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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1988 an outbreak of the paralytic form of Equid herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) infection occurred on a stud farm and several animals died. This provided an opportunity to perform detailed pathological investigations to gain insights into the pathogenesis of this spontaneous disease. Two paretic mares, three foals, an aborted foetus and its non-paretic dam were examined. The endotheliotropism of the virus was clearly demonstrated by the use of an indirect immunoperoxidase (IP) stain. At autopsy, evidence of viral infection was widespread in the foetus and foals, but limited or absent in the mares, probably reflecting differences in their immune status. Vascular lesions were present in the central nervous system (CNS) of the foals as well as the adults; they resulted in minimal neural lesions in the foals. Severe changes in the upper and lower respiratory tracts were a particular feature in the foals, two of which exhibited extensive
vasculitis
and thrombosis in the lungs. The IP technique was of great value in locating antigen-containing cells in the CNS of one mare when virus isolation was negative. It also revealed the presence of virus in less well documented sites such as the pancreas,
gut
, thyroid, uveal tract and the skin of the nares.
...
PMID:Pathological findings in horses dying during an outbreak of the paralytic form of Equid herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) infection. 131 59
Patients with systemic
vasculitis
, including Wegener's granulomatosis (WG) and microscopic polyarteritis (MP), may undergo white cell scanning for the investigation of infective complications and/or occult fever. In a retrospective study of 12 patients with systemic
vasculitis
(six each of WG and MP), all with renal disease, we observed increase diffuse lung radioactivity soon after the injection of 111In-labeled granulocytes or 99mTc-HMPAO-labeled leukocytes in all patients with WG and in three with MP. Lung activity was quantified by comparison with the liver or spleen. The lung:liver count rate ratio per pixel, 1-1.5 hr after injection, in patients with systemic
vasculitis
was 0.87 (s.d. 0.25), significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than the ratio 0.38 (0.13) in patient controls who had normal white cell scans. The majority of patients with systemic
vasculitis
had scintigraphic evidence of abnormal splenic function. Two had focal splenic defects, while 7 had increased labeled cell uptake. Nine of the patients with
vasculitis
showed cell migration into the
gut
, presumably as a result of
vasculitis
, and in 6 it was prominent. Focal nasal uptake was found in 5/7 patients with systemic
vasculitis
who had their heads imaged, and may be specific for WG. Although all patients had renal disease, there was scintigraphic evidence of diffuse parenchymal renal uptake of 111In-labeled granulocytes in only one (with MP). The presence of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies did not correlate with any abnormality or with lung uptake. Systemic
vasculitis
is associated with abnormalities of granulocyte kinetics, particularly involving the lung and spleen.
...
PMID:A retrospective study of radiolabeled granulocyte kinetics in patients with systemic vasculitis. 155 30
Twenty consecutive patients with recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were studied. One had a parent who suffered from recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Thirty-three percent of the patients had also recurrent periods of weeks to months of unilateral periorbital pain without ophthalmoplegia. One patient had cluster headache before the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome started. Some patients had involvement of cranial nerves outside the cavernous sinus region during Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and also between episodes. The same systemic symptoms, i.e. back pain, cold feet, arthralgia,
gut
problems, varices, vertigo, chronic fatigue, thrombophlebitis, memory deficiency and signs of inflammation in serum, occurred in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome as earlier found in patients with orbital venous
vasculitis
. Seventy-three percent of the patients had pathologic orbital phlebograms. All patients treated with steroids reacted promptly; four who developed chronic pain syndromes were treated satisfactorily with azathioprine.
...
PMID:Recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 155 57
Tissues from five chickens from each of 44 flocks affected with "spiking mortality" were examined histologically. Tissues from these chickens were characterized by: multifocal necrosis of hepatocytes with congestion and blood lake formation; severe lymphocyte necrosis in the bursal medulla, thymic cortex, and
gut
-associated lymphoid tissues; acute necrotic
vasculitis
in the alimentary serosa and liver; rickets; and air-sac disease in survivors. No specific etiology was identified in sections examined.
...
