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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A number of viruses have been implicated as being the cause of various forms of myositis, including acute transient myositis, chronic polymyositis, and dermatomyositis. However, the cause of juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) has remained elusive. Our study of serum samples taken within 4 months of the onset of disease in 12 children with JDM showed that 83% had detectable titers of complement-fixing (CF) antibody to 1 or more coxsackie B viral antigens. Detectable titers were found in only 25% of age-, sex-, and date-matched control sera taken from 24 patients with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA), and in 25% of serum samples taken from 2,192 "normal" children who had been hospitalized because of viral syndromes. Titers of CF antibody to coxsackie B1, B2, and B4 were positive in 58%, 50%, and 58%, respectively, of the JDM patients. In matched JRA controls, the respective values were 8%, 13%, and 8%. There were no significant antiviral titers and no significant differences in the results of tests for 13 other viral CF antigens, hepatitis B surface antigen, and Mycoplasma pneumoniae CF antigen in the JDM patient sera compared with the JRA patient sera. When titers of neutralizing antibody were determined, 58%, 58%, and 67% of the JDM patients were positive for coxsackie B2, B4, and B5, respectively, whereas 16%, 26%, and 21%, respectively, of the JRA controls were positive for the 3 antigens. These data suggest that the host response to coxsackie B virus might be related to the pathophysiology of JDM.
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PMID:Prevalence of Coxsackie B virus antibodies in patients with juvenile dermatomyositis. 302 59

We report a patient who developed an acute symmetrical polyarthropathy, orbital myositis and posterior scleritis following inoculation with the 1993 Fluvirin (inactivated influenza vaccine: surface antigen) vaccine. We believe that this represents a hypersensitivity reaction to the vaccine as extensive investigations revealed no underlying infective, inflammatory or systemic cause. We review the current indications for vaccination against the influenza virus and the known adverse reactions to the vaccine.
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PMID:Polyarthropathy, orbital myositis and posterior scleritis: an unusual adverse reaction to influenza vaccine. 911 51

This report describes the case of a 47-year old man who developed myositis in association with hepatitis B surface antigen-positive hepatitis. Interestingly, the myositis repeatedly worsened 2 months after the exacerbation of hepatitis in this case, suggesting a close association between hepatitis B infection and myositis. The dose of prednisolone was increased twice in order to treat the exacerbating myositis, resulting in improvement of the muscle symptoms, but the patient eventually died of liver failure. Only 5 other myositis patients with hepatitis B antigenemia have been reported in the literature. We review these cases of the association between hepatitis B infection and myositis.
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PMID:A case of polymyositis associated with hepatitis B infection. 1072 51

Transient weakness of the legs developed in a 17 year-old male high school student three weeks after the initial injection of a hepatitis B vaccine. Seventeen days after the second injection of the vaccine, low-grade fever, a pruritic maculopapular rash appeared and weakness of the legs recurred. This was associated with elevation of the creatinine kinase to 2,406 U/L. The day after admission he became afebrile and in the subsequent four days the rash improved but leg weakness persisted. One-month later, muscle strength had returned; and the creatinine kinase had returned to normal levels. The only case of dermatomyositis associated with hepatitis B vaccination and the findings in the six reported cases of surface antigen-positive hepatitis associated with polyomyositis or dermatomyositis are briefly reviewed. Hepatitis B vaccination should be encouraged, but it is important to be aware that, rarely, dermatomyositis, polymyositis or neurovascular complications may occur. Polymyositis associated with the administration of the hepatitis B vaccine or with hepatitis B virus infection is a rare occurrence. A Medline Search performed from 1960 to January 2002 associating hepatitis B vaccine or hepatitis B virus with myopathy, myositis, polymyositis and dermatomyositis, showed only one case of dermatomyositis related to the hepatitis B vaccine, and six case reports relating polymyositis to hepatitis B virus infection. We present a case where a causal relationship between polymyositis and hepatitis B vaccination appears quite likely.
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PMID:Polymyositis: rare complication of hepatitis B vaccination. An unusual cause of toxic shock syndrome. 1544 86