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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DOCA-salt hypertension was produced in 10 male 10-week-old normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats receiving deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA; 100 mg/kg, subcutaneous pellet) and 1% NaCl drinking
water
and was compared with data from 10 age- and sex-matched WKY receiving normal tap
water
(C). These data were also compared with spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) rats similarly treated. After 10 weeks on these programmes, systemic and regional haemodynamics were determined in conscious rats using microsphere techniques. DOCA-salt treatment increased mean arterial pressure (MAP), total peripheral resistance index (TPRI), cardiac and renal weights in both WKY and SHR. In contrast to SHR (C), the SHR (DOCA) demonstrated more severe MAP elevation (204 +/- 4 versus 185 +/- mmHg; P less than 0.01), more severe systemic and regional (especially renal) vasoconstriction, and malignant
vasculitis
associated with azotaemia and hyperuricaemia. The hyperuricaemia was related inversely to renal blood flow (r = -0.74; P less than 0.01) and directly to renal vasoconstriction (r = 0.65; P less than 0.05) in SHR (DOCA). These data suggest that in both WKY and SHR, DOCA and salt produced marked cardiovascular changes and SHR rats developed malignant hypertension.
...
PMID:DOCA-salt induced malignant hypertension in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 653 May 37
Three patients with cutaneous
vasculitis
and one patient with digital gangrene had a negative or equivocal test for cryoglobulins but a positive result in a modified assay for cryoproteins ( hypocryoglobulins [ HGs ]) in which serum is rendered hypotonic by dilution with an equal volume of distilled
water
before incubation in the cold. Each cryoprecipitate contained a mixture of immunoglobulins, and in two instances, a monoclonal component was demonstrated. Rheumatoid factor activity was found in two precipitates. All four patients improved with plasmapheresis, and two subsequently responded to alkylating agents. Seven patients with conventional cryoglobulins had precipitation from diluted serum as well, but none had a substantial increase in precipitation in the HG assay. Only two of five patients with seropositive rheumatoid arthritis had abnormal levels of HG. Hypocryoglobulins are a new category of abnormally insoluble serum proteins, probably closely related to conventional cryoglobulins, which are readily detected in a simple precipitation assay.
...
PMID:'Hypocryoglobulins'. Enhanced cryoprecipitation from hypotonic serum in patients with vasculitis. 673 99
Clinical signs of EAE were infrequently observed (1/20) in adult Hartley guinea pigs challenged with isolated human myelin lipophilin in complete Freund's adjuvant. However, CNS
vasculitis
and parenchymal infiltration by inflammatory cells were found in 10 of 20 inoculated animals. Localized, nonconfluent, small demyelinated lesions were detected in the brain and spinal cord of 5/20 Hartley guinea pigs during an observation period of 120 days. The frequency of both inflammatory and demyelinated lesions in Hartley animals appeared to be dose-dependent, but extensive demyelinated lesions were not induced. Persistent residual inoculation mixture at the site of injection was found in animals showing CNS inflammatory and/or demyelinated lesions. In contrast to the Hartley strain, young strain 13 guinea pigs were clinically and pathologically unresponsive to challenge with lipophilin and mycobacteria in
water
-in-oil emulsion.
...
