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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (
urticaria
)
6,569
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient is reported with a history of several years of chronic urticaria, transient fever, arthralgias and secondary systemic amyloidosis. A biopsy of an urticarial lesion showed necrotizing vasculitis and amyloid deposits in the eccrine sweat glands. Amyloid A deposits were also detected in kidney and rectum biopsies. This patient is likely to represent a variant of the Muckle-Wells syndrome (chronic relapsing
urticaria
, fever, arthralgia,
deafness
and renal amyloidosis). Hitherto undescribed is the presence of a necrotizing vasculitis as cause of the urticarial rash; further investigation will determine whether or not this finding represents the rule rather than an exception.
...
PMID:[Urticarial vasculitis as a symptom of Muckle-Wells syndrome?]. 167 41
A 35-year-old woman had since early childhood suffered from recurrent
urticaria
-like rash, intermittent fever, arthralgia and pancochlear inner-ear
deafness
. At the age of 17 years she also developed a steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome, found to be due to renal amyloidosis (type AA). The triad of renal amyloidosis, inner-ear
deafness
and recurrent
urticaria
is characteristic of Muckle-Wells syndrome, which has a hereditary basis. Rapidly progressive renal failure necessitated long-term haemodialysis and two renal transplantations. The accompanying immunosuppressive treatment with corticosteroids, azathioprin and, later, cyclophosphamide brought about a remission of the joint and skin abnormalities. After removal of the first donor kidney and termination of immunosuppressive treatment the syndrome recurred with subacute growth of an amyloid goitre as well as amyloidosis of the optic nerve. A few weeks before death a malignant non-Hodgkin lymphoma of the stomach was demonstrated. It was presumably a complication of long-term immunosuppression and not of the Muckle-Wells syndrome. The patient died of the complications of combination chemotherapy. Necropsy revealed generalized amyloidosis.
...
PMID:[Complications in the course of the Muckle-Wells syndrome]. 173 60
Muckle-Wells syndrome is characterized by recurrent episodes of
urticaria
, fever, polyarthralgia,
deafness
and secondary amyloid (AA type), familial type with autosome dominant features; few cases have been described. A case of a patient with idiopathic interstitial pneumopathy, diagnosed 7 years before the onset of clinical amyloid, is presented. The patient had lymph glands enlargement and nephrotic syndrome and died 18 months later due to renal insufficiency. We have not found this association previously described in any medical literature.
...
PMID:[Muckle-Wells syndrome associated with idiopathic interstitial pneumopathy]. 189 10
We have studied the clinical presentation and course of a chronic inflammatory disease occurring in childhood and observed in 30 patients. The first symptoms were generally present at birth, except in a few patients where they were first noticed in early infancy. All the patients had the association of three main symptoms: neurological, cutaneous and articular. The skin rash was the first symptom observed in all the patients and looked like a chronic non pruritic
urticaria
varying during the day. The articular manifestations involved knees, ankles and feet, elbows, wrists and hands unaffecting the other joints. They could be mild giving arthritis during flare-ups or severe with major radiological modifications affecting the epiphysis, metaphysis and growth cartilage. The neurological manifestations were characterized by a chronic meningitis and symptoms indicating meningeal irritation: headaches, seizures, spasticity of legs. Most patients had a cerebral atrophy and a low IQ. Sensory organ involvement occurred progressively during the follow-up: ocular inflammation with optic atrophy,
deafness
and hoarseness. Common morphological features characterized these patients with short stature, head enlargement, saddle back nose and short and thick extremities with clubbing of fingers. The course was that of a chronic inflammatory disease with numerous flare-ups associating fever, splenomegaly and adenomegaly. Except for a high level of eosinophils in blood, CSF and tissues, the biology was non specific and only exhibited features of inflammation. Except for two families, the disease was sporadic. A high frequency of prematurity with features resembling a foetal infection was observed but no proof of a possible causal virus has so far been found so that etiology remains unknown.
...
