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)

Villitis of unestablished etiology is a placental lesion frequently associated with high risk pregnancies: it is also found in placentae from normal term pregnancies. The etiology of the lesion is unknown. Vasculitis and thrombosis have been described in villitis areas of placentae from normal and high risk pregnancies. We asked if fetal stem vessel endothelium in villitis lesions expresses MHC class II antigens, and if this is associated with a thrombogenic activity of these vessels. We found that endothelium of fetal stem vessels in villitis areas was usually MHC class II (HLA-DR, DP and DQ) reactive. Reactivity of fetal stem vessel endothelium for MHC class II antigens was associated with the presence of tissue factor reactivity and the absence of thrombomodulin reactivity. These changes on endothelial plasma membranes can promote intravascular coagulation, ischemic necrosis, vasculitis and other histological changes characteristic of villitis.
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PMID:Concordant expression of tissue factor and class II MHC antigens in human placental endothelium. 217 58

The endothelial cell (EC) is the primary target for Rickettsia conorii (RC) in Mediterranean spotted fever (MSF). Clinical manifestations such as thrombosis and vasculitis are mediated by pathologic changes localized in blood vessels. To study the in vivo endothelial injury induced by RC, markers of endothelial damage, including circulating EC (CEC), plasmatic thrombomodulin (TM), and von Willebrand factor (vWF), were investigated in 12 patients with MSF. CEC were counted in whole blood by a new immunomagnetic separation assay using a specific anti-EC antibody, S-Endo 1. Plasmatic TM and vWF antigens were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. High levels of CEC and cell fragments were found in patients with a severe or malignant form of MSF. Sequential studies of CEC showed a decrease from 162 +/- 454 cells/mL before treatment to 6 +/- 7 cells/mL during treatment and recovery. Mean plasma TM and vWF levels that were also elevated before therapy (TM, 106 +/- 27 ng/mL; vWF, 420% +/- 164%) decreased progressively (TM, 55 +/- 43 ng/mL; vWF, 148% +/- 26%) during treatment. The measurement of cellular and molecular markers of vascular damage such as CEC, plasmatic TM, and vWF contributes to the definition of the Rickettsia-induced endothelial injury in vivo.
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PMID:Demonstration of Rickettsia conorii-induced endothelial injury in vivo by measuring circulating endothelial cells, thrombomodulin, and von Willebrand factor in patients with Mediterranean spotted fever. 818 Apr 9

Serum concentrations of immunoreactive von Willebrand factor (vWF) and soluble thrombomodulin (TM), and vWF multimer patterns were measured to assess endothelial function in patients with inflammatory intestinal diseases. In Crohn's disease and acute infective diarrhea, vWF concentrations were significantly higher than in normal controls. In all patient groups, multimeric analysis of vWF and the concentration of serum TM were not different from normal controls. The results indicate alteration of endothelial function in inflammatory intestinal disorders. They may be compatible with the presence of localized vasculitis, but indicate that systemic endothelial destruction does not occur in inflammatory bowel disease.
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PMID:Serum concentrations of von Willebrand factor and soluble thrombomodulin indicate alteration of endothelial function in inflammatory bowel diseases. 772 Apr 71

Severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria is characterized by multiple organ involvement due to sequestration of infected erythrocytes in small vessels. Endothelial cell adhesion molecules play an important role in this interaction. During the course of a severe cerebral P. falciparum malaria infection we found very markedly elevated levels of the soluble adhesion molecules intercellular adhesion molecule-1, E-selectin, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, with a maximum increase of nine, seven, and eight times, respectively. These very high levels of soluble adhesion molecules point to an endothelial cell injury as an additional cause to physiological release or shedding due to receptor interactions. Soluble thrombomodulin (sTM) levels showed an extremely marked elevation up to 332 ng/ml (up to 13 times the normal value) as well. Malaria patients without severe organ involvement/cerebral manifestation showed only a mild elevation of sTM levels. TM is a parameter independent of the immunological system. It is regarded as a marker of vasculitis and endothelial cell destruction. Therefore, markedly elevated sTM levels document a substantial endothelial cell injury in severe malarial infection and may be of diagnostic and prognostic importance.
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PMID:Serum levels of adhesion molecules and thrombomodulin as indicators of vascular injury in severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria. 781 16

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.
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PMID:Childhood stroke associated with protein C or S deficiency and primary antiphospholipid syndrome. 845 4