PMID:Lipophilin-induced experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in guinea pigs. 709 5
The aim of our investigations is to evaluate blood histamine, complement titer and cryoglobulins before and after cold stimulation (extremity
water
immersion test) in patients with cold urticaria and Raynaud phenomenon. In our investigations patients were put into five groups according to the following diagnoses: cold urticaria (40 patients), chronic urticaria (15 patients), Urticaria-
Vasculitis
Syndrome (15 patients), Raynauds Disease (16 patients), and Raynauds phenomenon (15 patients). The investigations demonstrated that the test was always positive in cold urticaria and that a high percentage of patients had a rise in blood histamine. This was found in 50% of the patients while cryoglobulins were found in one third of the patients. Consequently they can be grouped in secondary cold urticarias. A number of patients with chronic urticaria and Urticaria-
Vasculitis
Syndrome gave a positive history of cold sensitivity. Positive tests were accompanied by a rise in histamine, although (less frequently) there was a decrease in the complement titer and the occurence of cryoglobulins. Raynauds Disease was accompanied by a positive test in 94% of the patients, while patients with Raynauds Phenomenon (whose etiology was Thoracic Outlet Syndrome) had a negative test (60% of the patients). Significant changes were not found in the remaining groups. Positive tests were accompanied by abnormal values of cryoglobulins and of complement titer as well as an increase in histamine. The rise in histamine was not significant in Raynauds Phenomenon, while one patient had a decrease in the complement titer and the appearance of cryoglobulins.
...
PMID:[Significance of monitoring histamine serum levels, cryoglobulins and complement titers during cold tests in patients with cold allergy and Raynaud's phenomenon]. 759 Apr 15
We report an autopsy case of granulomatous
angiitis
of the central nervous system (GANS) complicated by the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). A 88-year old female was admitted because of progressive mental deterioration, fever, and vomiting. A computed tomogram disclosed bilateral periventricular lucency, and a low-density area in the right occipital lobe. Laboratory studies during her hospital stay, revealed hyponatremia, hypoalbuminemia, and increased antidiuretic hormone. Treatment with antibiotics, hypertonic saline solution, and steroids, and
water
restriction was ineffective, and the patient died six weeks after admission. Autopsy examination of the brain revealed slightly turbid meninges with multiple small infarctions in the corona raiata of both cerebral hemispheres. Microscopic study disclosed granulomatous inflammation with many giant cells in the walls of small and medium sized vessels, and the adventitia and media were more involved than the intima. Their lumens were narrowed, and many thrombi were observed. Extensive non-granulomatous inflammatory change was found mainly in the subarachnoid space. All of these findings were similar to the GANS firstly reported by Cravioto et al, in 1959. Since the blood vessels in the central nervous system play an important part in any inflammatory conditions and the blood vessels may be involved by bacterial, fungal, parasitic or viral meningitis, various microorganisms have been suspected as the cause of GANS, including mycoplasma, herpes zoster, herpes simplex viruses, cytomegalovirus, and human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III). Some reported cases have been associated with Hodgkin's disease and cerebral amyloid angiopathy. We could not identify any cause in our case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system complicated by the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone]. 760 90
Five-week-old turkey poults were given two consecutive intravenous injections (24 hours apart) of highly purified Pasteurella multocida lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in an effort to induce a generalized Shwartzman reaction. There were no gross lesions, and microscopic lesions were limited to focal hepatic necrosis with heterophil infiltration. Hepatic lesions did not differ qualitatively from lesions in turkeys given a single dose of lipopolysaccharide. Margination of heterophils in the pulmonary vasculature was observed in turkeys 4 hours after a single injection of LPS, but it was not present in turkeys given the consecutive injections of LPS. To induce a dermal Shwartzman reaction, turkeys were given intradermal injections of LPS followed by an intravenous injection of LPS 24 hours later. Although no grossly visible hemorrhagic dermal necrosis occurred, microscopic lesions, including heterophil infiltration,
vasculitis
, thrombosis, and necrosis, were present. Thrombosis and
vasculitis
were observed only in turkeys given the intravenous and intradermal LPS, whereas the other inflammatory changes were observed in turkeys given the intradermal injection of LPS and intravenous
water
. Prominent lymphocytic perivascular cuffing at the site of dermal injection was present in all turkeys given intradermal LPS.
...
