlusive
vascular disease
. Contractures around joints were readily evident and arthralgias were common, but evidence of objective arthritis was absent. Sixty percent of the patients in this series had ANA. Overlap syndromes with
myositis
and SLE were present in 7 patients. Three of 15 children died 6-10 years after onset of disease.
...
PMID:Scleroderma in children. 26 12
A patient with cutaneous necrotizing vasculitis had chronic urticaria associated with multiple system involvement including arthralgias, glomerulonephritis,
myositis
, pseudotumor cerebri, and adenopathy. Persistent hypocomplementemia is noted with classic pathway activation. The syndrome recognized in this patient and those few individuals reported previously seems to constitute a distinct category of collagen-
vascular disease
.
...
PMID:Vasculitis with urticaria, hypocomplementemia, and multiple system involvement. 98 89
The specific aim of this retrospective, observational study was to assess safety and efficacy of long-term (21 months/patient), open-label, gemfibrozil-lovastatin treatment in 80 patients with primary mixed hyperlipidemia (68% of whom had atherosclerotic
vascular disease
). Because ideal lipid targets were not reached (low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol less than 130 mg/dl, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol greater than 35 mg/dl, or total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol less than 4.5 mg/dl) with diet plus a single drug, gemfibrozil (1.2 g/day)-lovastatin (primarily 20 or 40 mg) treatment was given. Follow-up visits were scheduled with 2-drug therapy every 6 to 8 weeks, an average of 10.3 visits per patient, with 741 batteries of 6 liver function tests and 714 creatine phosphokinase levels measured. Only 1 of the 4,446 liver function tests (0.02%), a gamma glutamyl transferase, was greater than or equal to 3 times the upper normal limit. Of the 714 creatine phosphokinase levels, 9% were high; only 1 (0.1%) was greater than or equal to 3 times the upper normal limit. With 2-drug therapy, mean total cholesterol decreased 22% from 255 to 200 mg/dl, triglyceride levels decreased 35% from 236 to 154 mg/dl, LDL cholesterol decreased 26% from 176 to 131 mg/dl, and the total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio decreased 24% from 7.1 to 5.4, all p less than or equal to 0.0001.
Myositis
, attributable to the drug combination and symptomatic enough to discontinue it, occurred in 3% of patients, and in 1% with concurrent high creatine phosphokinase (769 U/liter); no patients had rhabdomyolysis or myoglobinuria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Gemfibrozil-lovastatin therapy for primary hyperlipoproteinemias. 849 94
Causes of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome other than L-tryptophan include parasitic
myositis
(that is, trichinosis), acute tropical
myositis
, sarcoidosis, granulomatous
myositis
, polymyositis, collagen vascular diseases, neoplastic
myositis
, and eosinophilic
myositis
. Some of these can be excluded by the absence of associated findings, that is, sarcoidosis, collagen
vascular disease
, neoplastic
myositis
; or on epidemiologic grounds, for example, acute tropical
myositis
. A muscle biopsy is diagnostic for trichinosis and for granulomatous, neoplastic, and eosinophilic
myositis
. A normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate militates against but does not rule out neoplastic or collagen
vascular disease
-associated
myositis
. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate may be elevated in most of these disorders although trichinosis is characterized by a very low rate. Most conditions associated with eosinophilia are characterized by both blood and local tissue eosinophilia.
...
PMID:The eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome with neuritis associated with L-tryptophan use. 233 56
Lyme disease is capable of producing a wide variety of clinical pathologic conditions and lesions having in common histologic features of collagen-
vascular disease
. The plasma cell is an omnipotent inflammatory responder in most tissues involved by Lyme disease, ranging from relatively acute to lesions that have gone on for years. Vascular thickening also seems to be prominent, and in the dermis is accompanied by scleroderma-like collagen expansion. The disease in some ways resembles the responses seen in lupus erythematosus such as mild cerebritis with lymphocytes and plasma cells in the leptomeninges. Lymphoplasmacytic panniculitis of Lyme disease resembles lupus profundus, both in the infiltrate and the plasma cell-blood vessel relationship. The onion skin thickened vessels of the synovia resemble the vessels of lupus spleens, while the scleradermoid thickening of the dermis and various skin lesions of stage III Lyme disease suggest a collagen-
vascular disorder
. Finally, the perivascular lymphoid infiltrate in clinical
myositis
does not differ from that seen in polymyositis or dermatomyositis. All of these histologic derangements suggest immunologic damage in response to persistence of the spirochete, however few in number.
...