Markers of endothelial cell activation were measured in 28 patients presenting with various forms of limited or focal type cutaneous vasculitis. Plasma levels of tissue plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA:Ag), plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 antigen (PAI-1:Ag) and PAI-1 activity, fibrin plate, von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag), tissue factor (TF) and soluble thrombomodulin (sTM) were measured. In comparison with the control group (n = 20) there was a significant increase in t-PA:Ag, vWF:Ag and TF (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney U-test) in the cutaneous vasculitis group. This study confirms that measurable degrees of endothelial activation occur in cutaneous vasculitis. Cutaneous vasculitis includes a diverse group of clinical conditions, which are associated with inflammatory changes in cutaneous blood vessels with local fibrin deposition. The aetiology and pathogenesis of the majority of these entities remain unknown. Causative mediators are thought to include immune complexes, anti-endothelial cell antibodies, cytotoxic lymphocytes and viruses. Histologically, immune complexes and complement are frequently detected on the vessel wall, and serologically anti-endothelial antibodies are often detected in patients with vasculitis and in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) which correlate with the severity of cutaneous vasculitis, arthritis and nephritis. Lymphocyte-mediated toxicity to endothelial cells has been reported in a small number of patients with giant cell arteritis and Takayasu's arteritis. The vascular endothelium plays a central part in the control of haemostasis. Under physiological conditions endothelial cells present an anticoagulant surface to blood constituents, partially due to surface expression of heparan sulphate and thrombomodulin (TM). Heparan sulphate binds antithrombin III (ATIII), thereby accelerating inactivation of intrinsic coagulation enzymes. Thrombomodulin is an endothelial cell surface glycoprotein which promotes anticoagulation by forming a complex with thrombin which then activates protein C. Activated protein C together with a cofactor, protein S, inactivates FVa and FVIIIa. von Willebrand factor (vWF) is synthesized by endothelial cells, stored in Weibel-Palade bodies and released into the circulation upon endothelial stimulation. vWF mediates the binding of platelets to the subendothelium and is the carrier molecule for FVIIIC. The endothelium controls fibrinolysis by producing t-PA and its inhibitor PAI-1. Inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1) and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) activate endothelial cells, causing a shift from an antithrombotic to prothrombotic state, including expression of tissue factor, increased synthesis of PAI-1 and decreased expression of TM. Fibrin deposition and intravascular thrombosis are seen in cutaneous vasculitis syndromes, suggesting local endothelial cell activation. The aim of this pilot study was to assess whether perturbation of the endothelium in cutaneous vasculitis could be detected in the patients' plasma samples. If so, further studies to assess any correlation in levels of these markers with disease activity might prove useful in the future.
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PMID:Endothelial cell activation in cutaneous vasculitis. 868 65

Activation of coagulation and endothelial cell damage was studied in 47 patients with small vessel vasculitis [Wegener's granulomatosis (WG) and microscopic polyangiitis (MP)] by measurement of thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT), fibrin-D-dimers (D-dimers), von Willebrand-factor (vWF) concentration and plasma thrombomodulin (TM) levels. There was a close correlation between disease activity (DA) in patients with WG or MP and markers of endothelial cell damage (correlation TM/DA r = 0.46 for WG and r = 0.43 for MP) and activated coagulation (correlation TAT/DA r = 0.58 for WG and r = 0.55 for MP). Elevation of the markers of activated haemostasis and endothelial cell damage was reversed when remission was obtained by specific treatment. The markers studied were particularly helpful in cases where measurement of antineutrophil cytoplasmatic antibodies (ANCA) did fail to assess disease activity.
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PMID:Elevated levels of markers of endothelial cell damage and markers of activated coagulation in patients with systemic necrotizing vasculitis. 906 24

The case of a 75-year-old Japanese woman with adult-onset Still's disease who presented with cerebral haemorrhage is described. She had been in clinical remission for 2 years, after induction therapy including non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, prednisolone, cyclophosphamide and mizoribine followed by auranofin, until her cerebral haemorrhage occurred, although her serum level of ferritin had gradually increased. After the onset of cerebral haemorrhage, the patient's serum level of thrombomodulin was elevated although c-reactive protein and lactate dehydrogenase were not increased. Anti-cardiolipin antibody and lupus anti-coagulant were not detected. Patients with adult-onset Still's disease are rarely reported to develop cerebral vascular disease, possibly because the disease is most frequent in young adults. The cerebral haemorrhage may have been caused by the vasculitis due to Still's disease.
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PMID:Cerebral haemorrhage complicating adult-onset Still's disease: a case report. 895 35

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease with systemic vascular involvement, that is, granulomatous angiitis and microangiopathy. To determine if there is vascular involvement in cutaneous sarcoidosis, we examined 42 skin specimens taken from 32 patients with cutaneous lesions of sarcoidosis. Cutaneous sarcoidosis was prevalent in older females with high serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) levels. Most skin lesions appeared during the following-up of sarcoidosis. Granulomatous angiitis was present in 12 specimens of sarcoid skin lesions (30.8%). Eight of the 12 specimens showed venous involvement in the dermis. There was no correlation between the incidence of granulomatous angiitis and the gross pattern of cutaneous sarcoidosis. Immunohistochemically, thrombomodulin was negative in the vascular endothelium close to the granuloma or a periphlebitis lesion. Electron microscopy revealed endothelial swelling, luminal narrowing, and basal lamina layering of the basement membrane in the capillaries and venules in the dermis. These findings demonstrated that granulomatous angiitis and microangiopathy coexist in cutaneous sarcoidosis.
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PMID:Vascular involvement in cutaneous sarcoidosis. 908 25

Breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, which consists of endothelial cells, is implicated essential in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). To examine the endothelial cell damage, we determined the von Willebrand factor and thrombomodulin, markers for endothelial cell activation and/or injury, in the peripheral blood of patients with MS. The subjects were 26 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 35 control subjects (mean age +/- standard deviation, 44.8 +/- 9.6 years). Patients with systemic vasculitis were excluded. The plasma activity of von Willebrand factor was significantly higher in patients with MS in the active phase (n = 23; 44.6 +/- 9.6 years) than in the age-matched controls. This suggests that von Willebrand factor could be a useful marker for evaluating the breakdown of blood-brain barrier resulting from endothelial damage in MS. In contrast, the serum level of thrombomodulin was not significantly different between patients with active MS and the controls. In MS patients (n = 15; 44.2 +/- 2.2 years), the plasma activity of von Willebrand factor was significantly lowered after immunosuppressive treatment. This suggests that von Willebrand factor could be used as a parameter for assessing the effect of treatment in MS.
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PMID:[Endothelial cell activation and/or injury in multiple sclerosis: analysis with von Willebrand factor and thrombomodulin]. 924 36


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