Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calcification and ossification of soft tissues occurs as a response to a variety of injuries such as atherosclerosis, myositis ossificans, and caseous necrosis. These injuries and others have as a unifying characteristic persistent necrotic tissue elements. Normal tissues may calcify under conditions of hypercalcemia or hyperphosphatemia. The initial mobilization of Ca and P following injury is rapid, as observed in calcergy. The mitochondria of cells, normally a storehouse of Ca, become preferential sites of precipitated Ca when cells are irreversibly injured, and act as foci of progressive calcification. Collagen fibers undergo calcification directly, principally when they are located within devitalized sites such as prosthetic heart valves, and direct calcification of collagen may predominate generally in dystrophic calcification. VArious porous sponges act as foci for calcification and ossification, and the utilization of porous implants may provide for the development of therapeutically useful calcifying and ossifying biomaterials.
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PMID:Mineralization of connective tissue surrounding implanted devices. 733 Nov 58

In horses, immune-mediated muscle disorders can arise from an overzealous immune response to concurrent infections or potentially from an inherent immune response to host muscle antigens. Streptococcus equi ss. equi infection or vaccination can result in infarctive purpura hemorrhagica (IPH) in which vascular deposition of IgA-streptococcal M protein complexes produces ischemia and complete focal infarction of skeletal muscle and internal organs. In Quarter Horse-related breeds with immune-mediated myositis, an apparent abnormal immune response to muscle antigens results in upregulation of major histocompatibility complex class (MHC) I and II on muscle cell membranes, lymphocytic infiltration of lumbar and gluteal myofibers, and subsequent gross muscle atrophy. Rarely, an inflammatory event results in myositis with subsequent systemic calcinosis characterized by a pathognomonic hyperphosphatemia and high fatality rate. This review presents an overview of these immune-mediated myopathies and highlights clinical and pathological features as well as the suspected pathophysiology.
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PMID:Immune-Mediated Muscle Diseases of the Horse. 2812 93