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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calciphylaxis is a small vessel vasculopathy involving mural calcification with intimal proliferation, fibrosis, and thrombosis. This syndrome occurs predominantly in individuals with renal failure and results in ischemia and necrosis of skin, subcutaneous fat, visceral organs, and skeletal muscle. The syndrome causes significant morbidity in the form of infection, organ failure, and
pain
. Mortality rates are high. In individuals with renal failure, risk factors for the development of calciphylaxis include female sex, Caucasian race, obesity, and diabetes mellitus. Many cases occur within the first year of dialysis treatment. Several recent reports demonstrate that prolonged hyperphosphatemia and/or elevated calcium x phosphorus products are associated with the syndrome. Protein malnutrition increases the likelihood of calciphylaxis, as does warfarin use and hypercoagulable states, such as
protein C
and/or protein S deficiency. Recent advances in diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies have helped in the management of patients with calciphylaxis.
...
PMID:Calciphylaxis: emerging concepts in prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. 1210 Apr 55
Linoleic and alpha-linolenic acids, obtained from plant material in the diet are the precursors in tissues of two families with opposing effects which are referred to as "essential fatty acids" (EFA): arachidonic acid (AA) and pentaene (eicosapentaenoic acid: EPA) and hexaene (docosahexaenoic acid: DHA) acids. The role of EFA is crucial, without a source of AA or compounds which can be converted into AA, synthesis of prostaglandins (PGs) by a cyclooxygenase (COX) enzyme would be compromised, and this would seriously affect many normal metabolic processes. COX, also known as prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (Pghs) or as prostaglandin G/H synthase, is a key membrane bound enzyme responsible for the oxidation of AA to PGs. Two COX isoforms have been identified, COX-1 and COX-2 that form PGH2, a common precursor for the biosynthesis of thromboxane A2 (TxA2), prostacyclin (PGI2) and PGs (PGD2, PGE2, PGF2alpha. COX-1 enzyme is expressed constitutively in most cells and tissues. Its expression remains constant under either physiological or pathological conditions controlling synthesis of those PGs primarily involved in the regulation of homeostatic functions. In contrast, COX-2 is an intermediate response gene that encodes a 71-kDa protein. COX-2 is normally absent from most cells but highly inducible in certain cells in response to inflammatory stimuli resulting in enhanced PG release. PGs formed by COX-2 primarily mediate
pain
and inflammation but have multiple effects that can favour tumorigenesis. They are more abundant in cancers than in normal tissues from which the cancers arise. COX-2 is a participant in the pathway of colon carcinogenesis, especially when mutation of the
APC
(Adenomatous Polyposis Coli) tumour suppressor gene is the initiating event. In addition, COX-2 up-regulation and elevated PGE2 levels are involved in breast carcinogenesis. It seems that there is a correlation between COX-2 level of expression and the size of the tumours and their propensity to invade underlying tissue. Inhibition by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) of COX enzymes which significantly suppress PGE2 levels, reduced breast cancer incidence and protected against colorectal cancer. Therefore it is suggested that consumption of a diet enriched in n-3 PUFA (specifically EPA and DHA) and inhibition of COX-2 by NSAIDs may confer cardioprotective effects and provide a significant mechanism for the prevention and treatment of human cancers.
...
PMID:Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and eicosanoids in human health and pathologies. 1219 20
Since 1980, 64 children with pelvic osteomyelitis (40 boys) were treated at a major pediatric referral center. The average age was 11 years and 6 months. The presenting complaints included
pain
in 61 children, fever in 30, and altered weight-bearing in 31. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was elevated in 56 and there was leukocytosis in 19. The most commonly affected sites were the ilium in 21 and the acetabulum in 20, followed by the pubis in 11 and the ischium in 10. Culture results were negative in 32 and positive for Staphylococcus aureus in 26. Treatment consisted of intravenous antibiotics in 62 and irrigation and debridement in five children, all of whom presented since 1990. The infection resolved in 62 children and persisted in two. Three developed complications, including fusion of the sacroiliac joint in one, deformity of the acetabulum in one, and one child with an underlying
protein C
deficiency developed thromboembolism. Recent patients have demonstrated increased severity, likely due to increased virulence of the organism.
