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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-four patients presenting an acute stroke with watershed cerebral infarct on CT scan or MRI were included in this retrospective study. Age was 63 +/- 14 years (mean +/- SD), and sex ratio was 2 men for 1 woman. Main clinical features were: in anterior location, lower limb weakness and frontal syndrome with transcortical motor aphasia in left lesions or spatial dyscalculia in right ones; in posterior location, brachiofacial weakness with constant quadranopsia and hypoesthesia, and Gerstmann syndrome in left lesion. There was no distinctive feature for subcortical and multiple infarcts. In bilateral infarcts, there were one pseudobulbar syndrome, and 2 pseudo brainstem syndromes with neuropsychological signs. Aetiologies were severe carotid artery disease in 14 cases, severe cardiopathy in 6, isolated cerebral
angiitis
in 1, essential thrombocythemia in 1,
protein C
deficiency with sickle cell disease in 1, and cholesterol emboli in 1 anatomical case. CBF performed in carotid artery occlusions or tight stenoses showed evidence of haemodynamic changes. Microembolic process can be proposed in the case with cholesterol emboli. Preventive treatment is discussed.
...
PMID:Watershed cerebral infarcts: retrospective study of 24 cases. 135
The central nervous system (CNS) is clinically involved in approximately 40% of all systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE) patients. Minor psychiatric symptoms and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing are being detected with increasing frequency. This review summarizes current thinking concerning the diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS lupus. The main symptoms of CNS lupus can be diffuse (generalized seizures, psychosis) or focal (stroke, peripheral neuropathies). Neuropsychiatric symptoms often occur in the first year of SLE, but are rarely the presenting symptoms of the disease. In studies on the pathology of CNS lupus, vasculopathy, infarcts and haemorrhages are often observed, whereas
vasculitis
is rare. Endocardial lesions and mural thrombi have also been reported in 33-50% of CNS lupus patients. In diagnostic imaging of the CNS, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans often provide evidence for edema or small infarcts, both in focal and diffuse CNS lupus, whereas computerized tomography (CT) scans only show gross abnormalities. The first reports on position emission tomography (PET) scans in CNS lupus patients show decreased glucose uptake in the brain. The cerebral blood flow decreases during active diffuse and focal CNS lupus. The blood-brain barrier is somewhat more frequently impaired in diffuse CNS lupus. Intrathecal IgG and IgM production is observed in 25-66% of all CNS lupus patient. Various specificities of autoantibodies have been observed in CNS lupus. Of these, anticardiolipin (ACA) antibodies show a well-documented association with focal involvement of the CNS in SLE. These antibodies could cause thrombosis by interfering with the
protein C
pathway of fibrinolysis. In addition, they are associated with endocardial and valvular heart disease, which is often observed in SLE and which could cause embolism. The relation between ACA and diffuse CNS lupus is not yet clear. Low-avidity anti-DNA antibodies are also found in CNS lupus, possibly because of their cross-reaction with cardiolipin. Antineuronal antibodies and lymphocytotoxic antibodies have been associated with diffuse CNS lupus and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing. However, the population of these antibodies is rather heterogeneous and it has not been possible to assess a common target antigen. Therefore, it is still obscure whether there is also a second immune-mediated mechanism responsible for the development of the diffuse form of CNS lupus.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS lupus. 186 69
A case report of a 61-year-old patient with hypersensitive
vasculitis
caused by ethylbiscumacetate is presented. After the implantation of the artificial aortic valve the patient was treated with medigoxine, furosemide, dipiridamole, disopiramide, potassium chloride and ethylbiscumacetate. Among these drugs furosemide and ethylbiscumacetate are reported to cause hypersensitive
vasculitis
. On the basis of the past medical history, clinical and histological findings furosemide was ruled out as a causative agent. The diagnosis was confirmed by the skin biopsy and finding of a normal biologic activity of
protein C
. The discontinuance of all previous drugs and administration of methylprednisolone led to improvement in the skin lesions of the patient. The need for continuous anticoagulant therapy was the reason for fepromarone to be given, achieving good anticoagulant effect, without any side effects. According to the criteria of Karch and Lasagna the degree of connection between drug use and side effects in this case belongs to the category "probable".
