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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
6,569 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lupus erythematosis is a nodular skin lesion that usually occurs on the inner surfaces of the extremities, and is 5-7 times more common in women than in men, particularly between 20-30 years of age. It is diagnosed by biopsy since the associated symptoms of malaise, fever, and arthralgia are variable. Known agents to induce lupus are streptococcal infection, sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, mycoses, medications particularly sulfa and oral contraceptive steroids, and a variety of other infections and allergies. A table is included in this review showing 8 cases of lupus erythematosus reported in the literature where oral contraceptive steroids were proved to be the etiologic factor, either by withdrawing and repeating pill prescription or by skin tests. The review ends with a list of other dermatological side effects of the pill, such as chloasma, acne, vaginal moniliasis, herpes, photosensitivity, and urticaria.
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PMID:[Etiologies of erythema nodosum (a little known etiology: estro-progestagens)]. 101 56

Eighty-one cases of acute urticaria were treated in our institution over a two-year period. In 13 of 32 cases screened for streptococcal pharyngitis, either positive throat culture, significant streptococcal exoenzyme antibodies (Streptozyme test), or both were found. Other causative factors for the acute urticaria had been excluded. It is our feeling that beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection may be a causative agent in many cases of acute urticaria, and that the infection may not always be clinically apparent. We therefore recommend a throat culture and determination of streptococcal enzyme level as routine procedures in evaluating acute urticaria. We also suggest, based on the findings in one case, that discontinuing therapy for a streptococcal infection when urticaria develops, even though necessary, might be inappropriate.
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PMID:Acute urticaria associated with streptococcal infection. 698 6

Microflora of nasopharynx in 117 patients with urticaria was studied. 589 cultures of gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria were isolated. Gram-positive bacteria represented the overwhelming majority of isolates from which streptococci dominated with high level of constancy (C=91.4%) and prevalence on mucosa. Several patients had signs of chronic streptococcal infection that support the possible role of streptococci in development of urticaria.
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PMID:[Microflora of nasopharynx in patients with urticaria]. 1729 87