Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (chills)
4,268 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Familial cold urticaria (FCU) is a rare autosomal dominant condition, first described in 1940. The onset is in early life in all reported cases. Symptoms are triggered by generalized exposure to cold air, particularly in damp and windy weather. The cutaneous lesions consist of erythematous macules or plaques, urticarial lesions and sometimes petechiae. Associated fever, chills, joint pains, nausea, stiffness and swelling of the hands and feet frequently occur. The symptoms are variable, ranging from mild to incapacitating. The pathogenesis of FCU remains unknown. To our knowledge only 10 pedigrees have been published, seven from the USA and one each from Holland, France and South Africa. We wish to report another extensive pedigree after having had the opportunity to investigate one member of the family in detail. A short form of this pedigree has been published elsewhere.
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PMID:Familial cold urticaria. 840 71

Ochrobactrum anthropi is a non-glucose fermentative, aerobic gram-negative bacillus, formerly known as Achromobacter sp or CDC group Vd. It has been isolated from the environment and from infections in usually immunocompromised human beings. The documented infections frequently involved catheter related bacteremia whereas endophthalmitis, urinary infections, meningitis, endocarditis, hepatic abscess, osteochondritis, pelvic abscess and pancreatic abscess were rarely involved. Here it is presented the case of a male patient aged 69 years with sustained hypotension, four day febrile syndrome, chill, lavish perspiration and sensorium deterioration. He had type 2 diabetes and antecedent of cerebrovascular accident. A double-lumen dialysis catheter was present due to chronic renal insufficiency. An episode of catheter-related bloodstream infection was documented by using Bact-Alert Blood Culture System and Differential-Time-to-Positivity Method for central venous catheter versus peripheral blood cultures (>120 min). Once removed, it was confirmed through Maki semi quantitative technique (>15 FCU). The microorganism was identified by API 20NE and Vitek 1 as Ochrobactrum anthropi.
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PMID:[Catheter- associated bacteremia caused by Ochrobactrum anthropi]. 2005 8