PMID:Clinical pathologic correlations of Lyme disease by stage. 284 22
The neurological spectrum of Borrelia burgdorferi infections is still enlarging. We review epidemiological, pathological and serological data of Lyme disease. The course of the disease is divided in three stages: stage 1 during the first month is characterised by erythema chronicum migrans and associated manifestations; stage 2 includes not only the classical European meningoradiculitis but also less specific neurological symptoms: isolated lymphocytic meningitis with an acute or even relapsing course, apparently idiopathic facial palsy, neuritis of other cranial nerves, polyneuritis cranialis, Argyll-Robertson sign, peripheral nerve involvement, acute transverse myelitis, severe encephalitis,
myositis
. During stage 3, three to five months or longer after the onset of the disease, chronic arthritis, acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans and various neurological symptoms can be observed: chronic neuropathy with mainly sensory or motor signs, recurrent strokes due to cerebral
angiopathy
and progressive encephalomyelitis; this third stage the central nervous system involvement is characterised by slowly progressive or fluctuating course during months or years, ataxic or spastic gait disorder, bladder disturbances, cranial nerve dysfunction including optic atrophy and hypoacusia, dysarthria, focal and diffuse encephalopathy. This chronic central nervous system disease can mimic multiple sclerosis, anorexia nervosa, psychic disorders or subacute presenile dementia. It is often associated with pleiocytosis, abnormal EEG and evoked potentials, sometimes multifocal and mainly periventricular white matter lesions visualised by CT or MRI, and as a rule high antibody titers against Borrelia burgdorferi. High doses of penicillin can halt the disease, sometimes induce spectacular regression of symptoms or sometimes be inefficient; ceftriaxone could be a more powerful therapy. Similarities between syphilis and Borreliosis are multiple: both of these spirochetes contain plasmids, can be transmitted through the placenta and progress for many years through successive stages, with multiorgan symptoms, including parenchymatous and vascular lesions of the central nervous system. Borrelia burgdorferi is the new great imitator.
...
PMID:[Multiple neurologic manifestations of Borrelia burgdorferi infection]. 307 Jun 90
Dermatomyositis (DM) is a collagen
vascular disease
with prominent cutaneous findings. Although the
myositis
often responds to therapy with corticosteroids and/or immunosuppressives, the cutaneous disease may not respond. Seven patients with cutaneous lesions of DM that had not responded to therapy were treated with hydroxychloroquine in an open study. Three patients had idiopathic DM, one had DM without
myositis
, one had DM with malignancy, and one had adolescent DM. The response to the addition of hydroxychloroquine was good in all of the patients, and three had total resolution of their skin lesions. In two patients the corticosteroid dosage could be tapered. Therapy with hydroxychloroquine did not appear to have any beneficial effect on the
myositis
. We conclude that hydroxychloroquine may have a role as an adjuvant to the therapy of patients with cutaneous lesions of DM.
...
PMID:Cutaneous lesions of dermatomyositis are improved by hydroxychloroquine. 671 8
We report on a patient with an interstitial
myositis
in type II polyendocrine autoimmune disease (Schmidt's syndrome) showing an immunohistochemical demonstrated perifascicular expression of Leu 19 indicating perifascicular denervation, which could not be detected with classical histological methods. In neurogenic muscular atrophy, idiopathic polymyositis and normal muscle we could not find such an exclusive perifascicular expression of the Leu 19 antigen. We conclude that perifascicular denervation is a characteristic feature in IM and thus might have diagnostic value. Furthermore the interstitial
myositis
is characterized by a complement-mediated
angiopathy
(vascular deposition of the membranolytic attack complex C5b-9). This pattern is comparable to well-known changes in dermatomyositis. Interstitial myositis and dermatomyositis are evidently pathogenetically similar according to myopathological criteria, but show phenotypic differences. Additional in interstitial
myositis
and idiopathic polymyositis inflammatory infiltrates surrounding Leu 19 expressing myocytes are regarded as the cause of disseminated intrafascicular muscle fibre denervation.
...
PMID:Myopathological findings in interstitial myositis in type II polyendocrine autoimmune syndrome (Schmidt's syndrome). 764 82
The role of MRT in the prebiopsy diagnosis of muscular and vascular inflammatory conditions was evaluated prospectively and an optimal method of examination was investigated. 92 patients with a suspected diagnosis of
myositis
(60 cases) or vasculitis (32 cases) were examined, in each case two extremities were studied using transverse T1 and T2 weighted SE sequences and double echo STIR sequences on a 0.5 Tesla (56 patients) or 1.5 Tesla magnet (36 patients; T5/S15 Gyroscan, Philips). The site of the biopsy depended on the MRT findings. In 41 patients the suspected diagnosis was confirmed histologically, in two patients an infective myositis was diagnosed on clinical grounds despite negative histology. MRT demonstrated muscle oedema in 86% of patients. There were negative findings after immuno-suppressive therapy (two patients), in focal
myositis
(3 out of 4 patients) and in one of 7 patients with untreated vasculitis. Amongst 49 patients in whom the suspected diagnosis could not be confirmed there was muscle oedema in 11 cases (9 neuropathies out of 22, two myopathies out of 10). Oedema indicated inflammatory muscular or
vascular disease
with a sensitivity of 97% (except in treated patients and for focal
myositis
). The number of false negative biopsies can be greatly reduced by the use of MRT.
...
PMID:[The diagnosis of inflammatory muscular and vascular diseases using MRT with STIR sequences]. 850 45
A 47-year-old man experienced multifocal mononeuropathy and putative ganglionopathy associated with influenza B infection, characterized by aching and dysesthesia in the right arm and left leg with normal deep sense. He displayed muscle atrophy in the affected limbs, which might have resulted from local
myositis
or a disorder similar to neuralgic amyotrophy. Sural nerve biopsy revealed a severe loss of unmyelinated and thinly myelinated fibres, consistent with a small fibre neuropathy, without evidence of
angiopathy
or inflammation. We could not detect any other cause of the neuropathy except influenza B. In this case, it may be inferred that small-diameter neurons in the dorsal root ganglia and thinly- or nonmyelinated fibres were selectively involved through a post-infectious immune process. To our knowledge, small fibre neuropathy following influenza B has never been reported.
...
PMID:Painful small-fibre multifocal mononeuropathy and local myositis following influenza B infection. 933 19
1
2
3
Next >>