...
PMID:Pelvic osteomyelitis in children: a comparison of decades from 1980-1989 with 1990-2001. 1282 53
Cutaneous necrosis is an infrequent complication of coumarin therapy. Skin necrosis has usually been reported in patients with congenital
protein C
deficiency or, less commonly, protein S deficiency. However, this complication may also occur with acquired and transient
protein C
and/or S deficiency. In coumarin therapy there is a relatively hypercoagulable state at the start of treatment, and most lesions appear between the third and sixth days. We describe a 75-year-old man receiving coumarin therapy (acenocumarol) for 7 years who was given a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent (diclofenac) for a
pain
in his knee. Two days later, his renal function deteriorated and skin necrosis became evident. Biopsy showed histological changes consistent with coumarin-induced necrosis.
Protein C
and S levels were normal. We concluded that in our patient acute renal insufficiency aggravated by diclofenac treatment probably associated with an inadvertent withdrawal could have been the precipitating factor for transient
protein C
deficiency.
...
PMID:Coumarin necrosis induced by renal insufficiency. 1532 63
Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (CAPS) is a severe and rare variant of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) characterized by acute multiorgan failure due to small vessel thrombi in patients with positive antiphospholipid antibodies. We report a fatal case of catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome in a young woman with a history of polymyositis and Hodgkin lymphoma. The patient was admitted to hospital because of severe foot
pain
following several weeks of skin ulcerations. Doppler ultrasonography showed evidence of arterial ischemia of the both lower extremities. Despite anticoagulation, immunosuppression, plasmapheresis and antibiotic therapy, she developed cutaneous gangrene, retroperitoneal hematoma, ileus, and acute respiratory and renal failure that resulted in death. Autopsy showed multifocal vascular injury and microthrombi with associated hemorrhages and infarcts in multiple organs. The patient had normal levels of functional
protein C
and protein S and a normal level of plasma homocysteine. Tests for common thromophilic gene mutations including prothrombin 20210, factor V Leiden 1691, and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase 677 were negative. To our knowledge, this is the first CAPS patient with molecular studies for genetic prothrombotic mutations. Our report showed that there was no association between the development of CAPS and inherited thromophilia.
...
PMID:Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome: a rare cause of disseminated microvascular thrombotic injury - a case report with pathological and molecular correlative studies. 1574 23
After 8 years of high performance training in mountain biking, a top female athlete, aged 23, first complained of diffuse, exercise-induced
pain
in both thighs. Over a period of the next 4 years, a slight but continuous reduction in her performance was observed, despite having maintained her training regime during the first 2 years. Gradually,
pain
increased, at last occurring even when she climbed a few stairs. This led to a clinical, echo-Doppler, MR-angiographic and DS-angiographic examination, which showed a complete occlusion of the right iliac external artery with good collateralisation. The left external iliac artery evidenced only small intravascular lesions. Surgical treatment (endarterectomy plus patch angioplasty) eliminated the
pain
completely. Except for a lipoprotein (a) of 114 mg/dL, no other significant risk factors were found. The influence of a genetic (heterocygotic) low
APC
-ratio of 1.6 and free protein S of 53% is unclear. This is a typical case of a delayed diagnosis in an athlete. A complete occlusion of an external iliac artery is extremely seldom in young in female athletes. With no indication of a general atherosclerotic or inflammatory process nor congenital abnormalities, an exercise-induced, chronic traumatisation may have caused this pathological condition.
...
PMID:External iliac artery occlusion in a young female cyclist. 1736 4
The authors report a case of partial thrombosis of a corpus cavernosum, confirmed by MRI imaging. In this patient, a neuroleptic had been prescribed several days before the thrombosis and the clotting assessment demonstrated
protein C
resistance. Conservative management comprising low molecular weight heparin and aspirin was instituted. Three months later,
pain
had resolved and signs of a thrombotic scar persisted on MRI. The aetiology of thrombosis of the corpus cavernosum, a rare disease, remains unknown. Neuroleptic therapy has been incriminated. In the light of this case, the authors emphasize the value of systematic clotting assessment.
