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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To examine the role of circulating immune complexes (CIC) in infective endocarditis, we studied 64 patients with infective endocarditis for the presence of CIC by the polyethylene-glycol (PEG)-precipitation test and the Clq binding test. This study was repeated during the course of the disease in 23 patients. CIC were found in 84 per cent of patients (66 per cent with acute infective endocarditis, 89 per cent with subacute infective endocarditis) during the active phase of the disease. Higer PEG precipitates were associated with typical cutaneous signs, cryoglobulins and nonstreptococcic culture-positive infective endocarditis. Under appropriate antibiotic treatment, the PEG precipitate levels of 17 patients fell within 1 month to the normal range, with a concomitant drop in cryoglobulinemia and
rheumatoid factor
. Conversely, uncontrolled
sepsis
always (six of six) yielded a rising level of CIC. These findings support the hypothesis that CIC may be important in the pathogenesis of peripheral lesions in infective endocarditis.
...
PMID:Fate of circulating immune complexes in infective endocarditis. 15 40
Thirty-two patients with the Felty syndrome, defined by the presence of rheumatoid arthritis, splenomegaly, and neutropenia, have been studied in comparison with 32 patients with rheumatoid arthritis matched for age, sex, and disease duration, and 9 patients with rheumatoid arthritis and idiopathic neutropenia. Patients with the Felty syndrome had severe destructive arthritis, which progressed during follow-up despite little evidence of objective synovitis, and a higher frequency of extra-articular manifestations, including vasculitis. Bacterial infection tended to occur in patients with the lowest neutrophil count but continued to occur in some despite normalization of the WBC. Prognosis was poor and 8 deaths occurred, predominantly from
sepsis
. Serologic features were prominent. High titers of IgG
rheumatoid factor
and circulating immune complexes characterized patients with persistent neutropenia. A family history of rheumatoid arthritis was more common in patients with the Felty syndrome. The association with HLA DR4 was very strong; in addition there was an increased frequency of the DQw3 variant, 3b, suggesting that HLA Class II genes in linkage with DR4 may contribute to disease expression.
...
PMID:The Felty syndrome: a case-matched study of clinical manifestations and outcome, serologic features, and immunogenetic associations. 196 4
Diabetes mellitus is associated with several non articular rheumatic conditions and is a cause of Charcot's arthropathy. We report three cases of long-standing insulin-dependent diabetics who developed an inflammatory monoarthritis of the ankle. There was no evidence of a peripheral neuropathy or
sepsis
. They were all seronegative for
rheumatoid factor
. In two the synovitis persisted; in the third there was a gradual resolution. This type of inflammatory synovitis has not been previously described in diabetes. It developed after a mean duration of diabetes of 34.3 years (range 18-52 years). We suggest that it may be associated with microvascular changes in diabetes, possibly involving hypoxic reperfusion.
...
PMID:Monoarthritis of the ankle in diabetes mellitus without neuropathy: a report of three cases. 239 Aug 52
Antibodies against the major capsular polysaccharide of Cryptococcus neoformans, glucuronoxylomannan (GXM), and a minor secreted polysaccharide, galactoxylomannan (GalXM), were surveyed by indirect enzyme immunoassay (EIA) in patients with cryptococcosis, with other mycoses, and in normal controls. Measurement of IgG levels against GalXM revealed cross reactions in candidiasis patients that were reduced by adsorption with Candida albicans cell walls. Measurement of IgM levels were subject to fewer cross reactions. The combination of adsorption with C albicans cell walls and measurement of IgM detected antibodies in 12 of 55 cryptococcosis patients. An end point equal to or greater than a titer of 1/16 excluded reactions in normals and limited cross reactivity in candidiasis patients to below 7%. This test has potential diagnostic significance in cryptococcosis patients who show no evidence of cryptococcal antigen circulating in the cerebrospinal fluid or serum. Reactions in this IgM assay were not spuriously due to
rheumatoid factor
. The major capsular GXM was much less serologically active and was subject to cross reactions with agents of bacterial
sepsis
. The specificity of the GalXM is directed mainly by the mannose and to a lesser extent by galactosyl residues.
...
PMID:Enzyme immunoassay detection of IgM to galactoxylomannan of Cryptococcus neoformans. 638 77
The British Orthopaedic Association assessment questionnaire for knee replacements was adapted to allow comparison of the severity of underlying polyarthritis with the benefits of geometric knee replacement in a retrospective study of 150 knees between six months and six years after operation. Total or partial relief of pain was achieved in 81 per cent of the operation, and changes in mobility occurred in fewer patients. Late
sepsis
remained a serious complication of nine per cent of the operations and one patient died from septicaemia. Late
sepsis
was associated with previous synovectomy or osteotomy. Retropatellar pain rarely interfered with the mobility of the patient. There was no association of operations that failed with a high erythrocyte sedimentation rate, a high platelet count, a low haemoglobin level or with a strongly positive
rheumatoid factor
but pain in the contralateral knee was associated with a diminished functional capacity.
...
PMID:The geometric knee replacement in polyarthritis. 706 29
The relation between the duration of bacterial infection and circulating immune complexes (CIC) level was evaluated using the C1q binding assay in a group of patients with well defined clinical
sepsis
. Fifty-four patients with endocarditis and 35 with post-open heart surgery mediastinitis were prospectively studied over a period of 2 years. CIC were detected in 42% of patients studied. Interindividual variations were observed but it was found that the level of CIC increased statistically with time (P less than 0.001). CIC were statistically linked with cryoglobulinemia (P less than 0.001),
rheumatoid factor
(P less than 0.001) and a decreased CH50 (P less than 0.05). CIC were more frequent in patients with endocarditis (53%) than in patients with mediastinitis (24%). However, when the duration of the infection was taken into account the difference was no longer significant. No relation could be evidenced between the incidence of CIC and clinical symptoms including prognosis and renal signs. In our experience, determination of CIC does not have a critical clinical value.
