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)

Morphological alterations in the lungs of pheasants after prolonged high-dosage administration of bleomycin sulfate were studied by light and electron microscopy. Nontreated birds acted as controls, and their lungs showed no abnormalities. Lungs of bleomycin-treated pheasants revealed collapse alternating with overexpansion, marked cuboidalization of atrial epithelium, and incipient interstitial fibrosis. There were neither lymphoplasmacytic or eosinophilic infiltrates, nor evidence of vasculitis. Ultrastructurally, type 1 alveolar epithelial cells were either reactive or conspicuously absent in the air capillaries. Type 2 alveolar epithelial cells appeared hyperplastic with numerous lamellar bodies, many of which extruded into air spaces. Immature fibroblasts were noted in the vicinity of collagen fibrils or amorphous material resembling elastin. No immune deposits were present in basement membranes. These findings are consistent with a direct toxic effect of bleomycin to the pheasant lung rather than a drug hypersensitivity reaction. Reproduction of the bleomycin lesion in a nonmammalian species corroborates even further the high propensity of the drug to affect the lung.
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PMID:Experimentally induced bleomycin sulfate pulmonary toxicity: histopathologic and ultrastructural study in the pheasant. 6 10

Review of clinical and pathologic data from ten fatal cases of Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) revealed the importance of acute renal failure in the clinical course and of multifocal perivascular interstitial nephritis as the principal pathologic lesion. In nine cases, Rickettsia rickettsii were demonstrated by immunofluorescence in the areas of vasculitis. Evidence was lacking for the role of disseminated intravascular coagulation, glomerulonephritis, or myoglobinuria in the pathogenesis of acute renal failure in these cases. Rickettsia-induced vascular injury led to acute renal failure by several mechanisms. Hypovolemia early in the course resulted in reversible, prerenal azotemia. Transient hypotension in midcourse produced acute tubular necrosis. In fulminant cases, preterminal circulatory collapse was associated with coma and oliguria. The interstitial nephritis could not be demonstrated conclusively to contribute to the acute renal failure.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in Rocky Mountain spotted fever. 43 98

Serum C3 levels were measured in 211 patients with meningococcal disease. Low levels were found in 13 patients with acute meningococcaemia, and complement activation may have contributed to the peripheral circulatory collapse that was responsible for nine deaths. The complement profile of these patients suggested activation of both classical and alternative complement pathways. Patients with meningitis had a higher mean serum C3 level than controls. Serial studies in 13 serum antigen-positive patients with meningitis who subsequently developed arthritis or cutaneous vasculitis showed a transient fall in serum C3 in eight. This fall was probably due to the formation of immune complexes that were responsible for their allergic complications.
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PMID:Complement and meningococcal infection. 126 Mar 36

Between November 1983 and January 1990 103 orthotopic heart transplants were performed at the National Hospital, University of Oslo, Norway. Twenty-two patients died. Acute and/or chronic rejection was the cause of death in nine, disseminated infection in eight, cancer in three, and cerebral haemorrhage in one of the patients. Two patients were successfully retransplanted after graft failure due to AB0 blood group incompatibility because of a communication error. One patient with a positive lymphocytotoxic crossmatch died shortly posttransplant due to acute circulatory collapse. The cumulative one- and five-year survivals were 82% and 68%. Follow-up time was 226.6 graft years, survival range from one to 2,306 days (mean 803 +/- 4.12 SEM). A total of 1,343 endomyocardial biopsies were performed, which revealed 181 acute cellular rejection episodes, and 22 biopsies revealed acute and/or chronic vascular rejection. Autopsy studies showed three general types of vascular damage: acute (necrotizing) vasculitis, atherosclerotic disease in the epicardial arteries and diffuse proliferative arteriopathy in the intramural and smaller branches. In several cases acute vasculitis was concomitant with either of the two chronic types of accelerated graft sclerosis. Tissue immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated vascular deposition of immunoglobulin and complement in acute vasculitis, indicative of humoral immunoreaction. Postoperatively early chronic vascular rejection may develop.
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PMID:Vascular rejection in cardiac transplantation. A morphological study of 25 human cardiac allografts. 158 Oct 45

Effects of betaxolol, a cardioselective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist, on blood pressure and hypertensive complications in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) were investigated. Betaxolol was provided in a dose of 33 +/- 1.8 mg/kg/day, orally in drinking water, throughout the experimental period. The chronic treatment with betaxolol inhibited the development of hypertension in SHRSP and reduced values of blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, total cholesterol, free cholesterol, triglyceride, phospholipid and HDL-cholesterol in serum. Treatment with betaxolol apparently inhibited the incidence of hypertensive lesions such as cardiac fibrosis, mesenteric vasculitis, proliferative and/or necrotic vasculitis and glomeruli showing collapse or vasculitis in the kidneys. To shorten the time before the onset of hypertension and the subsequent stroke, SHRSP were kept on a SP diet containing 0.39% Na instead of the F-2 diet. When the SHRSP were kept on the SP diet, all of the control SHRSP had cerebral apoplexy and severe hypertensive lesions in the heart and kidney. When betaxolol was chronically administered to SHRSP, cerebral apoplexy and hypertensive lesions in the heart and kidney were inhibited, but the effect on blood pressure was slight. Treatment with betaxolol reduced serum creatinine levels. Our observations show that betaxolol reduces blood pressure and potently inhibits hypertensive complications in SHRSP.
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PMID:[Antihypertensive effects of betaxolol, a cardioselective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist, in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP)]. 197 70

