Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Radiological sacroiliac (SI) changes were found in 3 patients, 2 with primary hyperparathyroidism (1 also with associated chondrocalcinosis) and 1 with osteomalacia. Osteomalacia was due to celiac disease. None of the 3 patients, all females, had a history of psoriasis, urethritis, iritis or chronic colitis. There was no renal function impairment. Peripheral joints were affected in the patient with associated condrocalcinosis. HLA B 27 was negative in all cases. Low back pain and vertebral stiffness were present in the patient with osteomalacia. A dramatic improvement in pain and stiffness ensued after vitamin D injections. These SI lesions, which may simulate ankylosing spondylitis, were attributable to subchondral bone changes related to the metabolic bone diseases. In the case of osteomalacia the SI lesions were predominantly on the right side, where there was a Looser's zone on the ischial ramus suggesting that pseudofractures could be a cause of SI changes. Metabolic osseous diseases such as osteomalacia or primary hyperparathyroidism should be investigated in cases of HLA B 27 negative radiological "sacroiliitis".
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PMID:[Sacroiliac changes, HLA-B27 negative, in primary hyperparathyroidism and osteomalacia]. 46 71

A study comparing 12 patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) to 25 with osteitis condensans ilii (OCI), referred to a rheumatic disease center, was carried out to determine whether OCI represents a varient of AS in women. In the group with OCI, chronic lumbodorsal pain was present in 9, 36%, a 'fibrositis' syndrome in 6, 24%, and 16, 64% had recurrent episodes of polyarthralgia. A definite arthritis with effusion developed in 10 patients, 40%. No patient with OCI had iritis or colitis, whereas 4 patients with AS had iritis and four had colitis. Radiographs of the spine showed no evidence of spondylitis in the OCI group. Of the 25 patients with OCI, only 2, 8% were HLA B27 positive compared with 11 of 12 patients with AS, 92%. These results suggest that OCI is not a variant of AS in women.
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PMID:Comparison of osteitis condensans ilii and ankylosing spondylitis in female patients: clinical, radiological and HLA typing characteristics. 67 May 38

The cases of 29 patients aged 20 years or less with orbital inflammatory pseudotumor were studied retrospectively. There was no sex predilection, although the left orbit was involved twice as often as the right. Patients typically had abrupt onset of periocular pain, early-morning swelling, chemosis, conjunctival and extraocular muscle injection, proptosis, a palpable mass, and extraocular motility disturbances. Visual acuity was usually only mildly affected at onset. Forty-five percent of patients had or subsequently developed bilateral orbital involvement in the absence of notable systemic diseases. Papilledema and iritis were seen in 35% of patients, respectively, particularly in bilateral cases. All cases responded to steroids, but bilateral disease was the most apt to become steroid dependent. Permanent functional impairments were seen most commonly in patients who had alternating recurrent bilateral disease or who underwent surgical exploration.
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PMID:Idiopathic inflammatory orbital pseudotumor in childhood. I. Clinical characteristics. 67 81

Thirty-nine Caucasian women with definite or probable ankylosing spondylitis were tissue typed and the radiographic and clinical features were correlated with the presence of B27 (formerly W27). This investigation showed that the same strong positive correlation observed in men obtains in women between B27 and unequivocal radiographic changes. As such changes develop slowly in women, clinical and laboratory features were identified which were sufficiently characteristic to enable the diagnosis to be reached in advance of decreased spinal mobility. Immobility pain and stiffness and bilateral sacroiliac pain are the most characteristic features, but additional support is provided by the presence of any of the following: onset by age 30, a raised sedimentation rate, peripheral joint involvement, circumthoracic pain, family history, and iritis.
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PMID:Clinical diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis in women and relation to presence of HLA-B27. 98 7

A new case of SAPHO syndrome with lesions confined to the spine and concomitant enterocolitis reported. Only eight cases of this rare combination have been published to date. Bone involvement consisted in sclerosis of vertebral bodies of T10 and T11, raggedness of the vertebral plateaux from T7 to T10, and thick syndesmophytes bridging the vertebrae from T7 to T11. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 108 in one hour. Systemic corticosteroids were given after failure of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents and recurrence of iritis. Pain resolved promptly and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate returned to normal. This case is unusual both because this combination of diseases is rare and because virtually complete resolution of vertebral sclerosis was noted after one year of corticosteroid therapy. Possible relationships between the SAPHO syndrome and the group of spondylarthropathies are suggested and discussed.
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PMID:[Bone condensation and enterocolitis: SAPHO syndrome. Apropos of a case]. 149 42

