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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of all the signs of Whipple's disease, the joint manifestations are among the most constant and the earliest to indicate the enteropathy, appearing long before the digestive and general signs. Essentially they consist of painful, peripheral joint manifestations: either simple arthralgia, or true arthritis differing in the degree of
pain
, the degree of the clinical signs accompanying the
pain
, the mode of evolution, and the number and the grouping of the joints affected, thus occurring in numerous clinical forms of which the two principal ones are subacute oligoarthritis with a tendency to migrate and chronic polyarthritis that gives rise to few definitive deformations. The radiographic appearance is usually normal. There is nothing specific about the laboratory aspects of the inflammatory syndrome. Synovial histology may in some cases clarify the diagnosis by demonstration of histiocytes with positive PAS granulations. The axial joint manifestations, which are always associated with the preceding ones, are infrequent and practically limited to unilateral or bilateral sacro-iliac lesions, with little or no clinical expression, that are discovered by standard radiology. Jejunal biopsy can be the key to early diagnosis. The pathogenesis remains obscure. The treatment is the same as for Whipple's disease, long-term antibiotic therapy.
Rev Rhum
Mal
Osteoartic 1976 Oct
PMID:[Joint manifestations of Whipple's disease]. 6 80
Thirty-two patients (group I: 7 normal subjects; group II: 25 coronary subjects) underwent coronary arteriography, and measurements were made both in normal rhythm and under atrial stimulation of the pulmonary capillary pressure and the pressure in the femoral artery, of cardiac output, of coronary sinus flow (by continuous thermodilution), of the coronary arterio-venous oxygen difference, of oxygen consumption, and in 28 of the patients of the coefficient of extraction of K lactates. During stimulation, the only differences to appear between the subjects of group I and group II were an increase in capillary pressure (p less than 0.01) and a decrease in the coefficient of extraction of lactates (p less than 0.001) in the coronary patients. Similar differences were found between coronary patients with a stenosis greater than 70% in the anterior descending or circumflex artery (group IIa) and those without it (group 11b), and between the patients with
pain
during atrial stimulation (n = 9) and those without it. There was a good correlation between a double score (IVA + circumflex artery, Rowe's method) and the coefficient of extraction of lactates during atrial stimulation (n = 28, p less than 0.01).
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1978 Aug
PMID:[Hemodynamic and coronary effects of atrial stimulation in normal subject and patients with coronary disease: correlation with coronary arteriography]. 10 Nov 66
The various factors influencing the result of treatment have been studied in a series of 100 consecutive patients undergoing aorto-coronary bypass graft surgery. There were three operative deaths and twelve cases of post-operative infarction. Longterm, 85% of them were three year survivors, clinical improvement being maintained in 84% of them. Post-operative tests showed that 70% of patients have no
pain
on the maximal exercise test, but 48% had ischaemic depression of the ST segment. From among the 47 patients who had follow-up arteriography, 78% of the grafts were patent, but no improvement of the contractility of the left ventricle could be demonstrated (pre-operative ejection fraction 47 +/- 3%, post-operative 49+/- 3%). The pre-operative clinical features rarely give any indication of the prognosis. The same is true in the present series of the condition of the left ventricle, bearing in mind the fact that patients with grossly impaired ventricular contractility (ejection fraction below 30%) were routinely excluded from surgery. It is essentially the state of the coronary arterial network, as assessed by a score made up from the degree and number of stenoses, the quality of the distal bed, and the anatomical distribution, which will pick out those patients more at risk both from the surgery and from post-operative death and in whom the longterm result is likely to be disappointing with no improvement in function, with obstruction of the grafts, or with secondary death.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1978 Jul
PMID:[Analysis of factors which can influence results of aortocoronary bypass surgery]. 10 77
This coronary spasm provocation test with methyl-ergometrine maleate was carried out during coronary arteriography in 47 patients presenting with spontaneous chest pain. Coronary spasm was triggered in 16 cases, reproducing the chest pain in 11 patients, and accompanied by electrical changes in 15 cases, 12 subepicardial ischaemias and 3 subendocardial ischaemias. This test is not without danger to the patient as arrhythmias and conduction defects were recorded in 6 cases although the spasm was readily reversible on injection of intravenous glyceryl trinitrate. Of 7 patients with Prinzmetal variant angina, the test was positive 6 times, in three of which on pre existing severe organic lesions, so confirming the mechanism of this syndrome and the reliability of the test. Of 40 patients presenting with spontaneous chest pain, 10 had a positive test. In 2 of these cases the chest pain was subsequently observed with subepicardial ischaemic electrical changes, so confirming the screening value of this test. In the 7 cases where coronary spasm gave rise to electrical changes with or without
pain
, the logical diagnosis would appear to be spastic angina. In the 30 cases where the test was negative the subsequent outcome did not provide any proof in favour of a coronary origin of the chest pain.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1979 Jan
PMID:[Methyl-ergometrin maleate test during coronary arteriography in spontaneous chest pain]. 10 81
