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

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia (EMC) is a rheumatic disorder characterized by widespread vasculitis. To better define the nature of the vasculitic process and to possibly outline assessment methods reliable for using in a clinical context, we studied plasma levels of three endothelial related peptides: fibronectin (FN), von Willebrand factor (vWF) and tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), and those of thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT) as markers of activation of the coagulation in 21 patients and in 16 controls. In EMC we found a picture consisting of reduced FN and increased vWF, t-PA, and TAT levels, suggesting a condition of endothelial cell damage with thrombin formation in vivo. Since we previously demonstrated the presence of chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation in these patients, we may assume that endothelial cells stressed by cryoprecipitation or stimulated by soluble mediators may be actively involved in the vasculitic process and possibly express procoagulant properties. This is a good example of the complex interplay existing between autoimmunity and coagulation mechanisms. We also suggest that FN, vWF, t-PA and TAT should be considered as additional clinical parameters when evaluating patients with EMC.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of endothelial damage markers in essential mixed cryoglobulinemia. 195 Mar 76

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia, which can cause hypersensitivity vasculitis, was observed in five patients with peripheral neuropathy. Three cases presented with multifocal neuropathies and two cases with symmetrical polyneuropathy. One had cryoglobulinemia with IgM monoclonal gammopathy IgG polyclonal gammopathy, and the other four had cryoglobulinemia with polyclonal gammopathy. Biopsies showed perivascular infiltration by mononuclear cells around medium, and mainly small-sized blood vessels. This was observed in the epineurium (five cases) and muscular fragments (three cases). At ultrastructural examination two cases showed severe damage of most myelinated fibers, which presented acute stages of Wallerian-like degeneration, and the three other cases showed a less widespread destruction of myelinated fibers. Most endoneurial capillaries showed swollen endoneurial cells. Myelino-axonal degeneration of myelinated fibers is probably due mainly to the vasculitis always present in the epineurium. This damage was probably worsened by the modifications of endoneurial capillaries. These lesions and their mechanisms are quite different from those observed in cases of cryoglobulinemia with an isolated monoclonal gammopathy.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy with essential mixed cryoglobulinemia: biopsies from 5 cases. 283 40

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia is frequently associated with chronic hepatitis. This report presents four cases of cryoglobulinemia with vasculitis associated with chronic hepatitis related to hepatitis C virus infection. Hepatitis C virus infection was ascertained in the four patients by both the presence in the serum of anti-HCV antibodies detected by the four-antigen recombinant immunoblot assay and of HCV RNA detected by polymerase chain reaction. In two patients tested, anti-HCV antibodies were not detected after centrifugation in the purified cryoglobulin but were detected in the supernatant. HCV RNA was detected in the purified cryoglobulin in all four patients and was detected in the supernatant in three patients. In one patient receiving recombinant interferon alfa, serum aminotransferases normalized and cryoglobulin disappeared; in another patient receiving recombinant interferon alfa, serum aminotransferases remained high and the cryoglobulin persisted. The presence of HCV RNA in the cryoglobulin and the parallelism of the changes of the cryoglobulinemia and of the serum aminotransferases during recombinant interferon alfa administration suggest that HCV infection is responsible for the production of cryoglobulinemia and vasculitis. It is proposed that HCV infection is a cause of cryoglobulinemia associated with chronic hepatitis.
...
PMID:Cryoglobulinemia with vasculitis associated with hepatitis C virus infection. 838 Mar 97

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia is frequently associated with chronic hepatitis C. Three patients undergoing transplantation for end-stage chronic hepatitis C in whom cryoglobulinemia with vasculitis developed after transplantation are described. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection was confirmed in the 3 patients by the presence of HCV RNA detected by polymerase chain reaction. The time interval between transplantation and the first expression of vasculitis was 1, 5, and 17 months. Type II cryoglobulins were detected in the sera of all 3 patients. All patients developed cutaneous vasculitis, requiring digital amputation in 1 case. Two patients developed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. Plasmapheresis and the addition of cyclophosphamide led to an improvement in the renal disease in 1 case, whereas no treatment was able to reverse the renal failure in the other case. One patient developed an autoimmune hemolytic anemia 4 years after transplantation. One patient died of multiorgan failure 5 months after transplantation. We propose that HCV-associated cryoglobulinemia could become clinically significant only after orthotopic liver transplantation, possibly due in part to posttransplant increase in viremia as reflected by HCV RNA levels. These results confirm previous observations suggesting that HCV infection is important etiologically in the pathogenesis of cryoglobulinemia.
...
PMID:Cryoglobulinemia presenting after liver transplantation. 853 66

