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Query: UMLS:C0034069 (
pulmonary fibrosis
)
7,050
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The literature suggests that 10% to 20% of adult patients with neurofibromatosis have associated interstitial lung disease. Characteristics of such involvement, as present in the case reported herein, include bilateral lower lobe fibrosis and may include bullous and cystic changes in advanced cases. In addition to
pulmonary fibrosis
, neurofibromatosis may have other intrathoracic associations; including "dumbbell" neurofibromas, intercostal neurofibromas, and intrathoracic meningoceles.
Arch
Dermatol
1978 Sep
PMID:Neurofibromatosis and interstitial lung disease. 9 88
Sixteen patients had biopsy-proved inflammatory sclerosis of the panniculus or fascia, which usually was seen in a generalized distribution. Although the sclerosis involved the digits of five patients, it was the result of centrifugal spread of the sclerosis and was not accompanied by ulcers, calcinosis, distal phalangeal resorption or telangiectasia. Four patients may have had digital vasopasm in the extremities involved in the sclerotic process. Five patients also had cutaneous lesions of dermal morphoea or lichen sclerosus et atrophicus. Four patients had a reduced carbon monoxide diffusing capacity, and one of these had roentgenographic evidence of
pulmonary fibrosis
. In three patients, oesophageal motility or barium swallow studies showed evidence of sclerodermatous changes. The sclerotic process was a contributory cause of the death of one patient. Five patients had peripheral eosinophilia. Six patients seemed to have responded to anti-inflammatory agents. We believe that subcutaneous morphoea is generally more inflammatory than generalized morphoea of the dermal type and may be more likely to progress to mild systemic sclerosis. We suggest that response of subcutaneous morphoea to anti-inflammatory agents is simply a reflection of the degree of inflammation present.
Br J
Dermatol
1979 Apr
PMID:Subcutaneous morphoea: a clinical study of sixteen cases. 45 64
Six patients initially had the characteristic skin eruption of dermatomyositis but no other evidence of the disease. They all later developed dermatomyositis. The clinical, laboratory, and pathological data suggest that whereas polymyositis may occur without skin involvement, the cutaneous features od dermatomyositis may be seen in the absence of detectable muscle disease. This variant of dermatomyositis occurs in children and adults but has not been found to be associated with internal malignant disease. The persistence of skin lesions despite systemic corticosteroid therapy is a poor prognostic sign. There were two patients with
pulmonary fibrosis
and dermatomyositis in this group. The presence of
pulmonary fibrosis
can contribute to a delay in diagnosis of dermatomyositis. Patients with
pulmonary fibrosis
had a poorer prognosis, despite moderate dosages of corticosteroids.
Arch
Dermatol
1975 Feb
PMID:Dermatomyositis in six patients without initial muscle involvement. 107 62
We conducted a statistical review of 114 cases of dermatomyositis (DMS) treated primarily at the Department of Dermatology at Nagoya University Hospital over 27 years from 1965 to 1991 in order to determine the primary characteristics of juvenile DMS with the following results. 1) Juvenile DMS was found slightly more often in males than females; the male-to-female ratio was 1.4:1. Therefore, unlike adult DMS with its preponderance of females, there was no clear gender predominance. 2) Muscular manifestations tended to follow the appearance of cutaneous manifestations, but the frequency of minor muscular manifestations was high over the entire course of the disease. 3) Laboratory findings showed increases in serum aldolase and serum creatinine kinase with significant frequency when compared with adult patients (p < 0.01 and p < 0.05, respectively). Elevated serum aldolase most often occurred prior to or at the time of the appearance of muscular manifestations, suggesting its usefulness in early diagnosis. The positive rates for the antinuclear antibody on HEp-2 cells and anti-DNA antibody were significantly lower in children than in adults (p < 0.001 and p < 0.05, respectively). 4) There were no cases of juvenile DMS complicated by malignant tumors, interstitial pneumonia, or
pulmonary fibrosis
. There were also no deaths, and the rate of "remission or improvement" was significantly higher than in adult DMS cases (p < 0.05). Adult cases which remained the same or worsened usually presented with intractable muscular manifestations. In children, however, the cutaneous manifestations were more difficult to treat.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J
Dermatol
1992 Aug
PMID:Juvenile dermatomyositis: a statistical study of 114 patients with dermatomyositis. 140 7
We report a case of systemic sclerosis sine scleroderma in which vitiligo-like depigmentation and early interstitial
pulmonary fibrosis
predominated. The pigmentary changes occurring in systemic sclerosis are reviewed and the distinctive features of the case discussed.
