Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We present an unusual case of adult-onset systemic mastocytosis with biopsy-proven skin and bone manifestations with the rare presentation of lumbar fracture and osteopenia. The normal 24-hour urine histamine is surprising in this patient, but it does not rule out mastocytosis. It is a sensitive assay that can give false negative results if stored before the assay is performed. Also histamine and PGD2 metabolites are more sensitive and specific. It is surprising that our patient did not have gastrointestinal symptoms. In one prospective study of 16 patients with systemic mastocytosis in which 75% had bone marrow involvement as the most common extracutaneous site, 80% were found to have gastrointestinal symptomatology, indicating such symptoms to be more common than previously thought. The lack of pruritus is also surprising, as most cutaneous lesions of urticaria pigmentosa are pruritic. Symptoms of systemic mastocytosis, particularly pruritus may respond to antihistamines and the bone disease may not respond to calcium and hormone manipulation. The main role of the latter is to prevent further bone loss. We may consider the use of cromolyn or ketotifen if she does not respond. Close follow-up will be needed to check for progression, however she appears to have a good prognosis with skin involvement and no hematologic abnormalities.
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PMID:Systemic mastocytosis: a diagnostic challenge. 774 67

Cutaneous mastocytosis usually includes objective skin signs such as pigmented maculopapulae or skin infiltration. We report an unusual case of cutaneous mastocytosis without systemic involvement in a 9-month old infant. Clinical expression was entirely functional (pruritus, urticaria) with no permanent lesions. There were 22 times more mastocytes found in the skin biopsy than in similar biopsies obtained in healthy control subjects of the same age, which corresponds to the counts found in cutaneous mastocytosis. Diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis with no permanent lesions is an exceptional form of mastocytosis (3 cases reported in the literature). The long-term outcome is unknown. This syndrome should be distinguished from idiopathic anaphylaxis by quantification of the dermal mastocytes.
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PMID:[Diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis without permanent lesion]. 775 14

Mastocytosis is a disorder of mast cell proliferation that may appear during infancy, childhood, or adulthood. We studied 67 consecutive patients (33 males, 34 females) with urticaria pigmentosa and assessed them fully to determine the presence of systemic involvement. Ages at onset of lesions ranged from birth to 11 years, with most developing in the first year of life. Pruritus was the primary symptom. Hematologic and serum chemistry profile, radiologic skeletal surveys, and bone marrow aspirations were performed. Slight anemia was present in three patients. Radiologic bone lesions were observed in eight. Bone marrow aspirates showed slight changes in six patients, with only an increased number of mast cells in an additional patient. The disease tended to resolve spontaneously. This prospective study emphasizes the benign nature of pediatric urticaria pigmentosa.
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PMID:Urticaria pigmentosa: a review of 67 pediatric cases. 804 46

Mastocytosis is the collective name for a group of clinical syndromes whose signs and symptoms are due to the infiltration of various tissues by mast cells and to the release of chemical mediators by these cells. The skin is the most frequently affected organ. Skin manifestations include urticaria pigmentosa, mastocytoma, diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis and telangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans. Seven cases of mastocytosis were seen over a 3-year period at the National Skin Centre from 1989 to 1992. All our patients were in the paediatric age group. There were four boys and three girls ranging in age from one year to five years. The mean age of onset of the disease was 2.3 months. Six patients presented with cutaneous signs and symptoms of urticaria pigmentosa and one patient had diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis. Itch was the most prominent symptom seen in all the patients. All the patients had a positive Darier's sign, pathognomonic for mastocytosis. None of the patients had a positive family history. Treatment was conservative and symptomatic, with the use of H1 antihistamines to control itching. A particularly important aspect of management is the avoidance of triggering factors. All our patients have remained well with only skin involvement. The prognosis for children with mast cell disease is good, with at least half of the children with urticaria pigmentosa experiencing reduction of symptoms and lesions by adolescence.
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PMID:Cutaneous mastocytosis in Singapore. 815 91

Telangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans (TMEP) is a rare form of mastocytosis. It appears most frequently in adults and only occasionally will affect young children or infants. In this disease, multiple brownish-red confluent macules and telangiectasias develop, primarily on the trunk. Pruritus frequently occurs, and may be mild to severe. Most patients have only skin involvement; however, involvement may be systemic as well. Clinical signs and symptoms of systemic mastocytosis are varied and depend on which internal organs are affected. Classic symptoms--such as episodic flushing, gastrointestinal complaints, heart palpitations, and syncope--may be confused with those of other diseases, most notably the carcinoid syndrome. A simple workup can help to differentiate between these two conditions. The authors describe a 48-year old woman who was seen with cutaneous features of TMEP and with multiple symptoms suggesting systemic mastocytosis. They discuss the clinical features, diagnostic workup, and therapeutic options in the management of this relatively rare condition.
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PMID:Telangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans. 820 Aug 29

