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)
Myositis
and myocarditis have been reported in progressive systemic sclerosis, and these patients have had favorable therapeutic responses to intravenous pulse methylprednisolone. Thus far, premortem biopsy documentation of myocarditis and myocardial fibrosis has not been reported in such patients. We report the case of a patient with subacute congestive heart failure six months after she developed Raynaud's phenomenon. Clinical examination was typical of scleroderma but there was no proximal muscle weakness. She had elevated creatine kinase and MB-creatine kinase and laboratory evidence of hypothyroidism. Echocardiogram demonstrated four-chamber dilatation and severe left ventricular dysfunction. Cardiac catheterization revealed normal epicardial coronary arteries and severely decreased cardiac index. A skin biopsy specimen of the forearm was consistent with diffuse systemic sclerosis, and an endomyocardial biopsy specimen demonstrated mild fibrosis and lymphocytic infiltrate. Her heart failure initially improved with digoxin, furosemide, and enalapril. She also received L-thyroxine and intravenous methylprednisolone. The heart failure progressed over the next six weeks and she died. Patients with scleroderma and new-onset heart failure may have
acute myocarditis
.
...
PMID:Acute myocarditis in fulminant systemic sclerosis. 154 Nov 69
We tested four isolates of Trypanosoma cruzi to assess parasite virulence and ability to cause myocarditis, cardiac sympathetic denervation, and histopathologic alterations in organs of the digestive system. The susceptibility of rats depends on the population of T. cruzi, with the ABC strain and the CL-Brener clone killing all animals, regardless of the parasitemic pattern. All tested T. cruzi populations caused
acute myocarditis
, but failed to induce histologic alterations in the intestine. The Cl-Brener and ABC isolates caused esophageal
myositis
. The myocarditis caused by the ABC, CL-Brener, and Y isolates was severe, but resolution started at the end of the acute phase. In contrast, the Col 1.7 G2 clone induced mild and sustained myocarditis. Our results also showed that T. cruzi populations able to induce severe
acute myocarditis
caused marked sympathetic denervation, but recovery of normal cardiac histology and innervation occurred. The sustained myocarditis induced by Col 1.7 G2 clone failed to cause sustained denervation.
...
PMID:Infection with different Trypanosoma cruzi populations in rats: myocarditis, cardiac sympathetic denervation, and involvement of digestive organs. 1128 72
In rats, CL-Brener clone caused high mortality, severe
acute myocarditis
, and
myositis
that subsided completely in surviving animals. Accordingly, no parasite kDNA could be amplified in several organs after 4 months. The monoclonal JG strain caused null mortality, acute predominantly focal myocarditis, discrete and focal
myositis
, and a chronic phase with sparse inflammatory foci. Double infection with both Trypanosoma cruzi populations turned mortality very low or null. At the end of the acute phase, the heart exhibited only JG strain kDNA (LSSP-PCR), while skeletal muscles and rectum exhibited only CL-Brener kDNA. Molecular and histopathological findings were accordant. In double infection chronic phase, JG strain remains in heart and appeared in organs previously parasitized by CL-Brener clone. Understanding the virulence and histotropism shifts now described could be important to clarify the variable clinical course and epidemiological peculiarities of Chagas' disease.
...
PMID:Trypanosoma cruzi: mixture of two populations can modify virulence and tissue tropism in rat. 1293 60
Research on this form of transmission was carried out on female rats intradermally injected, before mating, with 1 x 10(4) metacyclic trypomastigotes of T. cruzi strains from dog (Pr) and human (YBM). The infected rats, as well as their offspring, were given parasitological, immunological and histopathological examinations during and after gestation. Healthy gestating rats were used as controls. Rats infected with T. cruzi strains showed clear signs of infection between 18 and 45 days post-inoculation (pi). Of 44 offspring from mothers infected with Pr, 4 males (9.1%) showed high parasitemia (432 and 240 tryps./mm3 of blood) at 30 and 40 days after birth, while direct blood examination, hemoculture and xenodiagnosis showed no infection in the other 40, or in the 52 offspring of rats infected with YBM. Anti-T. cruzi antibodies were found in appreciable quantities in infected mothers and in 44 out of 92 (47.8%) of the offspring, with titers that fluctuated between 1:32 and 1:2048 respectively. Histopathological studies of rats sacrificed at the end of gestation showed
acute myocarditis
and
myositis
of varying intensity and extent, characterized by abundant inflammatory infiltrate, in some cases associated with nests of amastigotes. The placentas showed moderate cellular infiltrate without parasites in the vascular stroma and amniotic fluid. The offspring of mothers infected with Chagas' disease were reinoculated and showed an acute phase characterized by low parasitemia (p < 0.05); after 60 days, the beginnings of chronic myocarditis and
myositis
could be observed, of a similar intensity to that observed in offspring born to infected mothers that were subsequently infected. These results confirm that T. cruzi can be transmitted vertically in Wistar rats; that a small number of offspring contract Chagasic infection congenitally; that anti-T. cruzi antibodies can pass from the mother and that these can modify the immune response in the offspring; that the pathogenicity of the strains of T. cruzi plays an important role in congenital transmission independently of origin or geographical location.
...
PMID:[Vertical transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi in Wistar rats during the acute phase of infection]. 1455 62
Salmonella gastroenteritis is a common, self-limiting, foodborne disease and a rare cause of life-threatening complications especially in immunocompetent individuals. Moreover, bacterial infections of the GI tract have been rarely reported as a cause of serious complications like
acute myocarditis
and rhabdomyolysis. While viral infections are commonly associated with myocarditis, bacterial infections are infrequently seen with these conditions. Similarly, bacterial infections may lead to only 5% of adult rhabdomyolysis events whereas viral-induced
myositis
appears to be the commonest. A 28-year-old young male with no past medical problems presented with acute salmonella gastroenteritis that was complicated by myocardial injury (most likely myocarditis), rhabdomyolysis, acute renal failure, and shock. He made an uneventful complete recovery of all complications by early recognition of these rare complications and prompt institution of appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Myocarditis and Rhabdomyolysis in a Healthy Young Man Caused by Salmonella Gastroenteritis. 2612 70