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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although cerebral angiography should be approached with caution in the diagnosis of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease there are some characteristic angiographic findings which may be helpful for classification and differential diagnosis. The proximal cerebral arteries are favourably affected by basal
meningitis
and thrombangiitis obliterans with resulting stenoses and occlusions. Whereas those inflammations originating from neighbouring skull structures mostly involve the intracavernous parts of the carotid artery, the tuberculous and mycotic arteritis prefer the supraclinoid carotid siphon. Peripheral vascular changes are found in luetic endangiitis, necrotizing and toxic
angiitis
and in collagenoses. Simultaneous involvement of the temporal arteries is of great diagnostic importance demonstrating the systemic character of the inflammatory process; in Horton's arteritis it can be a pathognomonic finding. Infectious endocarditis, some mycoses and malaria may lead to embolic occlusion of cerebral vessels. Mycotic aneurysms mostly have a broad base or a fusiform shape and do not prefer the localizations of congenital aneurysms. Angiographically, abscesses, tuberculomas and viral encephalitis may result in circumscribed hypervascularized areas. The characteristic angiographic findings are exemplified and discussed on the basis of 8 cases of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease (tuberculosis, pneumococcal and unspecific bacterial meningitis, syphilis, mycosis, Takayasu-syndrome, panarteritis nodosa, temporal arteritis).
...
PMID:[Inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease: angiographic findings and distribution patterns (author's transl)]. 0 27
Mouse hepatitis virus (MHV3) can persist for months in strains of mice with genetically controlled "semisusceptibility" to this virus. The pathology of the chronic neurological disease induced in these animals has been investigated by conventional histology and immunofluorescence. A2G mice develop a chronic choroidoependymitis and
meningitis
leading to severe hydrocephalus and hydromyelia. In C3H mice a widespread
vasculitis
was observed, with both viral antigens and bound immunoglobulins in vessal walls. No significant glomerulonephritis was found. Systemic amyloidosis was present in the spleen, liver, and kidneys. The virus was not detected in neural tissues, but brain and spinal cord lesions were found near inflammatory areas surrounding damaged vessels. It is suggested that viral persistance in ependymal cells is directly responsible for the lesions in A2G mice, whereas an immunopathological lesion of blood vessels of the central nervous system underlines the damage to mice of the C3H strain.
...
PMID:Neuropathological effects of persistent infection of mice by mouse hepatitis virus. 17 53
Radiology provides valuable clues to the correct diagnosis of intracranial tuberculosis. Twenty-three children with this problem were reviewed. Fifteen had
meningitis
, 12 of whom had abnormal chest radiographs, nine of them suggestive of tuberculosis. Common neuroradiologic findings were minor suture separation, abnormal activity in the region of the sylvian fissure on brain scans, mild ventricular dilatation, and
vasculitis
. Among the eight patients with tuberculomas, abnormal chest radiographs were less common. Neuroradiologic abnormalities included evidence of increased intracranial pressure on skull radiographs, focal deep lesions on brain scans, and hydrocephalus and mass lesions on air studies. Most tuberculomas were calcified one year later.
...
PMID:The radiology of intracranial tuberculosis in children. 30 99
The fine structure of small blood vessels in and around ten brain tuberculomas was examined. In the peripheral reactive zone of the tuberculomas, examination of 1-mu-thick survey sections established the chronic inflammatory process and the
vasculitis
characterized by infiltration of the vasomurium (vessel wall) by large and small mononuclear cells. This reaction was typical of chronic epithelioid cell granuloma. Electron microscopic examination of the reactive zone confirmed the vascular proliferation and
vasculitis
, the venule being the most frequently involved type of blood vessel. It showed the infiltrating cells to lie amidst osmiophilic, concentrically proliferated basement membrane laminae, which formed the greater part of the thickened vessel wall, generally surrounding the endothelial cells directly, the pericytes having disappeared. This appearance, together with the results of Gomori's reticulin stain on paraffin sections, suggested that the altered basement membrane material was reticulin. The possibility is discussed that the altered basement membrane material could be antigenic and that it might be responsible for perpetuating the necrotic vascular and perivascular reaction in tuberculous
meningitis
and tuberculomas. The above change in the basement membrane was not encountered in the blood vessels of the surrounding edematous brain. The endothelial cells and tight junctions were relatively well-preserved. Intact arterioles could be recognized even in severely edematous brain tissue. At both sites the fine structure of the blood vessels was typical of that expected in the central nervous system. Fenestrated vessels were not seen. The perivascular astrocytic end-feet were destroyed in the reactive zone and either distended or ruptured in the overtly edematous brain tissue also. In the central caseous part of the tuberculoma, there were few blood vessels, and they were in a state of advanced necrosis, but ghost outlines of proliferated basement membrane could be seen.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural basis of the vasculopathy in and around brain tuberculomas. Possible significance of altered basement membrane. 33 37
Clinical and autopsy records of eight adults with non-traumatic gram-negative bacillary
meningitis
who were admitted to the hospitals of the Wayne State University--Detroit Medical Center during the years 1964 to 1974 were reviewed. There were five community-acquired cases, and five patients died. Escherichia coli was the causative enteric bacillus in six cases. Community-acquired infections were due to Esch. coli in four of the patients. Each of the patients with a community-acquired infection was a chronic alcoholic. Esch. coli bronchopneumonias, urinary infections, and bacteremias seeding the meninges were usual. Shunting contaminated portal venous blood through the liver in patients with Laennec's cirrhosis, or bypassing the liver with similar infected blood from a genitourinary source by way of Batson's perivertebral plexus draining into the cerebral dural sinuses may be important in the pathogenesis of these infrequent cases of nontraumatic gram-negative bacillary
meningitis
. Spontaneous gram-negative bacteremias, peritonitis, bronchopneumonias, and now "meningitis" may be a constellation of special complications of the alcoholic. Mortality among 25 patients with Esch. coli
meningitis
reported from 1922 to 1974 is approximately 50%, and has not changed appreciably during the antibiotic era. Mortality, however, is significantly higher in nosocomially acquired cases. Early and more recent cases have had bloody, xanthochromic pleocytoses indicative of leptomeningeal arterial and venous
vasculitis
, and far advanced disease. Since causative/enteric bacilli have been susceptible to antimicrobial agents employed, another mode of antibacterial administration, perhaps utilizing parenteral plus intraventricular dosing, particularly for patients acquiring their infections in the hospital, may be required.
