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)

Cross-sectional surveys of Norwegian populations indicate that 14-17 per cent of the children below the age of 15 years have had an allergic disease. The corresponding figure in adults is 37 per cent. Among children allergic diseases tend to be more frequent in boys than in girls. In adults there is no significant sex-difference regarding the prevalences of hay fever and obstructive lung disease, while eczema and urticaria are more frequent in women than in men. There is an association of smoking, occupational airborne exposure and degree of industrialization to the prevalences of allergic diseases. There are indications of an increase in occurrence of allergic diseases. The need for standardized operative definitions of these diseases is emphasized.
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PMID:[Allergic diseases in Norway. Operative definition, occurrence and risk factors]. 156 Oct 69

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.
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PMID:[Muckle-Wells syndrome associated with idiopathic interstitial pneumopathy]. 189 10

Causes and precipitating factors for systemic necrotizing angiitis (NA) with asthma were sought in 43 patients, focusing on a history of vaccination and desensitization. Mean age of patients was 43.2 years. Diagnosis was based on histopathologic findings in 25 patients, arteriography in 2, and clinical criteria in 16. History of allergic manifestations (asthma, rhinitis, eczema, urticaria) was present in the family of 19 patients. Forty-two patients presented with asthma before development of NA and 23 of them were treated with steroids. Nineteen subjects gave a history of desensitization and 5 of vaccination in the 4 weeks preceding the disease. The main symptoms of NA were asthma in 43, fever in 25, weight loss in 31, peripheral neuropathy in 29, cutaneous signs in 25, digestive signs in 16 (abdominal pain, digestive bleeding, bowel perforation), noninfectious pneumopathy with pulmonary infiltrates in 33. Eosinophilia was 8,212 +/- 6,214/mm3. Antigen HBs was found in 2 of 30 patients. Prognosis of NA with asthma was good in 15 patients who recovered completely from the disease. Seven patients died and the other patients improved but remained under treatment. The survival curve showed that 75% of patients were alive after 60 months. Our findings suggest that different causes can be considered responsible for NA, and that, in cases of NA with asthma, there is reason to consider vaccination and desensitization as precipitating factors.
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PMID:Systemic necrotizing angiitis with asthma: causes and precipitating factors in 43 cases. 310 93

Six adolescents with allergy or intolerance to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) showed different types of reaction (asthma, urticaria, anaphylactoid reaction). The results of 60 oral or bronchial challenges in asthmatic adolescents with no positive history of NSAID-intolerance are presented. NSAID should be prescribed very carefully after detailed medical history--especially in adolescents with obstructive lung disease. Compound drugs should be avoided. Any indication of allergy or intolerance to NSAID should lead to careful oral or bronchial challenge tests for diagnosis to find out a well-tolerated alternative drug. The patient should receive an allergy-passport and show it to any attending physician.
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PMID:[Intolerance reactions to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSA) in adolescents]. 377 19

We identify and describe clinical findings in hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis syndrome (HUVS), an uncommon to rare illness related to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). A patient with recurrent, idiopathic urticaria-like lesions was diagnosed as having HUVS if a lesional biopsy showed leukocytoclastic vasculitis, the serum C1q was markedly decreased, and antibody to C1q was detected in the patient's serum. The clinical characteristics, serologic findings, and outcome of patients who met these criteria were determined from prospective and retrospective data, including hospital and office records, patient interviews, previously banked serum samples, and freshly drawn sera. Eighteen patients with HUVS were identified, and high incidences of angioedema, ocular inflammation, glomerulonephritis, and obstructive pulmonary disease were found. Renal and lung biopsies showed mesangial or membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and severe pulmonary emphysema without vasculitis. Pulmonary function was measured in 17 patients, 11 of whom had dyspnea. All dyspneic patients had moderate to severe airflow obstruction, which progressed in all 11 and subsequently improved in only 1. Six of these 11 patients died of respiratory failure, 1 underwent lung transplantation, and 3 of the remaining 4 have moderately severe to life-threatening respiratory insufficiency. Treatment did not appear to alter the progression of obstructive lung disease. In contrast, renal insufficiency improved with treatment in 2 of 2 patients. Angioedema, ocular inflammation, obstructive lung disease, and glomerulonephritis appear to be common in HUVS, and lung disease causes substantial morbidity and mortality. The pathogenesis of HUVS may involve humoral autoimmunity, although it is not clear how autoimmunity would participate in development of obstructive lung disease. Cigarette smoking appears to be a risk factor for fatal lung disease in HUVS. All patients with HUVS should be made aware of this possibility and should be advised, encouraged, and helped to avoid tobacco smoke.
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PMID:Hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis syndrome. Clinical and serologic findings in 18 patients. 783 68

Urticarial vasculitis, a form of leukocytoclastic vasculitis involving the postcapillary venules, is classified as a type III hypersensitivity reaction and has been associated with connective tissue disease. The lesions resemble urticaria and typically persist for more than 24 hours. Urticarial vasculitis usually affects young women, and the diagnosis is confirmed at histologic examination. Patients with urticarial vasculitis can be divided into 2 types--those with normal complement levels and those with hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis (HUV). Patients with normocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis have a milder course than do patients with HUV, a condition that has a strong association with systemic lupus erythematosus. Angioedema, ocular inflammation, obstructive lung disease, and glomerulonephritis are commonly associated with HUV. We describe the case of a girl with systemic lupus erythematosus and HUV who also had pancreatitis, hypothyroidism, and elevated levels of antiphospholipid antibodies.
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PMID:Hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis: report of a 12-year-old girl with systemic lupus erythematosus. 1239 49