Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
6,569 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Factor VIII therapy has been reported to cause anaphylactic reactions in patients with hemophilia. Desensitization attempts have been complicated by severe allergic reactions that have prevented the achievement of protective factor VIII levels. We report successful administration of factor VIII by a graded dose desensitization protocol in a 36-year-old man with hemophilia A who had previously experienced anaphylactic reactions to factor VIII infusions. The reactions were manifested by urticaria, choking, and bronchospasm and were not prevented by pretreatment with antihistamines and corticosteroids. Intradermal skin test with factor VIII was positive. Serum levels of circulating immune complexes were slightly elevated. Persistently low serum C2 levels were consistent with genetic C2 deficiency. These findings suggest the possibility of Type I (IgE mediated) and Type III (immune complex) immunopathogenic mechanisms. Our experience suggests that administration of factor VIII by graded dose desensitization protocol may offer a practical therapeutic approach for management of hemorrhage in patients with classic hemophilia who are allergic to factor VIII.
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PMID:Desensitization to factor VIII in a patient with classic hemophilia and C2 deficiency. 310 96

During the course of replacement therapy, 22-30% of patients with severe hemophilia A develop alloantibody to factor VIII. Autoantibodies to coagulation factors rarely occur in elder individuals with previously normal hemostatic mechanisms or in patients with various underlying disorders. Although the great majority of the acquired inhibitors are directed to factor VIII, the antibodies may arise to every coagulation factor. The inhibitor antibodies directly inactivate specific clotting factor, or occasionally, they bind to a nonfunctional site, resulting in increased plasma clearance. In the last decade, we experienced 12 hemophilia A and 3 hemophilia B patients who developed factor VIII and factor VIII and factor IX inhibitor, respectively, 9 patients with autoantibody to factor VIII (acquired hemophilia), and 4 patients with acquired von Willebrand syndrome. Among 12 factor VIII inhibitors, 4 patients were identified to have inversion in the factor VIII gene, 1 with 4 bases deletion, and 1 with missense mutation resulting in G479R. Four of 9 patients with acquired hemophilia had underlying disorders of autoimmune hemolytic anemia, macroglobulinemia, urticaria, and pharyngeal cancer at the development of factor VIII inhibitor. Antibody to von willebrand factor was detected in 3 of 4 patients with acquired von Willebrand syndrome.
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PMID:[Immune coagulation disorders (excluding antiphospholipid syndrome]. 1176 64

We describe successful induction of immune tolerance (IT) in a 10-month-old boy with severe haemophilia B. Urticaria developed soon after starting prophylactic treatment and was associated with an inhibitor at 7 Bethesda units mL(-1). Initially, we tried low dose factor IX therapy to induce IT with only a transient effect. The patient experienced an intracranial haemorrhage. A simple bolus dose of FIX eradicated the inhibitor. Thereafter he has been free from inhibitor and nephrotic syndrome for more than 5 years, although he receives FIX three times a week.
Haemophilia 2003 May
PMID:Successful induction of immune tolerance in a patient with haemophilia B with inhibitor. 1269 28

We describe a 54-year-old man with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection-associated cryoglobulinemia type III. The patient had suffered from cold-induced urticaria that left purpuric eruptions up to 1 cm in diameter, intermittent migratory joint pain for seven years and mild liver dysfunction for nine years. Hemophilia A was diagnosed when the patient was 26 years old, and he was then given infusions of factor VIII for a short time. In both skin biopsy samples from urticarial and purpuric eruptions, mild inflammatory infiltration by polymorphonuclear leukocytes with nuclear dust, extravasation of erythrocytes and deposition of IgM and C3 in the superficial blood vessels were observed. After antiviral treatment with interferon-beta, the clinical symptoms and the cryoglobulin and HCV-RNA in the serum disappeared. There has been no recurrence in the subsequent nine years.
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PMID:Purpura with cold urticaria in a patient with hepatitis C virus infection-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia type III: successful treatment with interferon-beta. 1270 69