...
PMID:Non-traumatic gram-negative bacillary meningitis in the Detroit Medical Center, 1964-1974; (with special mention of cases due to Escherichia coli). 34 22
There has been a gradual accumulation of reported Campylobacter fetus human infections since the first description in 1947. The taxonomy of these fastidious and morphologically confusing organisms has been recently revised and, in the past few years, through the use of selective culture medium for stool isolation C fetus has been implicated as a frequent paghogen in children. There are three relatively distinct patterns of human C fetus infection. The first, most frequent, pattern of disease is enteritis which is usually uncomplicated and due to C fetus subsp jejuni. A second form of disease consists of focal infections, often associated with
vasculitis
and/or chronic bacteremia. These infections, due to C fetus subsp intestinalis, are seen most often in older, debilitated, or chronically ill men. The third pattern, perinatal infections causing abortion, prematurity, and neonatal
meningitis
, is the least frequent, but these infections are usually fetal to the fetus or infant and are also due to C fetus subsp intestinalis.
...
PMID:Campylobacter fetus infections in children. 39 Apr 87
Four patientw with acute polyarthritis due to meningcoccemia are described. One had skin manifestations suggesting
vasculitis
, another had transient nodular lesions, but there were none of these features in the other two. Synovial fluid cultures were negative and cells counts did not suggest septic arthritis. The diagnosis was not suspected until positive blood cultures were reported in three cases and
meningitis
developed in the fourth. In spite of diagnostic delay due to slow growth in cultures (six to 11 days) there was prompt response to antibiotic treatment. Meningococcemia should be suspected in patients presenting with fever and polyarthritis, even in the absence of skin lesions.
...
PMID:Meningococcemia presenting as acute polyarthritis. 41 40
Subacute
meningitis
was the first manifestation of illness in a young man with multisystem disease involving lung, kidney, eye, and central nervous system. Necrotizing granulomatous
angiitis
was found in tissue obtained at thoracotomy and the diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosis was suggested. This patient had an excellent functional recovery with cyclophosphamide and prednisone.
...
PMID:Subacute meningitis heralding a diffuse granulomatous angiitis: (Wegener's granulomatosis?). 55 62
Adult Richardson's ground squirrels were infected with western equine encephalomyelitis virus by intranasal instillation. Mortality followed the instillation of a minimum threshold of 4.7 logs of virus while infection was produced by a dosage of 2.3 logs. The incubation period was from four to seven days, being preceded by a viremic phase. Signs were depression, ataxia and paralysis of the limbs. Highest titres of virus were recovered from the brain and histopathological changes involving the central nervous system included
meningitis
,
vasculitis
, perivascular cuffing, gliosis, neuronophagia and neuronal degeneration. The virus was also found in a variety of extraneural tissues. Lesions in extraneural tissues included necrosis of brown fat and an apparent increase in number of Kupffer's cells in the liver. The lymphoid tissue was involved indicating a possible source for viremia. The duration and magnitude of viremia were ample enough to provide virus source for arthropods. The potential for transmission of the virus independent of arthropods was discussed in view of the pathogenesis demonstrated in the experimental infections.
...
PMID:Intranasal exposure of the Richardson's ground squirrel to Western equine encephalomyelitis virus. 66 6
The value of cerebral angiography in the diagnosis of intracranial infections is presented, and the differential diagnosis of the various angiographic appearances in meningocerebral infections is discussed. Specific angiographic characteristics permitting the diagnosis of
vasculitis
, cerebritis,
meningitis
, brain abscess, and subdural and epidural fluid collections are correlated with known concepts of the pathological anatomy of these entities. Angiography is recommended in those infants known to have a meningocerebral infection who show signs of an increase in intracranial pressure or focal neurological dysfunction.
...
PMID:Cerebral angiography in meningocerbral inflammatory diseases in infancy and childhood: a study of thiryt-five cases. 68 94
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