Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura is a rare disease characterized by microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, neurologic abnormalities, fever and renal dysfunction. in six of seven consecutive patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura seen in an eight month period, respiratory impairment was present. Respiratory dysfunction was characterized by tachypnea, hypoxemia nad infiltrates on chest roentgenogram. Five patients required mechanical ventilation. Two patients had cardiogenic pulmonary edema, but they remained hypoxemic despite treatment for pulmonary edema and maintenance of normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressure for more than 36 hours. Four patients died and autopsies revealed pulmonary edema, hemorrhage and hyaline thrombi. Pathologic examination of the heart also showed hyaline thrombi. Information from out patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura implicates respiratory dysfunction as a component of this disease as well as the classically described pentad. Cardiogenic and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema and possibly bleeding into the lung contributed to pulmonary impairment.
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PMID:Respiratory dysfunction in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. 56 25

Systemic mast cell disease (SMCD) is a rare disease often associated with symptoms of general malaise, pruritus, diarrhea, vomiting, fever, urticaria pigmentosa, hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. We reported a case of SMCD associated with cutaneous xanthoma and serum hyper IgE. Skin biopsy revealed xanthomas and diffuse infiltration of mast cells in the dermis. The association of SMCD with xanthoma was reported in the literature for only one case. The hyper IgE could be due to the defect of IgE receptors on the cell membrane of mast cells of dysfunction of T and/or B cell. Any of the treatment using H1 and H2 receptor blockade, disodium cromoglycate, adrenocorticosteroid or chemotherapy (VEPA) were not effective. The patient died of pulmonary edema and multiple organ failure 7 months after the diagnosis was established. The crush method for the cytological examination of bone marrow was considered more useful than smear method for the diagnosis of SMCD.
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PMID:[Systemic mast cell disease associated with cutaneous xanthomas and markedly elevated serum IgE]. 224 20

Alkaptonuria is a rare disease of phenylalanine, aromatic amino acids, and tyrosine metabolism. Because of a genetic deficiency of the enzyme homogentisic acid oxidase, an accumulation of homogentisic acid causes ochronotic pigment deposition. The most common clinical manifestations are arthropathy, urinary calculi and discoloration, cutaneous and cartilaginous pigmentation, and cardiac valvular disease. Arthropathy and aortic stenosis are the most debilitating manifestations of the disease. A case of alkaptonuric aortic stenosis is described. A 75-year-old woman with a history of alkaptonuria presented in the emergency department with complaints of progressive dyspnea. Upon examination, the patient was hypertensive, tachypneic, and tachycardic with premature ventricular contractions. She had pitting edema of the lower extremities and complaints of generalized weakness. Chest x-rays revealed congestive heart failure and pulmonary edema. Diuretics were administered, and a continuous nitroglycerin infusion was initiated in the emergency department. The patient was admitted for further evaluation. The patient's respiratory status continued to decline. She was intubated endotracheally 1 day after admission. Subsequent cardiac evaluation revealed an ejection fraction of 35%, severe aortic stenosis, mild coronary artery disease, ischemic cardiomyopathy, and anteroapical akinesis. A dobutamine infusion was instituted for persistent hypotension, and renal dose dopamine was initiated for oliguric renal failure. The patient underwent an emergency operation for an aortic valve replacement with a Dacron patch 10 days after admission. Cardiopulmonary bypass and mild hypothermia were used during the procedure. The patient's hemodynamic status remained tenuous throughout the procedure. Although the first attempt to wean off cardiopulmonary bypass failed, the second attempt was successful with the aid of an intra-aortic balloon pump, inotropic support, and atrioventricular pacing. These measures were maintained during transport to the surgical intensive care unit. In the intensive care unit, the patient did not have an audible blood pressure or a palpable pulse without the support of the intra-aortic balloon pump and atrioventricular pacing. Coarse atrial fibrillation was the underlying electrocardiogram rhythm in the absence of atrioventricular pacing. Sodium bicarbonate was given without improvement. After discussion with the family, all life support measures were discontinued. The patient died 10 minutes after her arrival in the intensive care unit. Alkaptonuria's pathogenesis is manifested as both local and systemic in nature. Collagen vascular diseases share a similar pattern of multisystem involvement. Despite the negative outcome for the patient described, valuable insight can be obtained by studying this case and noting the anesthetic considerations specific to collagen vascular diseases in general.
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PMID:Alkaptonuric aortic stenosis: a case report. 1048 88