We describe a patient with relapsing polychondritis who developed fatal cardiac involvement comprising complete heart block, acute aortic incompetence, and cardiovascular collapse. Pathologic studies showed fibrosis of the cardiac conducting system and necrotizing inflammation of the aortic valve, features not previously described in relapsing polychondritis, as well as evidence of coronary artery vasculitis.
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PMID:Complete heart block and severe aortic incompetence in relapsing polychondritis: clinicopathologic findings. 198 82

Temporal bone pathology is described in a 37-year-old man who had acute, bilateral, profound sensorineural hearing loss without improvement 4 months before death. The patient had suffered from low complement nephritis, for which he had received prednisolone therapy. Autopsy revealed malignant lymphoma with non-Hodgkin's type, membranous proliferative glomerulonephritis and necrotizing vasculitis of middle and small arteries. In the temporal bone study, pathological changes were limited to the cochlear region. The vestibular structure showed no detectable pathological changes. The changes included total absence of the organ of Corti, atrophy and/or disappearance of the stria vascularis in the upper turns, collapse of Reissner's membrane in the middle turn, and new bone formation in the apical turn.
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PMID:Acute bilateral deafness with nephritis: a human temporal bone study. 382 56

Fifteen patients with symptomatic cryoglobulinaemia were subjected to apheretic treatment when acute renal insufficiency, glomerulonephritis, severe generalized vasculitis and polyneuropathy unresponsive to conventional therapy or complications due to steroids, such as vertebral collapse, peptic ulcer and steroid diabetes, had appeared. Treatment was performed by discontinuous flow centrifugation or cascade filtration: when discontinuous flow centrifugation was employed, a mixture of saline, gelatin and fresh frozen plasma was used for replacement. Cytotoxic drugs were administered to patients with lymphoma (4 patients) or chronic active hepatitis (5 patients) and also to patients suffering from essential mixed cryoglobulinaemia. Exchanges were organized into courses of 3 to 5 sessions over 5 to 10 days and employed as a supportive measure. No patient underwent long-term treatment. A complete resolution of kidney damage, skin involvement and neurologic signs was observed when treatment was started early in the course of the disease, whereas unequivocal but moderate improvement was obtained in the case of long-lasting symptoms such as polyneuropathy. Relapses were seen in most patients when cytotoxic drugs had been discontinued abruptly. In 8 patients the solubility of cryoglobulins was studied by a recently developed turbidimetric assay. Following treatment the solubility increased; when solubility decreased, 2 patients of this group had a relapse. On the basis of these preliminary observations it appears that the possibility of predicting relapsing disease or the need of continuing therapy can eventually be achieved.
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PMID:Plasmapheresis and cytotoxic drugs for mixed cryoglobulinemia. 653 39

Pneumocystis carinii (PC) pneumonia is a frequent manifestation of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans and macaques. An unusual nodular type of PC pneumonia was observed in two simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-inoculated rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). These animals developed clinical signs of simian AIDS, including anorexia, weight loss, dyspnea, and collapse. Grossly, both animals had multifocal tan-white nodules 1-10 mm in diameter scattered throughout the lungs. One animal had similar nodules involving the diaphragm and thoracic wall. The lungs were characterized by severe PC pneumonia with numerous large nodules consisting of foamy material that compressed adjacent tissue. The nodules had central areas of necrosis and lysis of alveolar septa. Varying degrees of necrotizing vasculitis were observed in areas of nodular PC pneumonia. The presence of PC in intra-alveolar spaces and nodular lesions was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. No evidence of other agents, including viral inclusions, bacteria, fungi, and lung mites, was detected. The animal with the most severe nodular PC pneumonia had vascular involvement with extrapulmonary spread to the diaphragm, thoracic wall, and regional lymph nodes. This unusual type of nodular PC pneumonia has been rarely seen in human AIDS patients.
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PMID:Nodular Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in SIV-infected macaques. 1049 Feb 19

Cocaine, derived from the leaves of the shrub Erythroxylon coca, which grows on the slopes of the Andes, remains one of the most widely abused illicit drugs (Johnson et al., 1993). Its abuse appears to be increasing and as a result, so is its trafficking across borders, with ever-increasing sophistication of concealment (Rouse, 1992). Over the past few years, cases of cocaine intoxication have been reported, resulting from ruptured packets of cocaine that have been swallowed, or inserted into the vagina or rectum by couriers (drug smugglers), so called 'body packers' or 'mules' (Westli and Mittleman, 1981; Ricaurte and Langston, 1995). Cocaine is a powerful sympathomimetic and central nervous system stimulant, an overdose of which causes primarily cardiac, neurological and psychiatric effects (Ricaurte and Langston, 1995). Acute toxicity is dose-related and is characterized in the first place by its sympathomimetic effects, which include tachycardia, hypertension and hyperthermia arrythmias, followed by seizures. Brainstem depression and cardio-respiratory collapse, stroke, coma, intracranial vasculitis, myocardial infarction and sudden death have all been reported in cocaine abuse (Ricaurte and Langston, 1995). We present a fatal case with neurological and psychiatric symptoms, but without the usual cardiac and systemic signs.
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PMID:Body packer: cocaine intoxication, causing death, masked by concomitant administration of major tranquilizers. 1105 42


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