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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) typically manifests as inflammatory pain in the shoulder and/or pelvic girdles in a patient over 50 years of age. This condition was long underrecognized and therefore underdiagnosed. Today, however, overdiagnosis may occur. Physicians must be aware that many conditions may simulate PMR, including diseases that carry a grim prognosis or require urgent treatment. PMR may be the first manifestation of giant cell arteritis, and a painstaking search for other signs is mandatory. PMR may inaugurate other rheumatologic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis,
RS3PE syndrome
, spondyloarthropathy, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), myopathy,
vasculitis
, and chondrocalcinosis. Finally, PMR may be the first manifestation of an endocrine disorder, a malignancy, or an infection. Failure to respond to glucocorticoid therapy should suggest giant cell arteritis, malignant disease, or infection. Ultrasonography may assist in the diagnosis by showing bilateral subdeltoid bursitis. Glucocorticoids are the mainstay of the treatment of PMR. Although the optimal starting dosage and tapering schedule are not agreed on, a low starting dosage and slow tapering may decrease the relapse rate. Methotrexate is probably useful when glucocorticoid dependency develops. In contrast, TNF-alpha antagonists are probably ineffective.
...
PMID:Polymyalgia rheumatica: diagnosis and treatment. 1711 8
Remitting symmetrical seronegative synovitis with pitting edema (RS3PE) syndrome is a rare type of seronegative polyarthritis occurring in the elderly. It can be associated to various diseases. We report a case of
RS3PE syndrome
associated with myopericarditis, leading to the diagnosis of polyarteritis nodosa in a 71-year-old patient admitted to the hospital for a febrile acute polyarthritis with pitting edema of the hands associated with a marked inflammatory syndrome. On second day of hospitalization, a sustained chest pain led to the diagnosis of myopericarditis. Muscular biopsy showed necrotizing
vasculitis
, characteristic of polyarteritis nodosa. The coexistence of RS3PE and myopericarditis has never been described in the literature. Its association with polyarteritis nodosa is also very rare and only one case has been previously reported.
...
PMID:[Oedematous polyarthritis and myopericarditis as presenting features of periarteritis nodosa]. 1876 Aug 65