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)

A 37-year-old woman with myositis ossificans of the left foot is reported. A faint density was seen on foot radiographs, whereas computed tomography images showed a rim of mineralization inferior to the second and third metatarsal bones. On short tau inversion recovery-weighted magnetic resonance images, a hyperintense lesion was demonstrated with hyperintensity extending to the surrounding soft tissues. The rim of ossification appeared hypointense. Other non-neoplastic soft tissue processes with bone formation such as pseudomalignant osseous tumor of soft tissues, florid reactive periostitis, and bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation occur more commonly in the foot than myositis ossificans. A differential diagnosis of these lesions including periosteal and parosteal osteosarcoma, periosteal chondroma, and osteomyelitis is discussed.
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PMID:Myositis ossificans of the foot. 929 45

Influenza is associated with a variety of neurologic complications. Although the epidemiologic and clinical characteristics of influenza A H1N1 were reviewed in depth, only brief descriptions of neurologic complications exist. We describe the neurologic complications of children hospitalized with influenza A H1N1 infection. We undertook a retrospective study of all hospitalized children with laboratory-confirmed influenza A H1N1 infection accompanied by neurologic complications during a 4-month winter period. Their demographics and clinical characteristics of neurologic presentations were reviewed. Fourteen of 74 children (19%) with laboratory-confirmed influenza A H1N1 infection presented with neurologic complications. Eleven (11/14, 79%) were previously healthy, and three exhibited chronic conditions. Ten (10/14, 71%) presented with seizures: six were febrile, and four were nonfebrile. Other complications included transverse myelitis, myositis, expressive aphasia, and syncope. Only the child with transverse myelitis required a course of rehabilitation. Neurologic complications associated with influenza A H1N1 in our patients were relatively mild. Seizures (febrile or nonfebrile) were the most common. However, the possibility of influenza A H1N1 infection should be borne in mind when diagnosing children with neurologic signs during the influenza A H1N1 season.
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PMID:Pediatric Neurologic Complications Associated With Influenza A H1N1. 2114 87

Systemic sclerosis (SS) can involve the pericardium, myocardium, conduction system, and cardiac valves. The presence of overt clinical signs of cardiac disease is a poor prognostic sign. Clinical manifestations include dyspnea, palpitations, chest pain, syncope, and symptoms of right heart failure. Prevalence of clinically symptomatic pericardial disease is 5-16%. However, ecocardiographic prevalence is 5.4- 41% and at autopsy is 33-77.5%. Patchy fibrosis is the characteristic myocardial finding in SS. Contraction band necrosis is the typical pathological finding. Important complications of fibrosis include left ventricular hypertrophy, as well as systolic and diastolic dysfunction of both ventricles. Early detection of these abnormalities is very important, mainly of the diastolic dysfunction, since it occurs before the systolic dysfunction and can predict important cardiac damage. Association of skeletal myositis with myocardial disease has been described. Patients with skeletal myositis are more likely to develop congestive heart failure, sustained symptomatic arrythmias, and cardiac sudden death. Coronary arteries are normal in systemic sclerosis, but there is no endomyocardial vessel involvement. There is an increased prevalence of arrhytmias, mainly premature atrial and ventricular contractions, as well as conduction system disease. Cardiac valvular involvement is minor in systemic sclerosis; mitral valve is the most frequently affected. Other abnormalities described in this disease include peripheral large vessels stiffness and secondary cardiac involvement due to pulmonary and systemic arterial hypertension. Cardiac involvement confers a high morbi-mortality risk in systemic sclerosis.
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PMID:[Cardiac involvement in systemic sclerosis]. 2179 85