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Query: UMLS:C0039483 (
giant cell arteritis
)
3,204
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vasospasm can have many different causes and can occur in a variety of diseases, including infectious, autoimmune, and ophthalmic diseases, as well as in otherwise healthy subjects. We distinguish between the primary vasospastic syndrome and secondary vasospasm. The term "vasospastic syndrome" summarizes the symptoms of patients having such a diathesis as responding with spasm to stimuli like cold or emotional stress. Secondary vasospasm can occur in a number of autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, lupus erythematosus, antiphospholipid syndrome, rheumatoid polyarthritis,
giant cell arteritis
, Behcet's disease, Buerger's disease and preeclampsia, and also in infectious diseases such as AIDS. Other potential causes for vasospasm are hemorrhages, homocysteinemia, head injury, acute intermittent porphyria, sickle cell disease, anorexia nervosa, Susac syndrome, mitochondriopathies, tumors,
colitis
ulcerosa, Crohn's disease, arteriosclerosis and drugs. Patients with primary vasospastic syndrome tend to suffer from cold hands, low blood pressure, and even migraine and silent myocardial ischemia. Valuable diagnostic tools for vasospastic diathesis are nailfold capillary microscopy and angiography, but probably the best indicator is an increased plasma level of endothelin-1. The eye is frequently involved in the vasospastic syndrome, and ocular manifestations of vasospasm include alteration of conjunctival vessels, corneal edema, retinal arterial and venous occlusions, choroidal ischemia, amaurosis fugax, AION, and glaucoma. Since the clinical impact of vascular dysregulation has only really been appreciated in the last few years, there has been little research in the according therapeutic field. The role of calcium channel blockers, magnesium, endothelin and glutamate antagonists, and gene therapy are discussed.
...
PMID:Vasospasm, its role in the pathogenesis of diseases with particular reference to the eye. 1128 96
In order to investigate the effect of bile acids on gastrointestinal inflammations, bile duct ligated rats (BDL) were treated with
GCA
(25 mM/ml, oral or colonic) or saline I h before ethanol challenge and twice daily for 3 days in the ileitis group, while
GCA
was given twice daily for 3 days in the
colitis
group. BDL reduced the macroscopic and microscopic damage scores in the ileitis group compared to sham operated group, while it had no significant effect on ulcer or
colitis
groups. However,
GCA
given in BDL group reduced the ulcer index and microscopic damage in
colitis
group compared to saline-treated groups, but had no effect in ileitis group. Both BDL and
GCA
administration in BDL group reduced ileitis- or
colitis
-induced elevations in MPO levels.
GCA
administration in BDL group inhibited gastric acid output and volume. Our results suggest that oral or colonic administration of primary bile acids may be useful for the treatment of gastrointestinal inflammations.
...
PMID:Beneficial effects of glycocholic acid (GCA) on gut mucosal damage in bile duct ligated rats. 1182 Apr 58
The need of blood flow to different organs varies rapidly over time which is why there is sophisticated local regulation of blood flow. The term dysregulation simply means that blood flow is not properly adapted to this need. Dysregulative mechanisms can lead to an over- or underperfusion. A steady overperfusion may be less critical for long-term damage. A constant underperfusion, however, can lead to some tissue atrophy or in extreme situations to infarction. Unstable perfusion (underperfusion followed by reperfusion) leads to oxidative stress. There are a number of causes that lead to local or systemic vascular dysregulation. Systemic dysregulation can be primary or secondary of nature. A secondary dysregulation is due to other autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis,
giant cell arteritis
, systemic lupus erythematodes, multiple sclerosis,
colitis
ulcerosa, or Crohns disease. Patients with a secondary vascular dysregulation normally have a high level of circulating endothelin-1 (ET-1). This increased level of ET-1 leads to a reduction of blood flow both in the choroid and the optic nerve head but has little influence on autoregulation. In contrast, primary vascular dysregulation has little influence on baseline ocular blood flow but interferes with autoregulation. This, in turn, leads to unstable oxygen supply, which seems to be a relevant component in the pathogenesis of glaucomatous optic neuropathy.
...
PMID:What is the link between vascular dysregulation and glaucoma? 1799 40
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is generally associated with significant immunosuppression. Cellular immunity is particularly important and corticosteroid treatment increases the risk of CMV infection substantially. Immunocompetence generally decreases with age, older patients are at higher risk for developing CMV disease than are younger patients. CMV infection in the immunocompetent adults is quite rare. Esophagitis is the second most common gastrointestinal manifestation of CMV infection after
colitis
. Herein, we present three cases of
giant cell arteritis
who developed CMV esophagitis after various periods of corticosteroid treatment. CMV infection should be included in the differential diagnosis of GI disease in immunocompromised patients, and the clinician should pursue appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic interventions aggressively.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus esophagitis precipitated with immunosuppression in elderly giant cell arteritis patients. 2373 8