Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 68-year-old man with suspected allergic granulomatosis and
angiitis
is reported. He had received 10 mg of prednisolone daily since July 1988 for asthma. He abruptly developed muscle weakness of the lower extremities, followed two days later by paraplegia. Six days after the onset of the muscle weakness, he was hospitalized. He showed disturbance of recent memory, disorientation, neck rigidity, paraplegia, mild
muscle fasciculation
and hypesthesia. He also showed paralytic ileus. Laboratory findings showed leukocytosis (24580/mm3), eosinophilia (56% of the peripheral white blood cells and 19% of the cells in the cerebrospinal fluid), on erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 31 mm/h, and the IgE level of 1200 IU/ml. The ECG showed loss of the r-wave in V1 and V2. A granulomatous lesion anterior to the spinal cord was found on myelography and MRI. Prednisolone was given at a dose of 60 mg daily resulting in improvement of the clinical symptoms and eosinophilia. There was disappearance of the granuloma on MRI performed after prednisolone therapy. Despite the severe manifestation of allergic granulomatosis and
angiitis
, prednisolone therapy had a marked effect in this patient. The granulomatous lesion anterior to the spinal cord shown by MRI suggested an eosinophilic granuloma, and may have been the etiology of some of the neurological symptoms.
...
PMID:[A case of suspected allergic granulomatosis and angiitis with a rapid clinical course of paraplegia]. 224 87
A 25-year-old man with multifocal weakness and
fasciculation
was thought to have motor neuron disease. Signs progressed for 1 year, plateaued, and 3 years later resolved almost completely. There was no evidence of paraproteinemia, lymphoproliferative disorder, or
vasculitis
, and myelography was normal. Electrodiagnostic study disclosed multifocal, acute and chronic denervation that evolved into a picture consistent with residuals of old multifocal radiculopathy without active denervation. Prolongation of F response, absence of H-reflex, and conduction block in a proximal nerve segment suggested multifocal demyelination. A proximal motor neuropathy, perhaps demyelinating, may cause some of the benign motor neuron syndromes that simulate motor neuron disease.
...
PMID:Slow resolution of multifocal weakness and fasciculation: a reversible motor neuron syndrome. 374 96
Among a cohort of 921 outpatients less than 65 years of age at Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound who took lithium during a 5-year period, lithium-associated toxicity leading to hospitalization was rare. In only one case (
muscle fasciculation
) was lithium directly implicated as the cause of hospital admission. In five cases described in detail (one case each of hyperparathyroidism,
vasculitis
, edema, brain stem infarction, and subarachnoid hemorrhage), an etiologic connection with lithium exposure was considered unlikely but could not be ruled out.
...
PMID:Drug toxicity and hospitalization among lithium users. 670 36
Anesthetized rams envenomed s.c. with 40 microg/kg Tityus discrepans scorpion venom developed
fasciculation
, hypothermia, polyuria, pulmonary wet rales, tachypnea, respiratory distress and arrhythmia. Rams developed a cascade of inflammation reactions, characterized by activation of macrophages, fibroblasts and neutrophils, neutrophil infiltration and aggregation,
vasculitis
, arteritis and abundant fibrin deposition. At the inoculation site, venom was detected by immunohistochemistry in the extra cellular matrix, lymphatic vessels' and venules' lumen, inside macrophages and surrounding nerves. Extra cellular matrix was degraded at the inoculation site perhaps by activated neutrophils. Envenoming produced hepatocytes with Mallory body-like vacuoles which may be due to the increased plasmatic levels of TNF-alpha and IL6. Venom produced degranulation and vacuolization of acinary cells as well as interstitial swelling and necrosis. Necrosis of the Langerhan's islets occurred occasionally. Lungs showed the most deleterious effects developing wall collapse and necrosis, diffuse injury of the alveolar capillary barrier, interstitial and alveolar fibrin deposits with strong neutrophil infiltration. Massive infiltration of lymphocytes and macrophage occurred in the intestinal submucose, to the point that it modified villi and intestinal folding morphology. Envenomation developed a marked leukocyte aggregation surrounding nerves at the inoculation site. This study reveals that beyond its neurotoxicity, Tityus venom produces a severe and widespread inflammatory syndrome, expressed as histopathological changes at the site of inoculation, as well as in remote organs such as pancreas, lungs, intestine and liver. Our results suggest that not all remote targets are directly affected by the venom but that, as proposed earlier, are modified by inflammation by products produced elsewhere.
...
PMID:Histopathological changes and inflammatory response induced by Tityus discrepans scorpion venom in rams. 1553 Sep 67
Snake and spider bites, as well as scorpion sting envenoming, are neglected diseases affecting millions of people all over the world. Neurological complications vary according to the offending animal, and are often directly related to toxic effects of the venom, affecting the central nervous system, the neuromuscular transmission, the cardiovascular system, or the coagulation cascade. Snake bite envenoming may result in stroke or muscle paralysis. Metalloproteinases and other substances (common in vipers and colubrids) have anticoagulant or procoagulant activity, and may induce ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes. The venom of elapids is rich in neurotoxins affecting the neuromuscular transmission at either presynaptic or postsynaptic levels. The clinical picture of scorpion sting envenoming is dominated by muscle weakness associated with arterial hypertension, cardiac arrythmias, myocarditis, or pulmonary edema. These manifestations occur as the result of release of catecholamines into the bloodstream or due to direct cardiac toxicity of the venom. Cerebrovascular complications have been reported after the sting of the Indian red scorpion. Intracranial hemorrhages occur in the setting of acute increases in arterial blood pressure related to sympathetic overstimulation, and cerebral infarctions are related to either cerebral hypoperfusion, consumption coagulopathy,
vasculitis
, or cardiogenic brain embolism. Three main syndromes result from spider bite envenoming: latrodectism, loxoscelism, and funnel-web spider envenoming. Latrodectism is related to neurotoxins present in the venom of widow spiders. Most cases present with headache, lethargy, irritability, myalgia, tremor,
fasciculation
, or ataxia. Loxoscelism is caused by envenoming by spiders of the family Sicariidae. It may present with a stroke due to a severe coagulopathy. The venom of funnel-web spiders also has neurotoxins that stimulate neurotransmitter release, resulting in sensory disturbances and muscle paralysis. Proper management of the envenomed patient, including prompt transport to the hospital, correction of the hemostatic disorder, ventilatory support, and administration of antivenom, significantly reduce the risk of neurological complications which, in turn, reduce the mortality and improve the functional outcome of survivors.
...
PMID:Neurological effects of venomous bites and stings: snakes, spiders, and scorpions. 2382 24