PMID:Lesions resulting from attempted Shwartzman reaction in turkey poults inoculated with Pasteurella multocida lipopolysaccharide. 770 12
A female patient is described who had a four year long period of unilateral chronic paroxysmal hemicrania (CPH) which then became bilateral. For some years before the CPH started she suffered from periods of about one month with chronic hemicrania without nerve involvement. She also suffered from chronic fatigue, back pain, arthralgia, vertigo, chronic constipation and spontaneous ecchymoses. Blood tests showed chronic leukocytosis, low serum iron, and signs of inflammation in serum electrophoresis during the five years she was studied. CPH attacks could be provoked by breathing 6% carbon dioxide in air. Lumbar cerebrospinal fluid pressure was pathologically increased (30 cm
water
). The attacks decreased during indomethacin treatment but 275 mg was needed for satisfactory control of the attacks, i.e., more than the 150 mg which, according to the criteria for CPH, should be absolutely effective. Sumatriptan was found to suppress the CPH attacks as well as indomethacin. Due to these findings CPH is considered to be another manifestation of venous
vasculitis
. The beneficiary mechanism of indomethacin in CPH is considered to be due partly to its anti-inflammatory effects and partly to its reduction of the intracranial blood flow.
...
PMID:Intracranial hypertension and sumatriptan efficacy in a case of chronic paroxysmal hemicrania which became bilateral. (The mechanism of indomethacin in CPH). 839 1
The gross and microscopic effects of four common modes of ureteral dilation and ureteroscopy were examined in 26 renoureteral units in 13 minipigs. Acutely, ureters subjected to mechanical (bougie, Teflon, or balloon) ureteral dilation and ureteropyeloscopy (UPS) demonstrated active mucosal bleeding with multiple sites of perforation, whereas ureters subjected to hydraulic dilation and UPS were significantly less traumatized. Two weeks after mechanical ureteral dilation and UPS, 3 of 6 ureters were obstructed radiographically, whereas all 7 hydraulically dilated ureters were unobstructed. By 6 weeks, all radiographic evidence of obstruction had resolved in the mechanically dilated group. While 5 of 6 mechanically dilated ureters showed extensive scarring with muscle loss 4 to 6 weeks after dilation, no scarring was seen in those ureters dilated hydraulically. Renal pelvic pressure (RPP) was measured continuously with a nephrostomy catheter in vivo during (bougie, Teflon, balloon and hydraulic) ureteral dilation and UPS. Renal pelvic pressure during rigid ureteroscopy approximated the resting pelvic pressure plus the irrigant height above the kidney or set pressure on a hydraulic pump, plus a "scope effect" which was characterized by a 20 to 25 mm. Hg increase in RPP produced by moving the endoscope in the ureter without flow. The effects on RPP of continuous bladder drainage with a uretheral catheter and renal pelvic decompression with an open-ended ureteral catheter passed into the renal pelvis through the ureteroscope working channel were also examined. The maximum RPP was evaluated in vitro in a separate group of 16 freshly harvested pig kidneys of similar weight examined immediately after sacrifice and was found to be 439 mm. Hg. We also studied the immediate and long-term effects of low (< 120 cm.
H2O
or 90 mm. Hg) versus high (> 200 cm.
