Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (pneumoconiosis)
1,578 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report two cases of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who later had developed after polymyositis (PM). The first patient was 64-year old male who experienced muscular weakness of the four limbs in proximity 10 years ago. He was diagnosed as PM because of the elevated serum CK and the myogenic pattern of EMG, and his symptoms were improved by treatment with corticosteroid. He started to complain polyarthralgia 2 years ago, followed by interstitial pneumonia, pleuritis and skin ulcer. He was admitted because of exacerbated polyarthralgia, multiple subcutaneous nodules, skin eruption and fever. The level of serum CK was within normal range but CRP was elevated and CH 50 was decreased. The laboratory examination showed positive cryoglobulin and high titer of rheumatoid factor, but anti-Jo 1 antibody was negative. The hand X-ray showed bone erosions in bilateral wrist joints. Skin biopsy revealed leukocytoclastic vasculitis. Based on these findings, he was diagnosed as malignant RA. He was successfully treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy, cyclophosphamide and prostaglandin E 1. The second patient was 77-year old male with pneumoconiosis who experienced muscular weakness of the four limbs in proximity 4 years ago. He was diagnosed as PM based on his clinical and laboratory findings and was treated with temporary corticosteroid. He started to have polyarthralgia last year, and he was admitted because of increasing arthralgia after the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis. The level of serum CK was slightly elevated due to hypothyroidism, and CRP was highly elevated. Rheumatoid factor and cryoglobulin were positive, but anti-Jo 1 antibody was negative. The hand X-ray showed bone erosions in bilateral wrist joints. Crystals of pyrophosphate calcium was observed in knee joints. He was diagnosed as RA associate with pseudogout. His symptoms were relieved with corticosteroid, salazosulfapyridine and anti-tuberculous therapy. These two cases had altered their clinical features from PM to definite RA, and both had pulmonary complications. Previous reports described the cases of RA followed by PM, most of which were induced by such drugs as D-penicillamine, but the cases of PM who later had developed RA are extremely unusual. The overlapped cases of RA and PM tend to highly associate with pulmonary lesions.
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PMID:[Two cases of rheumatoid arthritis developed after polymyositis]. 1291 Sep 69

Erasmus syndrome is defined as the association of silica exposure and subsequent development of systemic sclerosis. The limited number of cases reported in the literature mainly involves miners and only sporadically other professionals. We describe a case of Erasmus syndrome in a marble worker. A 68 year old man came to our observation complaining pelvic and scapular girdle pain, evening fever, intense weakness and emaciation for about 1 month. He also reported to have had Raynaud's phenomenon in his hands for the last 13 years. Also, his occupational history revealed a chronic exposure to silica dust. The patient presented pain in his shoulders and hips, moderate skin thickening and sclerosis in his hands and fingers extending proximally to his wrists. The diagnosis of systemic sclerosis was determined according to his clinical and medical history, the positivity of anti-Scl 70 antibodies, the nailfold capillaroscopy suggestive of an active scleroderma pattern and the detection of a mild restrictive pulmonary syndrome. The evaluation of the organbased complications excluded a gastroenterological and cardiovascular involvement, while the chest computed tomography (CT) detected multiple small nodules with a mantle distribution and enlarged lymph nodes with no signs of interstitial lung disease and fibrosis. Additional tests (positron emission tomography-CT, flexible bronchoscopy and broncho-alveolar lavage) excluded infectious diseases and cancer. However, given the pulmonary involvement, we performed a histological examination of the parenchyma and lymph nodes, which revealed a picture of pneumoconiosis. In the end, the occupational history and the findings from the diagnostic procedures led to the diagnosis of pulmonary silicosis. The precise definition of the pulmonary involvement was essential to the therapeutic approach to this patient.
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PMID:Erasmus syndrome in a marble worker. 2687 91

This paper examines rural-urban inequities in dusty lung (pneumoconiosis) deaths in China from 2002 to 2016 and possible causes for such inequities in the framework of social and spatial justice. The research reveals alarming results that have not been reported before. Dusty lung death rates for rural men increased twice as fast as those among urban men. The rural rates were particularly higher among middle-aged men, but lower in older age groups, as compared to urban rates. There were dramatic increases in death rates from 2011 to 2016 particularly among rural men aged 40-49 years old, who were many times more likely to die from dusty lung than urban men of a similar age. Chinese rural male victims also die at a younger age, compared to men in any of the seven countries or regions included in the study. For example, rural Chinese men aged 35-59 years old were many times more likely to die from dusty lung than their American, German, Polish, and Spanish counterparts. A possible explanation for the high death rates among middle-aged rural Chinese men is the tendency for rural migrant workers to be employed in unhealthy and unsafe working conditions in decent decades. Other explanations for the severe spatial injustice include the Hukou (household registration) system and the development policies that prioritize economic growth and urban development over occupational health and safety. The paper demonstrates the usefulness and weakness of the social and spatial justice concepts in understanding health inequity. Therefore, it proposes new definitions and models of social justice and spatial justice that combine the competing distribution and capabilities approaches and highlight interactions among multiple attributes.
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PMID:China's dusty lung crisis: Rural-urban health inequity as social and spatial injustice. 3122 8