Mastocytosis in children are very polymorphic, most often remaining isolated, without an associated visceral lesion. Beside the phenomenon of "urtication" characteristic, papulo-nodular lesions of urticaria and angio-oedema during the mastocytosis are rarely met. In contrast, congestive signs with pruritus, dermographism, congestive erythema and general signs are frequent.
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PMID:[Urticaria and angioedema caused by mastocytosis]. 826 47

We describe the clinicopathologic features of 10 patients with recurrent unexplained flushing. These patients were referred to the National Institutes of Health with a diagnosis of mastocytosis or idiopathic anaphylaxis. Both diagnoses were eliminated after evaluation. Patients reported attacks of flushing lasting 15 minutes to 2 days and associated with such symptoms as anxiety, chest tightness, paresthesia, slurred speech, weakness, and pruritus. Abdominal pain was a constant feature, often associated with cramping and an increase in stool frequency. Attacks witnessed by physicians consisted of an exaggerated blush response of the face and upper part of the chest, and were sometimes associated with tachycardia, mild hypertension, and tachypnea. Hives, angioedema, wheezing, and hypotension were not observed. Routine laboratory studies and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, vanillylmandelic acid, and plasma histamine levels were normal. Plasma histamine levels did not elevate during attacks. When performed, results of bone marrow examinations, skin biopsies, and bone scans were normal. Psychiatric examinations frequently revealed somatization disorders. Patients had often been prescribed a wide variety of medications including antihistamines, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and steroids, with little or no benefit. Despite the benign nature of the clinical and laboratory findings, patients had undergone repeated, often invasive, examinations for several years. Whether such patients have a prominent flush response exaggerated through a somatization disorder or a relatively benign flushing disorder associated with putative mediator release remains to be determined. Recognition of this category of patients with unexplained flushing will avoid subjecting such patients to unwarranted repeated examinations, procedures, and inappropriate therapy.
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PMID:A clinicopathologic study of ten patients with recurrent unexplained flushing. 830 82

We report a case of diffuse erythrodermic cutaneous mastocytosis with bone marrow infiltration. An 11-month-old female patient was referred to our hospital for intermittent flushing, fever, intense itching, erythematous rash and bullous lesions. Cutaneous biopsy demonstrated diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis. The bone marrow aspirate revealed mast cell infiltration. Ketotifen treatment was very effective.
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PMID:Diffuse erythrodermic cutaneous mastocytosis with bone marrow infiltration. 835 1

Urticaria pigmentosa (UP) is the most common form of cutaneous mastocytosis and may be associated with systemic involvement, most often of the bone marrow. The incidence of systemic involvement is not yet well established, however. To address this question, we subjected a group of 30 adults with histologically proved UP to a retrospective study that included history, physical examination, laboratory tests including cytokine measurements, radiologic examinations, and bone marrow biopsies. The most frequently associated clinical symptoms were recurrent flush episodes in 16 of 30 patients, alcohol intolerance in 13, pruritus in 10, and gastrointestinal problems in 11 (recurrent diarrhea, 8 patients; gastritis, 2 patients; and history of peptic ulcer, 1 patient). Of the 30 patients, 18 (60%) had mast cell infiltrates of the bone marrow (nodular type, 10 patients; diffuse interstitial type, 8 patients). Bone marrow involvement was not correlated with massive cutaneous mast cell infiltration, clinically or histologically, or with the incidence of clinical symptoms and associated hematologic disorders. None of the patients had experienced progression of clinical symptoms, skin or organ involvement, or development of hematologic malignant neoplasms since UP was first diagnosed (10 years on average). Urticaria pigmentosa was found associated with mast cell infiltration of the bone marrow in 18 patients (60%). However, bone marrow involvement does not seem to predict adverse clinical course.
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PMID:Urticaria pigmentosa: a clinical, hematopathologic, and serologic study of 30 adults. 949 99

A 74-year-old woman had an 8-year history of spells consisting of facial flushing and swelling, itching and erythema of the hands, rhinorrhoea and gastrointestinal complaints. The ultimate diagnosis was systemic mastocytosis without urticaria pigmentosa. In the clinical decision process the treating physicians used clinical axioms to try to establish a diagnosis, but these axioms were sometimes used inappropriately. In particular, spells accompanied by flushing inappropriately elicited a possible diagnosis of phenochromocytoma. Generalised mastocytosis can occur in the absence of urticaria pigmentosa and is probably an underestimated cause of spell-like complaints.
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PMID:[Clinical thinking and decision-making in practice. A patient with episodes of flushing]. 1034 42


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