Methylergometrine (Methergin) was given intravenously (0.4 mg) to 118 patients undergoing coronary arteriography. The electrocardiogramme and intraaortic pressure was continuously monitored whilst coronary arteriography was performed, 1,3, and 5 minutes after the injection of the ergot alkaloid. The test was positive if: 1) coronary spasm was observed; 2) if ST segment elevation was recorded with or without
pain
. Positive tests were obtained in 13 out of 14 patients with Prinzmetal angina. The test was negative in the other patients. However in 3 patients with Prinzmetal angina, the test produced typical coronary spasm without electrocardiographic changes. In Prinzmetal angina the sensitivity of this test was 93 p. 100 with a high specificity: 96-100 p. 100 depending on whether or not electrocardiographical changes associated with spasm are considered. Taking into account current therapeutic methods of treating Prinzmetal angina the indications of this test of coronary spasm are: 1) patients presenting with resting angina whatever the state of their coronary arteries; 2) patients with documented Prinzmetal angina with "angiographically normal" coronary arteries.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1979 Feb
PMID:[Detection of coronary artery spasm by the methylergometrin test. Technic. Results. Indications]. 10 90
The clinical beginning of diffuse pleural mesothelioma is a pleurisy. Initially pleura may be normal at X-ray examination, then either a pachypleuritis or a tumorous pleura appears. Thery serious since there is in the literature no cured case. The average survival time from diagnosis to death is 15 months. At terminal stage mesothelioma does not invade the other coelomic cavities. It may remain limited to the hemithorax where it has started, invading then the organs by contiguity. Metastasis may occur but their frequency is very variable, from 30 to 70% according the literature. On a therapeutic point of view all was tried: Surgery is rarely curative but may reduce temporarily effusion
pain
and dyspnea. Radiotherapy at high doses produces a partial effect in some series, but results are variable. Chemotherapy: adriamycin could be the most promising agent. At present time according to many authors no treatment seems to change the course of the disease.
Rev Fr
Mal
Respir
PMID:[Evolutive patterns of diffuse pleural mesothelioma (author's transl)]. 11 73
62 of 100 cases of acute pericarditis observed over 15 years were so-called acute benign pericarditis. 20 of these patients (30%) had multiple relapses. Relapse could not be predicted. The interval between the initial affection and first relapse was usually more than one month (18/20). Each relapse was accompanied by
pain
, fever, ST-T changes, slight cardiomegaly and acceleration of the ESR. Corticotherapy appeared to be responsible for relapse in 13 cases. In 6 cases the eradication of a deep septic focus prevented further relapses. In two cases the duration of anti-inflammatory therapy was thought to have been insufficient. Antibiotic therapy did not seem to be a provocative factor. Relapses may be numerous (10 to 12) and prolonged (24-36 months) especially in the corticodependant forms in which steroids should be tailed off gradually according to a strict protocol.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1979 Aug
PMID:[Recurrent acute pericarditis. 20 cases]. 11 29
The activity of a therapeutic drug against Paget's disease is judged by a reduction in the level of hydroxyprolinuria and of alkaline phosphatasaemia, these being the metabolic signs of the bone changes, and by a decrease in bone pain which may accompany the bone changes in Paget's disease. The effect of aspirin is only moderate and is produced only with large doses that are often not well tolerated. The cortisone drugs are also active only at high doses that should be avoided. The action of sodium fluoride is uncertain. Mithramycin is always effective; it leads to a decrease in the levels of hydroxyprolinuria and of alkaline phosphatosaemia and to disappearance of the
pain
. At the dose levels used by the authors, mithramycin induces only certain metabolic anomalies (rise in transaminases, decrease in the prothrombin level...) which return to normal at the end of treatment. However, the long-term tolerance of mithramycin is unknown and the authors think that its use in cases of Paget's disease should be severely restricted. Sodium etidronate, a diphosphonate that inhibits both bone resorption and osteoformation also decreases regularly the levels of hydroxyprolinuria and of alkaline phosphatasemia and often decreases the
pain
. It is usually well tolerated. However at the dose rate of 20 mg/kg/day it may lead to the development of osteomalacia.
Rev Rhum
Mal
Osteoartic 1975 Nov
PMID:[Non-hormonal drug treatment in Paget's disease]. 13 65
The author discusses the psychosomatic aspects of certain extra-articular rheumatic pains. He distinguishes between cervical, dorsal, lumbar, and brachial psychosomatic
pain
on the basis of an understanding of the phenomena. Neurophysiological and anatomo-pathological correlations are discussed. On the basis of this knowledge of psychosomatic disease therapeutic ideas are put forward that are important both for the generalist and for the rheumatologist.
Rev Rhum
Mal
Osteoartic
PMID:[Psychosomatic aspects of extra-articular rheumatism]. 13 38
Sickle cell disease is the commonest of the haemoglobinopathies. The pathophysiology consists on the one hand of chronic haemolytic anaemia whose course is punctuated by acute crises with
pain
, fever and severe haemolysis, and on the other of a tendency to microthrombotic accidents. Of all the very varied clinical features of the disease, cardiac signs are both common and variable. The authors report a series of 92 cases, and compare their findings with those in the literature.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1977 Feb
PMID:[Cardiovascular signs in drepanocytosis. Apropos of 12 cases]. 13 57
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