PMID:A chronic, infantile, neurological, cutaneous and articular (CINCA) syndrome. A specific entity analysed in 30 patients. 348 35
The Muckle and Well's syndrome corresponding to a transmission of the autosomic dominant type, combines bouts of
urticaria
, episodes of arthralgias to a shrinking of the ear and a sensory
deafness
. Sometimes, it evolves into a renal amylosis. Sometimes, as the case presented here, it combines multiple malformations. Its place in nosology is imprecise. It is, at the same time, close to systemic
urticaria
, sensory
deafness
, amylosis and specially amylosis of the periodic disease. But the common link between the various elements of the syndrome remains undetermined, for the time being.
...
PMID:[Muckle-Wells syndrome or association of joint pain attacks, urticarial outbreaks and sensory deafness?]. 356 75
Muckle-Wells syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by chronic recurrent
urticaria
, periodic arthritis, sensorineural
deafness
, general signs of inflammation, and secondary amyloidosis (AA type). We report on a 4-generation family with 7 persons sharing various signs of this syndrome associated with bipolar aphthosis in 5 cases and cystinuria in one. Two other relatives in the family had ichthyosis.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant Muckle-Wells syndrome associated with cystinuria, ichthyosis, and aphthosis in a four-generation family. 780 40
Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) is a rare condition characterized by
urticaria
, arthralgias,
deafness
and amyloid nephropathy. The arthropathy is poorly documented. We describe the arthropathy occurring in four cases of MWS and discuss the management. Each patient developed recurrent bouts of transient synovitis. One patient developed a persistent sterile pyoarthrosis.
...
PMID:The arthropathy of the Muckle-Wells syndrome. 800 Jul 53
The term Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) describes an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by various combinations of
urticaria
, sensorineural
deafness
, amyloidosis, arthralgia and skeletal abnormalities. We describe a family with nephropathy and several symptoms of MWS, but no evidence of
deafness
or amyloidosis. Since nephropathy without amyloidosis has never been reported in MWS, but
deafness
is a feature of all reported pedigrees, we conclude that members of this family have a previously unreported inherited predisposition to
urticaria
, arthralgia and nephropathy which is distinct from the MWS phenotype.
...
PMID:Urticaria, arthralgia, and nephropathy without amyloidosis: another variant of the Muckle-Wells syndrome? 873 77
Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) is a rare autosomal dominant hereditary disorder characterized by chronic recurrent
urticaria
, arthralgia, sensorineural
deafness
, and in some cases nephropathy due to amyloidosis (AA type). We report a 21-year-old woman and her father, both suffering from this syndrome, in whom elevated serum levels of IL-6 could be documented during the flares of
urticaria
, and discuss the relevance of this finding for MWS.
...
PMID:Circadian elevation of IL-6 levels in Muckle-Wells syndrome: a disorder of the neuro-immune axis? 979 32
The Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) is a hereditary inflammatory disorder characterized by acute febrile inflammatory episodes comprising abdominal pain, arthritis, and
urticaria
. Progressive nerve
deafness
develops subsequently, and, after several years, the disease is complicated by multiorgan AA-type amyloidosis (i.e., amyloidosis derived from the inflammatory serum amyloid-associated protein) (MIM 191900) with renal involvement and end-stage renal failure. The mode of inheritance is autosomal dominant, but some sporadic cases have also been described. No specific laboratory findings have been reported. The genetic basis of MWS is unknown. Using a genomewide search strategy in three families, we identified the locus responsible for MWS, at chromosome 1q44. Our results indicate that the gene is located within a 13.9-cM region between markers D1S2811 and D1S2882, with a maximum two-point LOD score of 4. 66 (recombination fraction.00) at D1S2836 when full penetrance is assumed. Further identification of the specific gene that is responsible for MWS will therefore provide the first biological element for characterizing MWS, other than doing so on the basis of its variable clinical expression.
...
PMID:Genetic linkage of the Muckle-Wells syndrome to chromosome 1q44. 1048 24
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