Mesenteric panniculitis is a rare disease of the bowel mesentery, characterized by tumor-like infiltration by chronic inflammatory cells, fat necrosis, and fibrosis. Reported cases cited clinical presentation ranging from abdominal pain to fever of unknown origin, the majority of which were idiopathic and associated with a benign prognosis. We report the case of a 43-yr-old male who presented with malaise, weight loss, microcytic anemia, and a high erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Radiographic and histological investigations revealed typical features of mesenteric panniculitis. Initial treatment with high-dose oral prednisolone led to rapid and complete resolution of symptomatology, radiographic, and laboratory anomalies. Within 6 months, the patient presented again with anemia, renal failure, and hypercalcemia. A diagnosis of IgA kappa chain myeloma was made. Despite chemotherapy and restoration of normocalcemia, he died from refractory pulmonary edema. This is the first report of a hematological malignancy initially presenting with features of mesenteric panniculitis culminating in an aggressive course and a fatal outcome.
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PMID:Aggressive multiple myeloma presenting as mesenteric panniculitis. 1119 60

Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis (IRF) is a rare disease of unknown origin, characterised by an inflammatory proliferative fibrosing process occurring in the retroperitoneum. Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT) is a form of chronic thyroiditis that in some cases shows an extensive replacement of thyroid parenchyma by fibrous tissue. We report the rare association of IRF with HT in a 68-year-old woman presenting with pulmonary oedema, acute renal failure due to bilateral hydronephrosis and a firm diffuse goitre with hypothyroidism. The so far reported cases of IRF associated with chronic thyroiditis are reviewed, and the possible aetiopathogenetic link between these two entities is discussed.
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PMID:Hashimoto's thyroiditis associated with idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis: case report and review of the literature. 1688 38

Primary cardiac myxosarcoma is a rare disease; it is exceedingly rare for symptoms of systemic metastasis to precede diagnosis of the primary cardiac tumor. We describe the case of a previously healthy 60-year-old man with left atrial myxosarcoma, who had first presented with jejunal intussusception due to intestinal polyposis. Three months after resection of the jejunum, the patient experienced cerebral infarction and pulmonary edema. Further physical evaluation, which included echocardiography for the 1st time, revealed a mass in the left atrium that protruded through the mitral valve into the left ventricle. At emergency cardiac surgery, we found that the tumor involved multiple sites of the left atrium, the pulmonary veins, and the mitral anterior leaflet. Two months after surgery, the patient died of massive cerebral hemorrhage. Necropsy disclosed multiple recurrences of the cardiac myxosarcoma and widespread metastatic lesions. The intestinal polyps that had been resected originally were diagnosed, on retrospective histopathologic examination, as metastases of the myxosarcoma. In this unusual case, the metastatic lesions were the 1st clinical manifestations of a malignant cardiac tumor.
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PMID:Left atrial myxosarcoma with previously detected intestinal metastasis. 1742 Aug 10

This is a report of fatality immediately after administration of epoprostenol. The patient was previously diagnosed with CREST syndrome and associated interstitial lung disease. She developed worsening pulmonary hypertension and was clinically diagnosed with pulmonary veno-occlusive disease. The patient developed flash pulmonary edema and arrested after administration of low-dose epoprostenol in the intensive care unit. An autopsy revealed the patient suffered from pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis. We review our case and what is known about this rare disease.
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PMID:Pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis associated with CREST syndrome: a case report and review of the literature. 2045 87