...
PMID:[Hypersensitivity vasculitis caused by ethyl biscoumacetate]. 189 Sep 7
Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) takes its name from the characteristic rash that occurs as a consequence of
vasculitis
associated with rickettsial invasion of the endothelium. The authors examined sera from 14 patients with serologically confirmed RMSF for the presence of antibodies (IgG and IgM) reactive with human umbilical vein-derived endothelial cells and with the phospholipids cardiolipin (CL) and phosphatidyl serine (PS). Sera from 7 patients (50%) exhibited antiendothelial antibodies, and 10 (71%) patient sera reacted with CL and/or PS. Because such antibodies may interfere with or augment endothelial thrombosis-related activities, acute and convalescent sera were tested for their effects on endothelial PGI2 secretion and
protein C
activation. Acute sera from two patients and convalescent sera from four patients stimulated
protein C
activation. Additionally, sera from five acute and nine convalescent cases inhibited basal endothelial PGI2 secretion, but sera from two acute and three convalescent cases stimulated thrombin-dependent PGI2 secretion. These results demonstrated that, in a significant proportion of patients, RMSF was accompanied by the appearance of antibodies that bound to endothelial cells and to phospholipids; some of these antibodies may have altered anticoagulant endothelial functions.
...
PMID:Serologic characterization of Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Appearance of antibodies reactive with endothelial cells and phospholipids, and factors that alter protein C activation and prostacyclin secretion. 202 28
Extensive cutaneous necrosis of the limbs with sudden onset was observed in 3 women suffering from benign systemic lupus erythematosus. All 3 had a circulating anticoagulant and a positive venereal diseases reference laboratory test without anticardiolipin antibodies. They were successfully treated with pulse methylprednisolone therapy and plasmapheresis. The necrosis-lupus anticoagulant relationship is discussed due to the absence of another possible etiology for cutaneous necrosis and the latter's histological aspect, i.e., thromboses of the dermal and hypodermal vessels without
vasculitis
. This cutaneous necrosis resembles that observed in congenital
protein C
deficiencies and favors the hypothesis of interaction between the lupus anticoagulant and the
protein C
-S complex.
...
PMID:Cutaneous necrosis associated with the lupus anticoagulant. 250 25
Two common causes of visual loss in idiopathic retinal
vasculitis
(RV) are retinal ischaemia and cystoid macular oedema. This study investigated whether thrombophilic factors are more prevalent in patients with ischaemic RV than non-ischaemic RV. Twenty patients with RV (10 ischaemic, 10 non-ischaemic) were prospectively recruited before starting systemic immunosuppression. Twenty-one different haemostatic parameters were tested. Seventeen patients had at least one haemostatic abnormality. Three patients had low Protein S, one had low
Protein C
. Three patients had positive anticardiolipin antibody titres, 1 had poor fibrinolytic activity, 3 had raised fibrinogen levels. Ten patients had raised lipoprotein (a) levels. Fibrinogen levels were higher in the smokers (p = 0.02). Although all von Willebrand's factor levels were within the normal range, they were higher in the ischaemic group (p = 0.008), in which smoking was more prevalent. This study has shown a high prevalence of thrombophilic abnormalities in RV patients, and implicates smoking in the aetiology of ischaemic RV.
...
PMID:Thrombophilic factors in ischaemic and non-ischaemic idiopathic retinal vasculitis. 749 76
We report six cases of protein S deficiency secondary to varicella. Five cases were complicated by thrombotic and vascular events, namely purpura fulminans and necrotic
vasculitis
, deep vein thrombosis and stroke. Two cases were associated with
protein C
deficiency and one case revealed a heterozygous factor XII deficiency. The underlying mechanism of this acquired protein S deficiency is unclear but could be related to a direct effect of zoster virus.
