Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (vasculitis)
20,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vasculitis, defined by inflammation in the blood vessel wall and reactive mural damage, may present with various clinical signs, depending on the organs involved. Infection, collagen vascular disease, and granulomatous disease or idiopathic inflammation of the vessels may result in various degrees of stenosis, obstruction, aneurysmal dilatation, or rupture. The definitive pathologic diagnosis is established by biopsy; however, the biopsy may pose significant risk to the patient; and the biopsy sample may not be adequate. Knowledge of the angiographic signs of various vasculitides should help in interpreting the clinical picture and reducing the need for biopsy. In this article, we describe the angiographic signs of the most common vasculitides, and review their clinical signs.
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PMID:Angiographic signs in specific vasculitides. 1881 39

Malignant catarrhal fever (MCF) is a sporadic disease of artiodactyls caused by several viruses in the Gammaherpesvirinae. We report two cases of MCF in free-living moose (Alces alces) from Saskatchewan. One was a thin, dehydrated, adult male found recumbent in 2006. At necropsy, ulcers were found in the intestine, bladder, and corneas. Microscopically, there was lymphocytic vasculitis and perivasculitis in many organs with infrequent fibrinoid necrosis. Ovine herpes virus-2 (OHV-2) was identified by polymerase chain reaction. A segment of the herpesviral DNA polymerase gene was 99% identical to published OHV-2 sequences. During a retrospective search of earlier cases, a female moose with lymphoplasmacytic meningoencephalitis examined in 2003 was identified and OHV-2 was amplified from paraffin-embedded tissues from this animal. We believe this to be the first description of MCF in free-ranging moose in North America. Infection requires contact with infected sheep or goats, and MCF in moose may become more prevalent as moose distribution continues to expand into agricultural prairie.
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PMID:Sheep-associated malignant catarrhal fever in free-ranging moose (Alces alces) in Saskatchewan, Canada. 1920 52

Vasculitis may be associated with infection, immunization or anti-microbial drugs. Infections are responsible for a number of different types of vasculitis. Conversely, patients with vasculitis may develop infections, which sometimes mimic relapse. The aim of this review is to summarize the various aspects of the inter-relationship between vasculitis and infection, and the physiopathological mechanisms involved, in light of our current knowledge from animal models. Currently, a causal relationship between infection and vasculitis has only been established in a few instances and many mechanisms remain hypothetical. This inter-relationship is further assessed from the point of view of clinical presentation and therapeutic options, based on case reports and prospective observational data.
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PMID:Infection and vasculitis. 1925 77

Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody (ANCA)-associated small-vessel vasculitis frequently affects the kidney. Here we describe the rates of infection, disease relapse, and death in patients with ANCA small-vessel vasculitis before and after end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in an inception cohort study and compare them to those of patients with preserved renal function. All patients had biopsy-proven ANCA small-vessel vasculitis. Fisher's exact tests and Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to compare the characteristics by ESRD status. ESRD follow-up included time on dialysis with transplants censored. Over a median follow-up time of 40 months, 136 of 523 patients reached ESRD. ESRD was associated with new-onset ANCA small-vessel vasculitis in 51% of patients, progressive chronic kidney disease without active vasculitis in 43%, and renal relapse in 6% of patients. Relapse rates of ANCA small-vessel vasculitis, reported as episodes/person-year, were significantly lower on chronic dialysis (0.08 episodes) compared with the rate of the same patients before ESRD (0.20 episodes) or with patients with preserved renal function (0.16 episodes). Infections were almost twice as frequent among patients with ESRD on maintenance immunosuppressants and were an important cause of death. Given the lower risk of relapse and higher risk of infection and death, we suggest that immunosuppression be geared to patients with ESRD who present with active vasculitis.
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PMID:The clinical course of ANCA small-vessel vasculitis on chronic dialysis. 2015 Sep 42

Infections may trigger or aggravate glomerulonephritidis and renal vasculitis like Henoch Schonlein purpura (HSP). HSP is seen more frequently in patients with familial Mediterranean fever in which TLR-2 Arg753Gln polymorphism frequency is increased. Although renal involvement is the most important factor affecting the prognosis in HSP, it is not known which patients will have renal disease or why some patients have severe renal involvement while some others have mild renal disease. We investigated the role of TLR-2 and TLR-4 polymorphisms on the incidence and severity of renal involvement in HSP patients. We studied HSP patients with and without nephritis (n = 15 for each group) and healthy controls (n = 100). TLR-2 Arg753Gln and TLR-4 Asp299Gly/Thr399Ile polymorphisms were analyzed with polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism method. The frequency of TLR-2 Arg753Gln, TLR-4 Asp299Gly, and Thr399Ile polymorphisms in healthy controls were 1, 3, and 2%, respectively. The frequencies of these polymorphisms were not different in HSP patients with or without nephritis compared to healthy controls. TLR-2 Arg753Gln, TLR-4 Asp299Gly, and Thr399Ile polymorphisms are not increased in HSP or HSP nephritis patients.
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PMID:TLR-2 Arg753Gln, TLR-4 Asp299Gly, and TLR-4 Thr399Ile polymorphisms in Henoch Schonlein purpura with and without renal involvement. 1959 34

