Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0231528 (
myalgia
)
6,565
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen patients with childhood scleromyositis followed from 1 to more than 10 years experienced concomitant sclerodermoid and dermatomyositis features, variably expressed at one time or another during the course of the disease. The most characteristic features were
myalgia
-myositis, arthralgia-arthritis, puffy, atrophic, sclerotic fingers, and Raynaud's phenomenon. This overlap syndrome was the most frequent sclerodermoid condition in children, differing from both systemic scleroderma and dermatomyositis. The course of the disease was protracted and rather benign, and
PM-Scl
antibody was an important diagnostic and prognostic marker. We present criteria for diagnosis of scleromyositis and its differentiation from systemic scleroderma, dermatomyositis, and Sharp overlap syndrome.
...
PMID:Childhood scleromyositis: an overlap syndrome associated with PM-Scl antibody. 190 68
The most common scleroderma overlap syndromes are mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD), scleromyositis and synthetase syndrome. There is controversy concerning MCTD as a separate entity due to heterogeneous clinical manifestations, not infrequent transformation into definite CTD and various classification criteria. Our study of 94 adult patients and 20 children, classified according to the criteria of Alarcon-Segovia, and especially a 5, 9-year follow-up showed transformation into SLE or SSc in over 20% of patients, less frequently than reported by others, whereas over half of the cases remained undifferentiated CTD. In several cases ARA criteria for both SSc and SLE were fulfilled, and there is no consensus whether such cases should be recognized as coexistence of both definite diseases or as MCTD. High titers of U1 RNP antibodies to 70 kD epitope were invariably present, whereas, by transformation into distinctive CTD there appeared, in addition, antibodies characteristic of these CTD. Of 108 cases positive for
PM-Scl
antibody, 83% were associated with scleromyositis. This scleroderma overlap syndrome differed from MCTD by coexistent features of dermatomyositis (
myalgia
, myositis, Gottron sign, heliotrope rash, calcinosis) with no component of SLE, characteristic of MCTD. The course was also chronic and rather benign, as in MCTD, and all cases responded to low or moderate doses of corticosteroids. A not infrequent complication was deforming arthritis of the hands. Our immunogenetic study showed an association of cases positive for
PM-Scl
antibody with HLA-DQA1x0501 alleles in 100% and with HLA-DRB1x0301 in 94% of cases. Synthetase syndrome, associated with anti-histidyl-tRNA synthetase antibodies, studied in 29 patients with myositis and interstitial lung disease (ILD), only in single cases had scleroderma-like features. These cases differed from SSc by acute onset with fever, and by response to moderate doses of corticosteroids. We also studied overlap of localized scleroderma with other CTD: 21 cases of progressive facial hemiatrophy and linear scleroderma, and 55 (39.5%) of atrophoderma Pasini-Pierini (APP) and morphea. As in other autoimmune disorders, two or more connective tissue diseases (CTD) may develop concurrently or sequentially in the same patient. In such overlap syndromes ARA criteria must be fulfilled for each of the disease, and the clinical presentation has features of both. However more frequently overlap syndromes only combine some manifestations of more than one CTD, and present a highly heterogeneous group of disorders with prevailing clinical features of SSc.
...
PMID:Scleroderma overlap syndromes. 1059 27
Inflammatory myopathies are a clinically diverse group of diseases, in which the detection of particular autoantibodies may facilitate diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis. The aim of this report is to summarize our experience with specific autoantibody testing in patients with inflammatory myopathies. Data were collected over the last decade in the Autoimmune Center of the Sheba Medical Center, a tertiary referral hospital. Data regarding patients' positive for autoantibodies against Jo-1, PL-7, PL-12, SRP, Mi-2, Ku, and
PM-Scl
antigens were retrospectively collected. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, and mortality were recorded. Descriptive statistics (mean, standard deviation, frequency, and percentage) were calculated. A total of 507 patients were surveyed for sclero-poly-synthetase antibodies, as part of the diagnostic workup of myositis/
myalgia
or interstitial lung disease. Forty-three patients were found positive for one or more of the abovementioned antibodies, and 23 of them (53.49%) had interstitial lung disease (ILD). Four patients were positive for anti-PL-7, three of them had ILD and Raynaud's phenomenon. Five patients were positive for anti-Ku, and four of them had both arthritis and Raynaud's phenomenon. Nine patients were positive for anti-Mi-2, and six of them were given diagnosed with dermatomyositis. Ten patients were positive for anti-SRP, and six of them had cancers of various types. Our results reiterate the previously recognized associations between anti-Mi-2 and dermatomyositis, anti-Ku and Raynaud's phenomenon, and between anti-PL-7 and ILD. In addition, our data support an association between anti-SRP autoantibody positivity and malignancy, which calls for further investigation.
...
PMID:The clinical phenotype of patients positive for antibodies to myositis and myositis-related disorders. 2945 82