Clin Exp
Dermatol
1992 Mar
PMID:Systemic sclerosis sine scleroderma presenting with vitiligo-like depigmentation and interstitial pulmonary fibrosis. 151 38
We conducted an epidemiological study of systemic sclerosis in the city of Tokyo using the records of patients who had been registered to receive free medical service for intractable diseases. A total of 636 patients were registered as having systemic sclerosis in 1987, and we sent questionnaires to the doctor of each patient. The contents of the questionnaires included the patient's name, sex, age, occupation, major symptoms, therapy and laboratory findings. We received 357 completed replies, and were able to analyse them. Our study estimated that at 1 January 1988 the prevalence rate in Japan was between 2.1 and 5.3 per 100,000. The male/female ratio was 14:1. The ages of the patients when surveyed ranged from 17 to 82 years, with a mean age of 51 years, peaking with the most numerous group being 50-59 years. The characteristic signs of systemic sclerosis were as follows: proximal scleroderma, 75%; sclerodactyly, 91%; pitting scars, 49%; short sublingual frenulum, 49%;
pulmonary fibrosis
, 45%; diffuse pigmentation, 45%; and phalangeal contracture, 35%. Raynaud's phenomenon was present in 93% of patients, and was the initial symptom in 59% of cases. With respect to specific antinuclear antibodies, anticentromere antibody was present in 19% and antitopoisomerase I antibody was present in 27%.
Arch
Dermatol
Res 1991
PMID:Epidemiological study of patients with systemic sclerosis in Tokyo. 179 18
To determine whether the clinical, immunological and serological features of patients with silica-associated systemic sclerosis are different from patients with the 'idiopathic' form of systemic sclerosis (SS) we studied 22 underground coal miners who were exposed to silica dust (SD), 30 mine workers who later developed silicosis (S) and 17 mine workers exposed to silica dust who subsequently developed a systemic sclerosis-like disease (SA-SS). The patients with SA-SS had features clinically indistinguishable from individual patients with SS. They all had Raynaud's phenomenon, 14 had cutaneous sclerosis identical to that seen in acrosclerosis and three had a generalized cutaneous sclerosis. Sixteen patients had bibasilar
pulmonary fibrosis
, 10 had necrosis of the fingertip pulps, nine had oesophageal involvement and only one patient had renal involvement. Antinuclear antibodies and circulating immune complexes were detected in three and eight patients with SD, 14 and five patients with S and in 16 and nine patients with SA-SS, respectively. Anti-Scl-70 antibody was detected in eight of the 17 patients with SA-SS. Evidence for in vivo endothelial cell damage, as determined by elevated levels of von Willebrand factor, was found in nine patients with SD, 14 patients with S and in 10 patients with SA-SS. Following incubation of the patient's serum with confluent cultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells there was only a significant reduction in calcium ionophore-induced release of prostacyclin with the serum from SA-SS patients compared to that with control serum (NC). The mean +/- SEM release of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha (the stable metabolite of prostacyclin expressed as ng/10(4) cells) decreased from 2.90 +/- 0.27 to 2.01 +/- 0.33 (SD), 3.34 +/- 0.42 to 1.76 +/- 0.31 (S), 1.98 +/- 0.12 to 0.64 +/- 0.07 (SA-SS) and 2.28 +/- 0.33 to 1.36 +/- 0.21 (NC) with 1 and 20% serum, respectively. This study demonstrates that immune complex and antinuclear antibody formation and in vivo endothelial cell damage occurs following occupational exposure to silica. The patients who subsequently develop a systemic sclerosis-like disease have clinical, immunological and serological features which are indistinguishable from the idiopathic form of the disease although as a group the SA-SS patients have a higher prevalence of pulmonary involvement and the anti-Scl-70 antibody.