...
PMID:[Partial thrombosis of the corpus cavernosum. Must a clotting disorder be systematically investigated?]. 1763 4
Here, we report on a patient with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) arising from recurrent anal fistula. The patient was a 57-year-old woman who had 32-year history of having a recurrent perianal abscesses that ruptured spontaneously. Six months before her admission to our hospital, anal pain developed. She had no history of inflammatory bowel disease. Physical examination revealed three external fistulous openings at the two o'clock position, 2 cm from the anal verge. One internal opening in the lower rectum was found with proctoscopy. The patient underwent fistulectomy. Microscopic examination showed SCC arising from the anal fistula, which was accompanied by vessel invasion. The tumor was observed to be continuous from the external opening but was not exposed to the internal opening of the rectal mucosa. Because human papillomavirus (HPV) infection was suspected, immunohistochemical analysis was performed, but showed no HPV infection. Two weeks after fistulectomy, abdominoperineal resection with lymph node dissection was performed. Histopathological examination revealed no remnant cancer tissue or lymph node metastasis. She was discharged after surgery without complications. Eight years after the operation, she complained of constant
pain
during micturition. Urological examination revealed urinary bladder cancer, and transurethral resection of the bladder tumor was performed. Histopathological examination revealed transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder. Two years later, the patient died of metastatic urinary bladder cancer, without recurrence of the fistula cancer. Because the patients mother had died of urinary bladder cancer and she herself had metachronous urinary bladder cancer in addition to fistula cancer, we investigated whether microsatellite instability (MSI) and chromosomal instability correlated with fistula cancer development. Immunohistochemical analysis of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded surgical tumor specimens for p53, MLH1, and MSH2 was performed. The tumor specimens showed no MLH1 expression but did show normal MSH2 expression. p53 was not expressed. Five microsatellite loci were examined using the tumor specimens to detect MSI, namely two loci with mononucleotide runs (i.e., BAT25 and BAT26) and three loci with dinucleotide repeats (i.e.,
APC
, Mfd15, and D2S123). The tumor specimens showed alternations in the repeated sequences of two loci (i.e., BAT26 and D2S123). As a result, the tumor was classified as MSI-H (high) according to the Bethesda criteria. Our patient had MSI and one of the smallest reported SCCs arising from recurrent anal fistulae.
...
PMID:Squamous cell carcinoma arising from recurrent anal fistula. 1787 4
Painful
pink or magenta colored skin lesions characterized by a clear line of demarcation between the affected area and surrounding tissue appearing under therapy with coumarins may be a sign for evolving coumarin-necrosis. Immediate treatment with a
protein C
preparation in patients with
protein C
deficiency can prevent necrosis.
...
PMID:[Impending Coumarin-necrosis in a patient with heterozygous protein C deficiency type I]. 1840 6
We report the case of a 19-year-old woman who consulted for low-back pain 3 weeks after her first delivery. This young woman had a personal history of
protein C
deficiency and was treated daily during her pregnancy with low-molecular-weight heparin. Her body mass index was 34 and she only gained 10 kg during her pregnancy. Since the delivery - which occurred without any complication - she had suffered from a gradually increasing right-buttock
pain
and limp. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a fracture of the right sacral ala. After analgesia and 1 month of home relative bed rest, the patient recovered her functional capacities. Regarding our patient, who had no potential clinical risk factors for osteoporosis, the causal effect of heparin is thus possible but not certain. This case report illustrates the fact that clinicians should have a high suspicion of pelvic fracture in post-partum women, even in very young ones, presenting sudden onset of low back and pelvic pain, especially when they have received heparin during pregnancy. MRI seems to be the key exam because it is able to detect and stage fractures or microfractures.
...
PMID:Post-partum sacral fracture associated with heparin treatment. 1845 90
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