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia is a systemic disorder in which cutaneous vasculitis and frequently glomerulonephritis are associated with cryoprecipitable serum immune complexes. Typically, the treatment regimen consists of plasmapheresis, high-dose corticosteroids, and cytotoxic chemotherapy, as well as interferon alfa for hepatitis C virus-related cryoglobulinemia. Herein we describe a man with progressive, symptomatic cryoglobulinemia and multisystem organ dysfunction in whom corticosteroid and alkylating therapy failed; however, he had a complete and long-lasting remission after administration of 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (cladribine).
...
PMID:Prolonged, complete remission after 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine therapy in a patient with refractory essential mixed cryoglobulinemia. 900 96

The blue toe syndrome is a rare presentation in a number of medical disorders. We report a 35-year-old woman who initially presented with blue toe syndrome and rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia with vasculitis and renal failure was documented by laboratory tests and renal biopsy. She was on maintenance hemodialysis as renal failure persisted after steroid and immunosuppressive agents therapy. Her gangrenous changes of bilateral toes were autoamputated symmetrically and uneventfully.
...
PMID:Blue toe syndrome associated with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis: ultimately revealed essential mixed cryoglobulinemia. 904 65

Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia (type II) has turned out to be secondary to hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in the large majority of patients. Interferon might be anticipated to be effective only in HCV-associated cryoglobulinemias. We found that interferon was highly effective in an HCV-positive patient with true essential type II mixed cryoglobulinemia. The patient presented with symptomatic cryoglobulinemic vasculitis without underlying immunologic, infectious, or neoplastic diseases. Tests for HCV viremia, a reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) assay, and anti-HCV antibodies (third-generation assays) were positive before therapy. The patient had severe cryoglobulinemic vasculitis with purpura, peripheral neuropathy, and membranous proliferative glomerulonephritis. The cryocrit before therapy was 6 percent in the patient. Recombinant interferon alfa-2a (Roferon-A, Hoffmann-LaRoche, Basel, Switzerland) was administered at a dose of 3 million units per day for three months and 3 million units every other day for the subsequent nine months, a protocol adopted for HCV-associated cryoglobulinemia. The patient had a complete clinical response, with the disappearance of serum cryoglobulins and all signs of cutaneous vasculitis and with the normalization of kidney-function results and urinary values in the patient with nephropathy. The patient has remained in complete remission for more than one year since the withdrawal of therapy. True essential mixed cryoglobulinemia with HCV infection complicated with glomerulonephritis represents a therapeutic challenge.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus-associated type II mixed cryoglobulinemia vasculitis complicated with membranous proliferative glomerulonephritis. 1921 13

Essential mixed cryoglobulinaemia or type II cryoglobulinaemia is an important extrahepatic manifestation of chronic hepatitis C. Cryoglobulinaemia results in the deposition of immune complexes in small or medium-sized blood vessels leading to palpable purpura, arthralgia, renal disease and peripheral neuropathy. Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a distinct phenomenon characterised by vasogenic oedema in the posterior circulation of brain. Cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis leading to spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage and PRES syndrome is rarely reported in the medical literature. In this report, we present an unusual case of spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage and PRES secondary to hepatitis C-associated cryoglobulinaemia presenting as right dense hemiplegia. Prompt institution of plasmapheresis resulted in successful resolution of symptoms in our patient, followed by full neurological recovery. To the best of our knowledge, this case describes the first successful use of plasmapheresis in alleviating neurological complications resulting from cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis and PRES secondary to chronic hepatitis C.
...
PMID:Resolution of neurological deficits secondary to spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage and posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) in a patient with hepatitis C-associated cryoglobulinaemia: a role for plasmapheresis. 2444 50