Herpes zoster ophthalmicus was seen in 22 cases out of 195 cases of herpes zoster (11.3% incidence). It was affecting mainly adults (90.9%). Oedema over the lids (81.8%) was invariably present and lead to ptosis. Mucopurulent conjunctivitis, predominantly mucoid (72.7%) was the commonest manifestation associated with vesicles over the lid margins. Sectorial (22.7%) and diffuse (9.1%) episcleritis appeared in later part of first week, while nodular episcleritis was observed in one case only on 12th day of the disease. Nummular keratitis was seen in 31.8% of cases between 8-10 days. Iritis and iridocyclitis was seen in 45.4% of cases out of which 36.3% had secondary ocular hypertension (glaucoma). Neuroparalytic keratitis and internal ophthalmoplegia were detected in one patient each. Postherpetic neuralgia occurred in 22.7% of cases and was uncommon in younger age group (below 40 years, 4.5%). Carbamazepine was effective in relieving the herpetic pain.
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PMID:Clinical profile of herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 174 74

Postoperative inflammation is one of the oldest complications of cataract surgery. It was described by the Indian Susruta as early as 500 BC. Following the introduction of cataract extraction by Daviel in 1745, these operations attracted increasing interest. In 1786 de Wenzel distinguished two types of postoperative inflammation. In the dangerous type there was involvement of the entire eye and severe pain; in the benign type, which began in the first few postoperative days, the conjunctiva and lids were not involved, and even if hypopyon developed there was no severe pain. During the 19th century, the possible causes of the benign type of iritis were discussed, including infection, phacoanaphylaxis, trauma, toxicity of irrigation solutions etc. In the early days of implantation of intraocular lenses, from 1949 onward, postoperative inflammation was common. However, it was not until 1980 that the term "toxic lens syndrome" was introduced. The clinical descriptions do not differ much from other descriptions of benign iritis published during the last 200 years. Therefore, it does not seem that there is any great advantage to be gained by using this new term.
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PMID:[Iritis following cataract operations. Historical retrospective with critical comments on a so-called "toxic lens" syndrome]. 219 76

In 1980, a 38-year-old man had remittent fever, swelling and arthralgia of the knee, ankle and wrist joints, as well as visual disturbance due to bilateral iritis. On his admission to our hospital, his laboratory data showed neutrophilia, normocytic normochromic anemia, hepatomegaly, hepatocellular damage, and a strongly positive RA test. All the microbiological examinations were negative. Thirty mg of prednisolone improved his symptoms and abnormal laboratory findings. Due to persistent mild arthralgia, he had continued to take 5-10 mg of prednisolone and analgesics until 1985 when he was readmitted to our hospital. In 1983, he began to complain of a steady pain around his left eye, and he sometimes had double vision. In 1985, he began to complain of decreasing left visual acuity and sensory disturbance in his left face in addition to pain in and around the eye. On his 2nd admission to our hospital, the neurological examination revealed involvement of the 2nd and 3rd cranial nerves and the 1st branch of the 5th cranial nerves of the left side. Laboratory data showed a positive RA test with RAHA titer at 1:320 and IgM at 216 mg/dl, but he had no joint deformities. The computed tomography (CT) of the brain demonstrated a high density mass of his left cavernous sinus extending to the left orbital apex. The prescription of the high dose of prednisolone (100 mg/day) relieved ophthalmic pain and improved visual acuity and neurological involvement within a week. Prednisolone was then gradually decreased to 10 mg. In 1986, he had partial and complex partial seizures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Intracranial multiple granuloma preceded by rheumatic disease--a case report]. 224 32

An 8-year-old girl complained of progressive pain, visual loss and photophobia in her right eye for 1 week. Treatment with local steroids for acute iritis had not been successful. Slitlamp examination revealed a marked cellular and fibrinous inflammatory reaction of the anterior chamber and a whitish, fibrin-like structure on the surface of the iris. There was mild serum eosinophilia and leucocytosis. The suspected organic material was removed surgically. By light and electron microscopy, parts of the wall of a helminthic parasite were discovered, anatomically consistent with the diagnosis of an immature stage of Taenia solium found in cysticercosis. Such cases of intra-ocular parasitosis are described very rarely but might still occur, although there is no history of suspicious typical exposition to parasites. It is important to know that eosinophilia may be insignificant or even absent and that complete surgical removal will be the only successful treatment.
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PMID:[Unilateral iritis by cysticercal larva in the anterior chamber]. 236 85

Transscleral neodymium (Nd):YAG cyclophotocoagulation, a new cyclodestructive procedure for controlling intraocular pressure in patients with refractory glaucoma, is designed to penetrate the sclera and selectively destroy the ciliary body and processes without damaging the overlying tissue. Complications include conjunctival edema, corneal edema, iritis, gas in the anterior chamber, pain, hyphema, hypopyon, vitreous hemorrhage, and cataract. We present a case in which a patient developed focal areas of scleral thinning 6 weeks after transscleral Nd:YAG cyclophotocoagulation. The possibility of scleral damage or thinning should be kept in mind when performing the procedure.
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PMID:Focal scleral thinning after transscleral Nd:YAG cyclophotocoagulation. 271 Apr 91


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