Br J
Dermatol
1990 Dec
PMID:Silica-associated systemic sclerosis is clinically, serologically and immunologically indistinguishable from idiopathic systemic sclerosis. 217 91
The immunoregulatory, antiviral, and antiproliferative agents known as the interferons have profound effects on collagen synthesis. Interferons alpha, beta, and gamma suppress collagen synthesis by dermal fibroblasts. In addition, interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) inhibits the constitutively increased collagen synthesis characteristic of fibroblasts derived from lesions of patients with scleroderma. IFN-gamma also inhibits collagen synthesis by myofibroblasts and synovial fibroblast-like cells. Inhibition of collagen synthesis by IFN-gamma is associated with a coordinate inhibition of transcription for types I and III collagen. In addition, IFN-gamma suppresses levels of procollagen mRNA and type II collagen synthesis in human articular chondrocytes. In vivo studies in mice have demonstrated that IFN-gamma inhibits the collagen synthesis associated with the fibrotic response to an implanted foreign body, bleomycin-induced
pulmonary fibrosis
, and the healing response to cutaneous thermal burns. In the latter case, while collagen content of the wound scar was decreased, hyaluronic acid was increased in mice receiving IFN-gamma compared to controls. This is in accord with in vitro studies showing that, while interferons alpha and beta decrease production of glycosaminoglycans, IFN-gamma increases production of glycosaminoglycans. Of interest, acute inflammation at sites of thermal injury, or when elicited by proinflammatory agents in separate experiments, also was suppressed in mice treated with IFN-gamma. The means by which IFN-gamma inhibits collagen synthesis involves transcriptional regulation. There is a single report that interferon alpha can decrease the size of a keloid of recent onset in a human patient. Because the interferons can inhibit collagen synthesis in vivo, further studies may be warranted to evaluate the usefulness of these agents in the treatment of disease states characterized by abnormal fibrotic responses as well as their potential for altering the healing response associated with particular therapeutic interventions.
J Invest
Dermatol
1990 Dec
PMID:Interferons and collagen production. 225 40
The causes of death of 50 patients who had had lichen planus have been investigated and compared with those of 50 patients with psoriasis and with those of the general population. Patients with lichen planus were as old as those with psoriasis and in the general population at the time of death, but the diseases causing death differed. Malignant tumors, particularly those of the gut and the bladder, and malignant hemopathies exceeded the expected prevalence. In addition, autoimmune diseases were more common than in patients with psoriasis and in the general population. Multiple sclerosis and primitive
pulmonary fibrosis
have never been described before in patients with lichen planus.
Int J
Dermatol
1989 Oct
PMID:What lichen planus patients die of. A retrospective study. 258 90
Cutaneous histiocytosis may take two principal forms. It is either a benign proliferative process or a relentless, progressive process with a poor prognosis. In histiocytic medullary reticulosis, histiocytes demonstrate nuclear atypia and the outcome is uniformly fatal. Benign cephalic histiocytosis X causes lesions similar to those of histiocytosis X, but Langerhans' cells are absent. In congenital self-healing histiocytosis X, the Letterer-Siwe-like cutaneous infiltrate contains Langerhans' cells, but the lesions heal spontaneously without treatment. The nodular cutaneous lesions of juvenile xanthogranuloma appear in infancy and resolve without treatment; however, the higher percentage (10%) of associated ocular lesions may lead to glaucoma and blindness. In histiocytosis X, the cutaneous lesions show a marked proliferation of Langerhans' cells, with prognosis dependent on the patient's age and the extent of organ dysfunction. Patients who survive the acute form of the disease may develop diabetes insipidus, growth retardation,
pulmonary fibrosis
, and biliary cirrhosis. A subtle immunologic defect has been identified in patients with histiocytosis X, yet the pathogenesis of the disease is still speculative. Familial disease occurring in early infancy should be differentiated from complete or partial immunodeficiency syndromes. Guidelines for evaluating patients with cutaneous histiocytosis are reviewed.
Pediatr
Dermatol
1985 Nov
PMID:Cutaneous histiocytosis syndromes. 299 40
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