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)

It is postulated that inflammatory cells play an important role in the process of developing vasculitis in Kawasaki Disease. LTB4, a 5-lipoxygenase product of arachidonic acid is one of the most potent chemoattractants to inflammatory cells and is produced in large amounts by PMNs. We investigated the role of PMN-derived LTB4 in Kawasaki Disease. Isolated PMNs were obtained from 19 Kawasaki disease patients in three different phases of the illness, (acute phase: 0-12th day, convalescent phase: 13-29th day, restored phase: greater than 30th day). LTB4 synthesis in the convalescent phase was 26.43 +/- 4.2 ng/5 x 10(6) cells, which was significantly higher than those in the acute and restored phases (11.90 +/- 1.91, 13.87 +/- 1.86 ng) and also higher than that in the control subjects (10.65 +/- 1.26 ng: p less than 0.05). No differences were found between two groups with or without coronary lesions. The results imply that activated PMNs during the convalescent phase of illness produce larger amount of LTB4 which may participate in the development of inflammatory process of the disease and that PMN-derived LTB4 plays no significant roles in the development of coronary lesions.
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PMID:[Role of polymorphonucleocyte-produced leukotriene B4 in Kawasaki disease]. 169 40

1. Mediators of inflammation can increase vascular permeability in at least two different ways: by acting directly on endothelial cells or, indirectly, through an incompletely understood mechanism, dependent on circulating neutrophils. Neutrophil-dependent oedema formation has been described in the skin of rabbits, rats, hamsters, mice and man. In contrast, we presented evidence in a previous study that local oedema formation induced by i.d. injection of chemoattractants in guinea-pig skin was neutrophil-independent. In the present study, we sought evidence of neutrophil-dependent oedema formation in immune-complex-mediated vasculitis, the reversed passive Arthus (RPA) reaction, in guinea-pig skin. We also investigated whether haemorrhage in the RPA reaction was neutrophil-dependent (as it is in other species) and the role of endogenous mediators of inflammation (prostaglandins, nitric oxide, histamine, PAF and leukotrienes) in contributing to the local inflammatory response. 2. In the RPA reaction, most oedema formation occurred over the first 60 min whereas 111In-neutrophil accumulation was still increasing from 60 to 240 min. The different kinetics of these two events suggested that they may be dissociated. 3. Oedema formation was partially inhibited by a long-acting PAF antagonist (UK-74,505) and an H1 histamine receptor antagonist (mepyramine) but not by a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor (ZM 230487). A nitric oxide synthesis inhibitor (NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, L-NAME) suppressed oedema formation by 68% whereas a cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor suppressed oedema by 27%. 4. 111In-neutrophil accumulation in the RPA reaction was partially suppressed by UK-74,505. In contrast, ZM 230487 was without effect at doses which abrogated arachidonic acid-induced 111In-neutrophil accumulation. 5. The anti-CD18 monoclonal antibody, (mAb) 6.5E F(ab')2, effectively inhibited 111In-neutrophil accumulation induced by PAF, zymosan-activated plasma (ZAP) and in the RPA reaction. However, oedema formation measured in the same sites was not altered. In contrast, oedema formation in the RPA reaction was partially suppressed by 6.5E whole mAb which was 2.5 times more potent than 6.5EF(ab')2 at inhibiting guinea-pig neutrophil adhesion to protein-coated plastic. Haemorrhage induced by PAF and in the RPA reaction was significantly inhibited by 6.5E F(ab')2 pretreatment.6. We conclude that in the RPA reaction in guinea-pig skin, oedema formation is partially neutrophil dependent as assessed by using an anti-CD18 mAb, whereas ZAP-induced oedema formation is neutrophil-independent. Haemorrhage was also dependent on neutrophil accumulation. In addition, our studies support a role for PAF in mediating both oedema formation and "'In-neutrophil accumulation in the RPA reaction. Endogenous release of histamine also appears to be important in mediating oedema formation suggesting that mast cells play a critical role in increases of vascular permeability in inflammatory reactions in guinea-pig skin. Moreover, our results confirm previous findings which suggest a dominant role for nitric oxide in maintaining cutaneous blood flow in the guinea-pig.
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PMID:Studies on the mechanisms involved in the inflammatory response in a reversed passive Arthus reaction in guinea-pig skin: contribution of neutrophils and endogenous mediators. 788 93

The Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) is a distinct form of vasculitis that is notable for its eosinophilia and frequent associations with asthma and sinusitis. Because there has been an increasing recognition that CSS can develop in patients with asthma and that CSS might be associated with specific asthma treatments, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the Office of Rare Diseases, National Institutes of Health, and the US Food and Drug Administration jointly sponsored a workshop to consider interrelationships among CSS, asthma, and asthma therapeutics and to assess what is known about underlying mechanisms of CSS. Issues related to the criteria for defining and diagnosing CSS were reviewed, including the contemporary understanding that diagnostic biopsies need only reveal eosinophilic perivascular infiltrates and that asthma need not be present when CSS develops. From published reports and reports to the US Food and Drug Administration, treatment of patients with asthma with any of 3 cysteinyl leukotriene receptor antagonists, a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, and inhaled corticosteroids has been associated with CSS development. It is unknown whether these agents were eliciting CSS. A variety of physiologic and study design issues might lead to the reported associations of these drugs with CSS. Because many asthma patients receiving these therapies were able to diminish their systemic corticosteroid therapy, it is possible that incipient CSS was unmasked by lessened steroid use. The underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms of CSS, however, are unknown, and there is no means of identifying which patients with asthma might be at risk for CSS. Accordingly, investigations with the goals of defining the underlying pathophysiologic processes of CSS and establishing the relationships of asthma and its therapies to CSS are needed.
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PMID:The relationship of asthma therapy and Churg-Strauss syndrome: NIH workshop summary report. 1149 31

Antileukotrienes are a relatively new class of anti-asthma drugs that either block leukotriene synthesis (5-lipoxygenase inhibitors) like zileuton, or antagonise the most relevant of their receptors (the cysteinyl leukotriene 1 receptor [CysLT1]) like montelukast, zafirlukast or pranlukast. Hence, their major effect is an anti-inflammatory one. With the exception of pranlukast, the other antileukotrienes have been studied and marketed in the US and Europe for long enough to establish that they are useful drugs in the management of asthma. Their effects, significantly better than placebo, seem more pronounced in subjective measurements (i.e. symptoms scores or quality-of-life tests) than in objective parameters (i.e. forced expiratory volume in 1 second or peak expiratory flow rate). Also, there is some evidence that these drugs work better in some subsets of patients with certain genetic polymorphisms - probably related to their leukotriene metabolism - or patients with certain asthma characteristics. There are a small number of comparative studies only, and with regard to long-term asthma control differences between the agents have not been evaluated. Nevertheless, their overall effect appears comparable with sodium cromoglycate (cromolyn sodium) or theophylline, but significantly less than low-dose inhaled corticosteroids. Antileukotrienes have been shown to have a degree of corticosteroid-sparing effect, but salmeterol appears to perform better as an add-on drug. Montelukast is probably the most useful antileukotriene for continuous treatment of exercise-induced asthma, performing as well as salmeterol without inducing any tolerance. All antileukotrienes are taken orally; their frequency of administration is quite different ranging from four times daily (zileuton) to once daily (montelukast). Antileukotrienes are well tolerated drugs, even though zileuton intake has been related to transitional liver enzyme elevations in some cases. Also Churg-Strauss syndrome (a systemic vasculitis), has been described in small numbers of patients taking CysLT1 antagonists. It is quite probable that this disease appears as a consequence of an 'unmasking' effect when corticosteroid dosages are reduced in patients with severe asthma once CysLT1 antagonists are introduced, but more data are needed to definitely establish the mechanism behind this effect. Overall, however, the benefits of antileukotrienes in the treatment of asthma greatly outweigh their risks.
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PMID:Benefit-risk assessment of antileukotrienes in the management of asthma. 1273 86

The so called leukotriene antagonists or, more accurately, the leukotriene modifiers are a rather heterogeneous set of drugs that work by several mechanisms. Such mechanisms include: (i) 5-lipoxygenase enzyme inhibition (e.g. zileuton); (ii) 5-lipoxygenase-activating-protein inhibition (e.g. quiflapon, BAYx 1005); (iii) LTD4-receptor antagonism (e.g. zafirlukast, montelukast, MK-571, pranlukast). The first leukotriene modifiers tested (L-649,923 and tomelukast) had adverse gastrointestinal effects. Since then, several leukotriene modifiers have been marketed, including zafirlukast, zileuton and montelukast. Zafirlukast has been associated with 8 cases of Churg-Strauss syndrome, although these were probably not caused by zafirlukast. It is more likely that this syndrome is related to the underlying illness, which was masked by corticosteroids, and revealed after zafirlukast-mediated asthma treatment allowed steroid withdrawal and unmasking of underlying vasculitis. The main adverse effects of zileuton include liver function test abnormalities, while montelukast, the most recently marketed, has so far shown minimal adverse effects. Zafirlukast causes a decrease in warfarin clearance and a clinically significant increase in prothrombin time, probably by cytochrome P450 isoenzyme interactions. Moreover, terfenadine decreases zafirlukast maximum serum concentrations. Calcium antagonists, cyclosporin, cisapride and astemizole are metabolised via the cytochrome P450 system, and interactions with leukotriene modifiers can be expected.
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PMID:Tolerability of leukotriene modifiers in asthma: a review of clinical experience. 1803 Nov 50