...
PMID:Circulating immune complexes and severe sepsis: duration of infection as the main determinant. 708 30
We reported a case of type II cryoglobulinemia involving glomerulopathy associated with HCV-induced liver cirrhosis. The patient was a 57-year-old woman. Her past history included chronic hepatitis at 51 years and rheumatoid arthritis at 53 years of age. At 46 years, an erythematous lesion appeared on her legs, which was diagnosed as allergic vasculitis by skin biopsy. At 50 years, proteinuria, hematuria and hypertension were recognized. The next year, the first renal biopsy was performed and showed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN). Recently, the edema of her legs has progressed, and the laboratory data showed proteinuria, hematuria, hypocomplementemia,
rheumatoid factor
positivity, and increase of monoclonal IgG kappa chain. The second renal biopsy revealed an endocapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis-like lesion with marked infiltration of monocytes and macrophages. The subendothelial deposit showed a fine fibril-like pattern. She was treated with steroids and double filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP) therapy, but the treatment was not very effective. She died of liver cirrhosis, which was probably induced by hepatitis C virus (HCV), and
sepsis
. Generally, the patients of type II cryoglobulinemia often showed HCV antibody positivity, pointing to HCV as an etiological factor. In this case, renal biopsy was performed twice in the same patient, and the histologic findings suggest the clinicopathological course of cryoglobulinemia.
...
PMID:[A case of type II cryoglobulinemia involving glomerulopathy associated with hepatitis C antibody]. 750 47
We summarize clinical, laboratory and pathologic details regarding a patient who presented with extrahepatic disease manifestations of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, including cryoglobulinemic leg ulcers due to cutaneous vasculitis, peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy, and recurrent pulmonary infiltrates. The patient had evidence for B-cell lymphoproliferation, diagnosed as extranodal lymphoma on initial (though not subsequent) bone marrow examination, retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy, and the presence of a Type II IgM6 monoclonal
rheumatoid factor
which became cryoprecipitable on complexing to IgG. Chronic hepatitis was mild on liver biopsy, though fibrotic changes developed over a three-year period of follow-up. She had consistently normal liver function tests, except for a brief rebound effect on discontinuing interferon-alpha, and preterminally. Symptoms were only partially responsive to trials of corticosteroids, cytotoxic agents, plasmapheresis and interferon, and the patient ultimately died at The Mount Sinai Hospital of
sepsis
. We review current information regarding the spectrum of extrahepatic HCV infection, including pathogenic factors relevant to its overlapping autoimmune, rheumatic and lymphoproliferative disease manifestations. The exact prevalence of these HCV-related syndromes among the 1% of the world population estimated to be infected by this virus remains to be delineated. Chronicity of infection, and lack of efficacy of currently available therapy in effecting sustained clearance of the virus from the host, have made this an important public health problem that is likely to increase in significance. Possible relationships to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma may present novel opportunities to delineate the basis for oncogenesis in HCV infection.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus, autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation. 1074 67
The measurement of cardiac troponins (cTn) is of considerable usefulness in the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome. Abnormal levels of serum cTn are occasionally found in patients who are not suffering a myocardial infarction. This may be observed in several well-known situations including pulmonary embolism, pericarditis, myocarditis, coronary vasospasm,
sepsis
, congestive heart failure, supraventricular tachycardia with hemodynamic compromise, re-nal insufficiency, and prolonged strenuous endurance exercise. Endogenous antibodies such as heterophile antibodies,
rheumatoid factor
, and other autoantibodies are known to interfere with the immunoassay measurements of many different analytes, including the widely used Abbot AxSYM cTnI analyzer. Other sources of circulating antibodies include immunotherapies, vaccinations, or blood transfusions that may interfere with these immunoassays as well. We examine the case of a 48-year-old man with a history of hypercholesterolemia and obesity who presented with chest pain and was found to have elevated Tn I levels on two separate occasions. Further work-up revealed that the Tn I levels were spuriously elevated because the patient's blood revealed a normal cTnI level when mixed with polyethylene glycol to inactivate any antibodies interfering with the cTnI assay.
...
PMID:Falsely elevated cardiac troponin I levels. 1732 64
"Macromolecules to PDMS transfer" technique relying on the direct entrapment of macromolecules spots during PDMS polymerisation is proposed as an alternative for the easy and simple PDMS surface modification. In the present work, the development of three different applications based on this procedure is presented as proof of the method potentialities. First, C-reactive protein (CRP) sandwich immunoassay using immobilised monoclonal anti-CRP antibodies was developed for
sepsis
diagnosis. The preserved integrity of the immobilised monoclonal immunoglobulin permitted the sensitive detection of free CRP in human sera (LOD=12.5 microg/L, detection ranging over two decades). Then, rheumatoid arthritis diagnosis through the
rheumatoid factor
(RF) detection based on rabbit immunoglobulins immobilisation allowed the detection of specific antibodies in human sera samples down to low RF levels (detection range 5.3-485 IU/mL). Finally, the "Macromolecules to PDMS transfer" procedure was used to easily and rapidly produce fibronectin-based cell culture arrays. The successful attachment of HeLa and BALB/3T3 cells was demonstrated with optical microscopy and specific staining of actin and vinculin.
...
PMID:"Macromolecules to PDMS transfer" as a general route for PDMS biochips. 1867 39
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