H2O
or 150 mm. Hg) RPP on renal histology. Acutely, high pressure caused diffuse denudation and flattening of the caliceal urothelium, submucosal edema and congestion not seen in calyces subjected to low irrigant pressure. Four to six weeks later, there was a higher incidence of columnar metaplasia, subepithelial nests and pericalyceal
vasculitis
in calyces subjected to high pressure as compared with those subjected to low irrigant pressure. Acutely, renal tubules subjected to high irrigant pressure demonstrated marked vacuolization and degeneration, whereas tubules subjected to low pressure appeared normal. At 4 to 6 weeks, focal scarring was seen in 5 of 7 kidneys subjected to high irrigant pressure, whereas no scarring was noted in all 6 kidneys subjected to low irrigant pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Morphological and physiological changes in the urinary tract associated with ureteral dilation and ureteropyeloscopy: an experimental study. 850 16
Clinical and experimental studies indicate that nonimmunologic factors may modulate the alloreactivity of a renal transplant. Nitric oxide (NO) is an essential modulator of endothelial function. It was postulated that, in renal allografts, inhibition of constitutive NO synthase may lead to an aggravation of immunologic damage to endothelia and therefore may enhance dysfunction of the graft. Male Lewis (RT1l) rats received syngeneic or allogeneic Brown Norway (RT1n) renal grafts and were treated with cyclosporin A (CyA) or with CyA and an NO synthase blocker (NOS-B): N omega-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) or NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA). CyA was given at a dose of 3.5 mg/kg body weight for 14 days and the NOS-B at a dose of 66 mg/L drinking
water
for up to 28 days postoperatively. Animals (N = 6/group) were studied at 4 to 7, 14, and 28 days posttransplantation. Four to 5 days posttransplantation, renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate of allogeneic grafts did not differ between animals treated only with CyA and those treated with CyA and NOS-B. Mean arterial pressure was significantly elevated by NOS-B (CyA+L-NNA: 115 +/- 13 versus CyA: 78 +/- 16 mm Hg). Combined NOS-B and CyA administration led to a pronounced increase in vascular and tubulointerstitial damage. The number of mononuclear cells in vessels, glomeruli, and tubulointerstitium increased significantly in allografts upon treatment with NOS-B. During NOS-B administration, adhesion molecules (intracellular adhesion molecule-1; leukocyte-function-associated molecules-1 alpha and-beta) were strongly expressed in endothelial and leukocytic cells of the allograft. A pronounced positivity for mRNA and protein of cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha and transforming growth factor-beta could be demonstrated in the inflammatory infiltrate. With L-NNA treatment, the total vascular injury index was 10-fold higher (14 days posttransplantation, CyA+L-NNA: 59.8 +/- 11.7 versus CyA: 6.0 +/- 1.8; p < 0.05). The tubulointerstitial damage score rose more than 2.5-fold after CyA and L-NNA therapy (28 days posttransplantation: CyA+L-NNA: 83 +/- 1 versus CyA:29 +/- 1). L-NNA was more potent than L-NMMA at the dosages used. Thus, pronounced vascular leukostasis,
vasculitis
, and T-cell and monocyte infiltration of the tubulointerstitium led to a severe damage of the allograft under therapy with CyA and NOS-B. Inhibition of NO synthesis may aggravate alloreactive immunemediated injury in kidney transplants acting primarily by a disturbance of endothelial function.
...
PMID:Enhanced renal allograft rejection by inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase: a nonimmunologic influence on alloreactivity. 878 Jan 67
Cause of mortality was studied in waterfowl in hypersaline playa lakes of southeast New Mexico during spring and fall migration. Mortality was not common in wild ducks resting on the playas during good weather. However, when birds remained on the lakes for prolonged periods of time, such as during experimental trials and stormy weather, a heavy layer of salt precipitated on their feathers. Sodium toxicity was the cause of death for all experimental mallards housed on playa
water
and for 50% of the wild waterfowl found moribund or dead during the spring of 1995. Gross lesions included heavy salt precipitation on the feathers, ocular lens opacities, deeply congested brains, and dilated, thin-walled, fluid-filled cloacae. Microscopic lesions in the more severely affected birds included liquefaction of ocular lens cortex with lens fiber swelling and multifocal to diffuse ulcerative conjunctivitis with severe granulocytic inflammation, edema, and granulocytic
vasculitis
resulting in thrombosis. Inflammation similar to that seen in the conjunctiva occasionally involved the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, nasal turbinates, cloaca, and bursa. Transcorneal movement of
water
in response to the hypersaline conditions on the playa lakes or direct contact with salt crystals could induce anterior segment dehydration of the aqueous humor and increased osmotic pressure on the lens, leading to cataract formation.
...
PMID:Sodium toxicity and pathology associated with exposure of waterfowl to hypersaline playa lakes of southeast New Mexico. 924 66
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