PMID:Microscopic lesions of naturally occurring and experimental "spiking mortality" in young broiler chickens. 195 74
Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are specific for constituents of neutrophil primary granules and monocyte lysosomes. There are different types of ANCA with different specificities. By indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using alcohol-fixed neutrophils as substrate, two major categories of ANCA can be recognized, one with cytoplasmic staining (C-ANCA) and the other with artifactual perinuclear staining (P-ANCA). Some C-ANCA have specificity for proteinase 3 (PR3-ANCA) and some P-ANCA have specificity for myeloperoxidase (MPO-ANCA), but there are additional C-ANCA and P-ANCA specificities. ANCA are found in the blood of patients with necrotizing systemic
vasculitis
, such as Wegener's granulomatosis and polyarteritis nodosa, and patients with idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis. The glomerular lesion in patients with systemic and renal-limited ANCA-associated diseases is the same, ie, a pauci-immune necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis. No matter where the vascular lesions of ANCA-associated disease are (eg, kidney, lung,
gut
, muscle, skin), they are characterized by necrotizing inflammation and a paucity of immune deposits. The distribution of disease correlates to a degree with the ANCA specificity, although there is substantial overlap. For example, patients with Wegener's granulomatosis most often have C-ANCA and patients with renal-limited disease most often have P-ANCA. In patients with P-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis, approximately 90% of the P-ANCA have specificity for MPO. The clinical manifestations of ANCA-associated diseases often begin following a flu-like illness. The onset is most often in the winter and least often in the summer. The renal disease usually presents as rapidly progressive renal failure with nephritis. One of the most life-threatening components of the systemic involvement is pulmonary hemorrhage caused by a necrotizing alveolar capillaritis. Intravenous cyclophosphamide plus steroids is as effective as oral cyclophosphamide plus steroids for controlling ANCA-associated diseases. Using life-table analysis, the 2-year patient and renal survival rate in both patients with renal-limited and systemic disease is greater than 70%. There is evidence that in addition to being a useful serologic marker, ANCA are directly involved in the pathogenesis of the vascular injury in patients with ANCA-associated diseases. Although ANCA antigens are normally in the cytoplasm of neutrophils and monocytes, priming of these cells, as occurs following exposure to certain cytokines, results in the release of small amounts of ANCA antigens at the cell surface. In vitro, ANCA-IgG causes cytokine-primed neutrophils to undergo a respiratory burst and degranulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies and associated diseases: a review. 197 31
Generalized
vasculitis
of unknown pathogeny, involving skin, joints, kidneys and
gut
in various combinations. Rheumatoid purpura (RP) is rare in adults. Clinical spectrum is more severe than in children, but the outcome is favorable in the majority of patients. RP has an unpredictable nature, but poor prognosis is bound, early, to gastrointestinal complications, specially in old patients, and secondarily to evolution of glomerular lesions. Intensive therapy (plasma exchanges) should be indicated only in severe extra renal complications, and when renal biopsy shows crescents present in more 50 p. 100 of the glomeruli.
...
PMID:[Rheumatoid purpura in adults]. 268 97
This reports a 27 yr old female Patient with seronegative polyarthritis who presented with lower GI bleeding and subsequently developed evidence of cutaneous
vasculitis
(palpable purpura) and orogenital ulcers. The cause of the GI bleeding was multiple ulcerations in the terminal ileum, cecum ascending colon and transverse colon. Continued and massive bleeding necessitated surgical resection of the involved segment of
gut
which on histopathological examination confirmed the presence of vasculities. This patient was thus diagnosed as having Behcet's disease. Although major GI bleeding is a rare manifestation of Behcet's disease with
vasculitis
of the
gut
, one must consider this possibility if the patient has multi-system involvement with evidence of
vasculitis
involving the skin in the form of palpable purpura.
...
PMID:Massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding as a presenting feature of Behcet's disease. 278 26
Orbital venous
vasculitis
has been suggested to cause characteristic periorbital pain in patients with pathologic changes in their orbital phlebograms. The orbital pain is characterized by being unilateral, not shifting side, boring and pressing, but not throbbing, increasing on eye strain, exposure to cold, or weather changes, and resistant to analgesics. It is ameliorated by steroids. Fifty patients with symptoms of orbital venous
vasculitis
were investigated for other symptoms that could be related to the
vasculitis
. When the 32 female patients were compared with a randomly selected age- and sex-matched control group, there was a significant increase of symptoms of chronic fatigue, cold feet,
gut
problems such as constipation and/or diarrhea, arthralgia, memory impairment, rotatory vertigo, spontaneous ecchymoses (all, p less than 0.0001), back pain (p less than 0.012), and thrombophlebitis (p less than 0.022) in the patient group. These symptoms, although commonly occurring, seem in these patients to be related to the
vasculitis
. Blood tests of the fifty patients showed signs of inflammation which did not disagree with the hypothesis of an immunologic cause of the orbital venous
vasculitis
.
...
PMID:Systemic symptoms associated with orbital venous vasculitis. 321 27
A hemorrhage into
gut
-associated lymphoid tissue developed as early as 3 min after the intravenous injection of group A streptococcal peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers into rats. Extravasated erythrocytes were specifically located in the lamina propria and organized lymphoid follicles of the intestines and mesenteric lymph nodes and did not occur in the lungs, kidneys, liver, spleen, adrenal glands, or submandibular and popliteal lymph nodes, as determined by gross and histologic observations and measurement of radiolabeled erythrocytes. Petechial hemorrhage was preferentially located within the intestine to the distal ileum, Peyer's patches, and lymphoid aggregates of the colon. The hemorrhage was transient and occurred in a dose-dependent fashion. It was maximal 5 min after injection and resolved completely by 3 days. A unique feature of this altered vascular permeability was the absence of polymorphonuclear leukocytic infiltration, edema,
vasculitis
, and tissue necrosis.
...
PMID:Localized gut-associated lymphoid tissue hemorrhage induced by intravenous peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers. 348 26
Degos' syndrome consists in a generalized
vasculitis
with frequent affectation of the
gut
and the skin. The arteriographic findings in a patient with the diagnosis of Degos' syndrome and severe affectation of the
gut
are reported.
...
PMID:[Degos' syndrome. Intestinal involvement as demonstrated by digital angiography. A case]. 379 78
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