Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0206061 (interstitial pneumonia)
6,105 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case is presented of interstitial pneumonitis and pulmonary vasculitis ascribed to the ingestion of an L-tryptophan preparation. An unintended rechallenge supported the causal relationship. There was neither myalgia nor peripheral eosinophilia. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid contained 12% eosinophils but few were present in the surgical lung biopsy specimen. Lung infiltrates receded after withdrawal of the drug and treatment with steroids. Dyspnoea and pulmonary hypertension persisted. Cyclophosphamide had no effect. Sclerodermiform skin lesions appeared as a late sequel. Chromatographic analysis of the L-tryptophan revealed no suspect impurities.
...
PMID:Interstitial pneumonitis and pulmonary vasculitis in a patient taking an L-tryptophan preparation. 178 80

A series of four patients with pulmonary infiltrates, pleural effusions, hypoxemia, peripheral eosinophilia, and symptoms of dyspnea, fatigue, and weakness is reported. Lung tissue obtained in three patients revealed interstitial pneumonitis, small-to-medium-vessel mixed-cell vasculitis, and alveolar exudate of histiocytes and eosinophils. All patients reported ingestion of L-tryptophan-containing products at a time when an association between L-tryptophan and the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome was established. This clinical pattern of pulmonary involvement may be part of the continuum of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. The pathophysiology of this syndrome and the relationship with the ingestion of L-tryptophan-containing products have not yet been identified.
...
PMID:Acute eosinophilic pulmonary disease associated with the ingestion of L-tryptophan-containing products. 198 92

Pathologic findings in eight patients with the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome, secondary to L-tryptophan ingestion, are reported. Tissue was obtained by biopsy alone in six patients, by biopsy and autopsy in the seventh patient, and by autopsy alone in the eighth patient. Muscle biopsies in five patients demonstrated an inflammatory infiltrate composed predominantly of lymphocytes, histiocytes, plasma cells, and a few eosinophils. The inflammation involved the perimysial and epimysial connective tissue, the walls of some small blood vessels, the perineurium of small nerve twigs, muscle spindles, and fibrous septae of subcutaneous adipose tissue. In two patients with peripheral neuropathy and one patient without overt neuropathy, denervation atrophy of muscle and perimysial and epimysial fibrosis were present. Sural nerve biopsy tissue taken from two patients displayed prominent axonopathy in one, and minimal changes in the second. Pulmonary changes in the two autopsied patients included endothelial cell damage, endovasculitis and fibromyxoid intimal change im arteries and veins, and interstitial pneumonitis with fibrosis.
...
PMID:L-tryptophan and the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome: pathologic findings in eight patients. 198 73

Poisoning with the plant Lasiospermum bipinnatum was studied in 9 lambs at various dose levels. Dyspnoea and tachypnoea, which were dose-related, were observed in 4 of the lambs. Gross and microscopic pulmonary lesions were found in all the lambs receiving plant material originating from one source but not in those given plant from another locality. The severity of the lesions appeared to be dose-dependent. Macroscopic lesions included pulmonary and mediastinal emphysema, congestion and oedema. Microscopically Clara cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia, and interstitial pneumonia were the most outstanding findings. It is speculated that the pulmonary lesions were induced by a furanosesquiterpene or tryptophan or a combination of both of these toxins in the dosed plant material. Miscellaneous and inconsistent lesions observed in the experimental animals included widespread haemorrhage (1 lamb), transudations into the body cavities and adrenocortical hyperplasia.
...
PMID:The pathology of experimental Lasiospermum bipinnatum (Thunb.) Druce (Asteraceae) poisoning in sheep. II. Pulmonary and miscellaneous lesions. 229 35

Tablets and capsules containing the essential amino acid L-tryptophan are currently being investigated as a cause of the newly recognized eosinophilia/myalgia syndrome. In the five histologically documented cases reported herein, L-tryptophan ingestion was associated with prominent pulmonary complications. All patients were women ranging from 34 to 65 years, and all presented with respiratory symptoms that began after one to nine months of L-tryptophan therapy. Peripheral eosinophilia was present in four patients as were bilateral interstitial infiltrates on chest roentgenograms. One patient had a normal chest roentgenogram. Lung biopsies were done in all patients and biopsy specimens showed a vasculitis and perivasculitis associated with a mild chronic interstitial pneumonitis and eosinophilia. Three patients had clinical and/or histologic evidence of pulmonary hypertension, and one had a follicular bronchiolitis. Four patients recovered promptly with steroid therapy and discontinuation of L-tryptophan therapy, and one patient has had minimal symptomatic improvement.
...
PMID:Pulmonary disease associated with L-tryptophan-induced eosinophilic myalgia syndrome. Clinical and pathologic features. 233 98

Interstitial pneumonias comprise a significant proportion of cattle respiratory diseases. Known by different names, such as acute bovine pulmonary emphysema and edema (ABPE), fog fever, atypical interstitial pneumonia (AIP) and cow asthma, the condition seems to occur predominantly in late summer or fall. However, depending on the etiology, cases have occurred throughout the year. Interstitial pneumonia often begins with acute respiratory distress in animals that were clinically normal 12 hr earlier. Animals are observed breathing very rapid and shallow with their mouths open. If disturbed, death may occur rapidly from hypoxia. Causes of interstitial pneumonia are quite varied ranging from parasitic, viral and bacterial to toxic. Toxic agents constitute the most economically important cause of this condition in cattle. The primary toxin is the amino acid L-tryptophan in lush pasture grasses, a compound which is converted to 3-methylindole by rumen microorganisms. Other leading toxic causes of interstitial pneumonia are perilla mint and moldy sweet potatoes. Although treatments are mainly symptomatic and ineffective, preventive measures will reduce the occurrence of interstitial pneumonia. Prevention consists of denying animals exposure to know pneumotoxic agents, eliminating certain rumen microflora that break down the toxic compounds to reactive metabolites, and supplying ample good forage so that cattle will not as likely consume toxic plants.
...
PMID:A review of interstitial pneumonia in cattle. 266 72

L-tryptophan (LT) has been implicated as a causal agent in the recently recognized eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS). Pulmonary complications occur in up to 60% of patients. Lung biopsies have shown chronic interstitial pneumonia, mild eosinophilia, vasculitis and perivasculitis, and hypertensive pulmonary arteriopathy. Open lung biopsies from two women who developed respiratory symptoms associated with LT EMS were studied with a panel of antibodies to lymphoid cells, by transmission electron microscopy and by direct immunofluorescence for immunoglobulin and complement. The majority of the cells infiltrating the interstitium and around vessels were T-cells, with a predominance of CD8+ cells. Numerous alveolar macrophages were also identified. Rare polyclonal B-cells were also present. Ultrastructural studies confirmed the presence of interstitial and perivascular lymphocytes as well as occasional eosinophils. The inflammatory cells were also present in vessel cells. Fibrointimal thickening was not observed in the sections studied ultrastructurally. Immunofluorescent staining for IgG, IgA, C3, C4, albumin, kappa, and lambda was negative. There was scattered staining for fibrinogen in alveolar spaces. The etiology of LT EMS is still under investigation, although a contaminant acting in conjunction with host factors is the favored hypothesis. The results of this study indicate that T cytotoxic/suppressor cells may be intimately involved in the pathogenesis of the lung injury.
...
PMID:Tryptophan-induced lung disease: an immunophenotypic, immunofluorescent, and electron microscopic study. 842 58