...
PMID:Varicella and thrombotic complications associated with transient protein C and protein S deficiencies in children. 795 22
Little is known about the pattern of Deep Vein Thrombosis in Saudi Arabia. Over 4 year period, 62 cases with strong evidence of venous thrombosis were studied in King Abdulaziz University and King Fahad Hospitals to learn the pattern of deep vein thrombosis in Jeddah, Western Saudi Arabia. There were 32 females and 30 males. The mean age of the group was 36.0 years (range 6-90 years). One or more risk factors was/were detected in 40 patients. Among these 14 factors, age more than 50 years, obesity,
vasculitis
, malignancy and postpartum were the common factors encountered. In other 22 patients, no risk factor was found. However, extensive laboratory search diagnosed 9 rare disorders out of these 22 cases. Antithrombin III,
protein C
, protein S deficiencies in 5, 2, 1 patients, consecutively. The last patient had significantly shortened PTT. The other 13 (21.0%) patients were considered real idiopathic DVT. Extremities were involved in 54 patients compared to only 8 cases with inferior vena cava or visceral thrombosis. The upper limb was affected in only 10 patients unlike the lower limb which was more commonly affected n = 37.
...
PMID:Pattern of deep venous thrombosis in Jeddah area, western Saudi Arabia. 837 13
A 27-year-old woman suffered from a sudden onset of slight paralysis of the right side of her body and the inability to express herself by speech, writing, or signs. She was admitted to the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington, D.C., in the US. 6 months prior to these events, she had been in a motor vehicle accident and had since experienced headaches and generalized musculoskeletal pain. The only drug she took was an oral contraceptive (OC), which she took irregularly. Health workers could not arouse her upon admission. Clinical examination revealed symptoms consistent with a left hemispheric stroke. Cerebral computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a left temporoparietal infarct. Her free protein S was only 27% on admission and 14% 11 days after admission (normal range, 55-125%). Over the next 72 hours, her physical condition deteriorated, entailing focal motor seizures, right Babinski's sign, loss of pain reflex response on her right side, and complete paralysis of the right side of her body. The left middle cerebral artery appeared to be constricted, which physicians first believed was caused by
vasculitis
but later found was the result of emboli. The patient developed right femoral vein deep thrombosis. The physicians treated her initially with heparin and followed with warfarin therapy. Nevertheless, embolus. Health workers placed a filter in her inferior vena cava and continued warfarin therapy. She did not experience any more thrombotic or embolic episodes during the rest of her hospital stay. OCs reduce circulating levels of free protein S which, along with
activated protein C
, inhibits clotting. OCs likely reduced her already existing low levels of free protein S. Deficiency of free protein S was likely responsible for the cerebral infarction and her thrombotic and embolic episodes.
...
PMID:A case of cerebral infarction in association with free protein S deficiency and oral contraceptive use. 823 70
Two girls, 22 months and 12 years of age, presented with repeated cerebral infarctions in association with primary antiphospholipid syndrome. The younger patient also suffered from
protein C
deficiency, while the other one had protein S and complement C4 deficiencies. All other causes of cerebral infarction were excluded; however,
vasculitis
remains a possibility in one patient. Both girls developed spastic tetraparesis as a sequela of the previous infarctions. The two patients were treated with aspirin and prednisone, with remission of the infarctions during the next 8 months of observation. A primary deficiency of
protein C
or S is proposed which would produce cerebral thrombosis with exposure of phospholipids; this thrombosis then, like antigens, would generate antibodies acting on the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex, exacerbating the thrombotic process. The association of complement C4 deficiency is an additional risk factor.
...
PMID:Childhood stroke associated with protein C or S deficiency and primary antiphospholipid syndrome. 845 4
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