The systemic capillary leak syndrome (SCLS) is a rare disease of reversible plasma extravasation and vascular collapse accompanied by hemoconcentration and hypoalbuminemia. Its cause is unknown, although it is believed to be a manifestation of transient endothelial dysfunction due to endothelial contraction, apoptosis, injury, or a combination of these. Fewer than 150 cases of SCLS have been reported, but the condition is probably underrecognized because of its nonspecific symptoms and signs and high mortality rate. Patients experience shock and massive edema, often after a nonspecific prodrome of weakness, fatigue, and myalgias, and are at risk for ischemia-induced organ failure, rhabdomyolysis and muscle compartment syndromes, and venous thromboembolism. Shock and edema reverse almost as quickly as they begin, at which time patients are at risk for death from flash pulmonary edema during rapid fluid remobilization. Diagnosis is made clinically and by exclusion of other diseases that cause similar symptoms and signs, most notably sepsis, anaphylaxis, and angioedema. Acute episodes are treated with vasopressor therapy and judicious fluid replacement, possibly with colloid solutions for their osmotic effects, to prevent the sequelae of underperfusion. Between episodes, patients may be treated with theophylline and terbutaline, which clinical experience suggests may reduce the severity and frequency of acute episodes. Prognosis is uncertain, but patients who survive an initial severe SCLS episode are estimated to have a 10-year survival rate greater than 70%. Much remains to be learned about SCLS, and clinicians should consider the diagnosis in patients with unexplained edema, increased hematocrit, and hypotension.
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PMID:Narrative review: the systemic capillary leak syndrome. 2113 5

Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) which encompasses hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and organ impairment. Around 10% of cases are atypical HUS (aHUS), a rare disease with poor outcomes caused by uncontrolled activation of the alternative complement pathway. This case describes a young woman with clinical manifestations compatible with TMA during childhood and adolescence who was formally diagnosed with aHUS at the age of 21. She was managed with intensive plasma exchange and hemodialysis, which failed to improve her severe acute kidney injury and other hematological manifestations of aHUS. This was further compounded by several episodes of flash pulmonary edema and the posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES). Treatment with the monoclonal anti-C5 inhibitor, eculizumab, improved all hematological parameters with almost full renal recovery following 3.5 months of dialysis. So far, long-term use of eculizumab (> 11 months) continues to be effective and without complication. Our case illustrates the difficulty but importance of early consideration of aHUS in patients presenting with TMA. More importantly, we highlight that near-normal renal recovery may be attained with eculizumab in adults even after a long dependence on dialysis - an observation that has not been reported in the literature so far.
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PMID:Renal recovery with eculizumab in atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome following prolonged dialysis. 2355 93

Pheochromocytoma during pregnancy is extremely rare. Its clinical manifestation includes hypertension with various clinical presentations, possibly resembling those of pregnancy-induced hypertension. The real challenge for clinicians is differentiating pheochromocytoma from other causes of hypertension (preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, and pre-existing or essential hypertension), from other cause of pulmonary edema (preeclampsia, peripartum cardiomyopathy, stress or Takotsubo cardiomyopathy, pre-existing cardiac disease [mitral stenosis], and high doses betamimetics), and from other causes of cardiovascular collapse (pulmonary embolism, and amniotic fluid embolism). Although, several cases of pheochromocytoma during pregnancy have been published, fetal and maternal mortalities due to undiagnosed cases are still reported. We report a case of a patient whose delivery by cesarean section was complicated by severe hemodynamic instability resulting in a cardiac arrest. Later on, pheochromocytoma was suspected based on computed tomography (CT) scan findings. Diagnosis was confirmed with special biochemical investigations that showed markedly elevated catecholamines in urine and metanephrines in serum, and later by histopathology of the excised left adrenal mass. This case illustrates the difficulty of diagnosing pheochromocytoma in pregnancy and raises the awareness to when this rare disease should be suspected.
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PMID:Cardiorespiratory crisis at the end of pregnancy: a case of pheochromocytoma. 2418 Jan 71


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