Cutaneous vasculitis is a clinical entity with a broad differential diagnosis, including an adverse drug reaction. It is defined as inflammation of skin blood vessel walls. During a 7-year-period, we observed three patients who developed isolated cutaneous vasculitis during antibiotic therapy of bacterial infection. All were treated with a fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin) combined with rifampin (two cases) or flucloxacillin (three cases), respectively. In all three cases the lesions gradually resolved after treatment with the inciting fluoroquinolone had been stopped. In one patient, leukocytoclastic small-vessel vasculitis was histologically confirmed. Fluoroquinolone-associated cutaneous vasculitis consists of an isolated self-limiting disorder that is part of a systemic vasculitis, or even life-threatening disease. Clinicians should be aware of this serious adverse event because any continuation of treatment may be fatal.
Infection 2009 Oct
PMID:Cutaneous vasculitis associated with fluoroquinolones. 1966 86

Wegener granulomatosis (WG) is a systemic vasculitis classically involving the lungs, kidneys, and upper respiratory tract. Involvement of other sites does occur but is less frequent. Clinically evident cardiac involvement is uncommon. There are only a few cases in the literature with documentation of the histologic appearance of cardiac involvement in WG. We report a case of a previously healthy 37-year-old man who presented with a one-week history of cough and weakness and a one-day history of shortness of breath. At presentation, he was hypoxic and required intubation. Upon hospitalization, he deteriorated rapidly, became bradycardic and expired the same night. Infection was suspected clinically as the cause of illness and death. At autopsy, the lungs showed diffuse alveolar hemorrhage with capillaritis, diffuse alveolar damage, and parenchymal necrosis with necrotizing granulomas. The heart was enlarged and showed a mixed inflammatory infiltrate composed of neutrophils, eosinophils, and histiocytes, with focal myocyte necrosis. Granulomas, giant cells, and vasculitis were absent. The esophagus showed submucosal vasculitis. A diagnosis of WG was made. Postmortem serology for c-ANCA was positive, and all cultures were negative, confirming the diagnosis. Cardiac involvement is an underrecognized and potentially fatal complication of WG. The histologic findings in the heart may consist of a non-specific inflammatory infiltrate without granulomas or vasculitis, raising a wide differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Cardiac involvement in Wegener granulomatosis diagnosed at autopsy. 1974 Jun 78

Vasculitides associated with serum positivity for anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCAs) that affect small- to medium-sized vessels are commonly known as ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV) and include Wegener's granulomatosis, microscopic polyangiitis, and Churg-Strauss syndrome. Evidence derived from both in vitro studies and recent animal models points to a pathogenic role of ANCAs in AAV. In 2002, the first in vivo breakthrough in the pathogenesis of ANCAs showed that mouse ANCAs against myeloperoxidase (MPO) led to intrinsic pauci-immune renal vasculitis in mice. In 2004, a report using both in vitro and in vivo studies proposed that proteinase 3 (PR3)-directed autoimmunity involved the complementary peptide of PR3 (cPR3), which is encoded by the antisense strand of the PR3 gene. The last breakthrough came in October 2008 with a previously undescribed molecular explanation for the origin and development of injury in pauci-immune renal vasculitis, with potential clinical implications. This report showed that infection by fimbriated bacteria may trigger cross-reactive autoimmunity to a previously characterized ANCA antigen, lysosomal membrane protein-2, which is contained in the same vesicles that harbor MPO and PR3. Infection by fimbriated bacteria resulted in the production of autoantibodies, which activated neutrophils and killed human microvascular endothelium in vitro and caused renal vasculitis in rats. Although the evidence for a pathogenic role of ANCAs, mainly MPO-ANCAs, is striking, various questions remain unanswered. Understanding the key pathogenic mechanisms of AAV may provide a safer, more rational therapeutic approach than the traditional (ie, corticosteroids and immunosuppressants) treatment strategy.
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PMID:Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody pathogenesis in small-vessel vasculitis: an update. 1981 3

An emerging concern with metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty is metal-induced hypersensitivity. Currently, this is a diagnosis of exclusion in patients with groin pain after metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty. We describe a patient presenting nearly a year after arthroplasty with incisional drainage. Infection was presumed; but preoperative studies were nondefinitive, and the wound was explored. The operative cultures were negative; the histology revealed lymphocytic vasculitis. The patient recovered uneventfully after exchange to a metal polyethylene bearing couple. We believe that metal-induced hypersensitivity should be considered with draining wounds with this bearing couple if infection cannot be proven.
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PMID:Wound drainage after metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty secondary to presumed delayed hypersensitivity reaction. 2014 76

Infection with the saprophagous nematode Halicephalobus species is uncommon but has been reported in horses worldwide. Only 3 human cases have been previously described, all of which have been fatal. We report a fourth fatal case, which occurred in a 39-year-old woman who presented with meningeal signs, altered mental status, and a prodromal pruritic rash. Diagnostic evaluation included an open brain biopsy, which was diagnosed as granulomatous vasculitis. The patient subsequently died after a course of steroids and cyclophosphamide. At autopsy, a robust perivascular mixed inflammatory infiltration of the brain parenchyma, meninges, and ventricular system was present with larval forms and mature nematodes morphologically consistent with Halicephalobus deletrix . Although extremely rare, this organism needs to be considered in the differential diagnosis of human helminthic infection of the central nervous system.
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PMID:Fatal parasitic meningoencephalomyelitis caused by Halicephalobus deletrix : a case report and review of the literature. 2036 14


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