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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present two females with antiphospholipid antibody (APA) syndrome who came with adrenal insufficiency (
Addison's disease
), recurrent abortions and extensive deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Both cases were positive for
lupus
anticoagulant (LA), global antiphospholipid test (APA), and IgG, IgA, IgM APA antibodies. Seventeen other cases with documented
lupus
anticoagulant and various clinical associations were tested for APA IgG, IgA, IgM. Only two were positive for IgA as well as IgG and IgM APA. Thirty volunteer blood donors (24 males and 6 females, aged 19-35 years) were taken as a control group. One person was moderately positive for LA and showed low positivity for IgG APA. These data suggest that the presence of IgA APA may signify a severe disease. Further studies are needed to confirm this observation.
...
PMID:IgA antiphospholipid and adrenal insufficiency: is there a link? 180 62
Insulin- and anti-immunoglobulin-antibodies have been recently reported in pre-diabetic subjects: the former has been proposed as a predictive marker of Type I diabetes in non-diabetic-subjects. To evaluate the diabetes-related specificity of these antibodies, the presence of insulin autoantibodies, using a recently developed and highly sensitive competitive radioimmune assay, and of anti-immunoglobulin antibodies together with that of immune complexes and of other autoantibodies has been investigated in patients with organ- or non-organ-specific autoimmune diseases. One hundred and eleven serum samples were assayed from patients with Graves' disease, primary hypothyroidism, chronic autoimmune thyroiditis,
Addison's disease
, chronic autoimmune hepatitis, pernicious anemia,
lupus erythematosus
, and rheumatoid arthritis, together with 45 serum samples from normal subjects. From patients with autoimmune diseases, 32.4% of all sera revealed values of insulin autoantibodies above the limit of positivity (p less than 0.001); anti-immunoglobulin antibodies were present in 4.1% of patients (NS); immune complexes were found in 19.5% (NS) of all patients, but in 38% of patients with Graves' disease and chronic hepatitis (p less than 0.02). There was a trend for multiple autoantibody positivity to be associated with high levels of insulin autoantibodies (p less than 0.05). Thus, whereas contrary to expectation anti-immunoglobulin antibodies are not associated with non-diabetes-related autoimmune diseases, increased humoral immunoresponsiveness to endogenous insulin appears to be related to autoimmunity in general rather than restricted to Type I diabetes.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to insulin do appear in non-diabetic patients with autoimmune disorders: comparison with anti-immunoglobulin antibodies and other autoimmune phenomena. 218 33
We describe deep vein thrombosis associated with
lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies in three children aged 10 to 14 years. One of them also had arterial thromboses. None of the patients had systemic lupus erythematosus when the thrombosis first occurred, but one fulfilled the criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus 3 years later. At presentation all had symptoms suggestive of pulmonary embolism and evidence of an autoimmune disease:
Addison's disease
in one, anti-DNA or antinuclear antibodies in all three, and a positive Coombs' test in two. Two of the three gave a false-positive test for syphilis. In the patient with systemic lupus erythematosus recurrent thrombocytopenia and severe haemolytic anaemia necessitated splenectomy. A child should be tested for
lupus
anticoagulant or anticardiolipin antibody if venous or arterial occlusion occurs without a known predisposing cause, or if there is pulmonary embolism or symptoms or laboratory findings suggestive of a connective tissue disease.
...
PMID:Venous thrombosis associated with lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies. 314 18
Although the APS seen as a PAPS or accompanying SLE essentially manifests the same clinical features, there appears to be distinct differences in the two groups of patients which have been summarized in this article. Additionally, the fact that some patients with Sneddon's syndrome, Trousseau's syndrome, or even
Addison's disease
, may in reality be examples of aPL-related vascular occlusive events has opened new avenues, not only for identification of these patients, but also for more systematic therapeutic regimens.
Lupus
1994 Aug
PMID:'Primary', 'secondary' and other variants of the antiphospholipid syndrome. 780 19
Vascular damage is a well known cause of hypopituitarism since Sheehan's report of postpartum pituitary necrosis; it has subsequently been reported that also sickle-cell anemia, eclampsia, pituitary apoplexy and other pathologies may induce failure of the anterior hypophysis through this mechanism. The antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is characterized by widespread arterial and venous thrombosis with resulting different clinical features;
Addison's disease
due to adrenal thrombosis is the only endocrine involvement reported so far in this syndrome. We report here a case of global anterior pituitary insufficiency which developed soon after cerebral ischaemic stroke in a 62 year aged woman with
Lupus
aicoagulant activity (LAC) and large atrial thrombosis; underlying pathologies were excluded by appropriate investigations. Therefore in our opinion this is the first case in which anterior hypopituitarism is reported in the clinical constellation of APS and the second type of endocline involvement.
...
PMID:Hypopituitarism and antiphospholipid syndrome. 958 17
A patient with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is described who had associated autoimmune thyroiditis with subclinical hypothyroidism and idiopathic
Addison's disease
. The presence of autoimmune thyroid disease and
Addison's disease
could classify her as having polyglandular autoimmune syndrome (PGAS) type II, which is the commonest of the three types of this syndrome. However, the additional presence of SLE in PGAS type II has not been described earlier. This patient appears to be the first such case.
Lupus
2001
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus with polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type II: report of an unusual case. 1143 81
An association between celiac disease and other autoimmune disorders--such as insulin-dependent diabetes,
Addison's disease
, systemic
lupus
erythematous, rheumatoid arthritis, alopecia areata, and autoimmune endocrine diseases--has been described. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of celiac disease in 100 patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. Moreover, the monitoring of patients with concomitant celiac and autoimmune thyroid diseases, after a gluten-free diet or a gluten-containing diet, can give important insights into the effect of dietary habits in thyroid autoantibodies modulation. In our study, the prevalence of celiac disease in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease was 2%. In these two celiac patients, the serologic markers became undetectable 6 months after beginning a gluten-free diet. However, thyroid autoantibodies did not positively correlate with dietary habits.
...
PMID:Thyroid-related autoantibodies and celiac disease: a role for a gluten-free diet? 1219 1
Although Addison disease and hypoadrenalism are rare in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), early reports of the association suggested the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) in these patients. Data from literature reveal that adrenal failure was present in between 10 and 26% of patients with catastrophic APS and that one-third of patients presented with adrenal involvement during the course of catastrophic APS. Adrenal involvement may be the first clinical manifestation of this syndrome, whereas a few patients may have a history of
Addison's disease
in the past. The pathological mechanisms involved in the production of adrenal insufficiency in APS are still not clearly understood, but the hypercoagulable state in these patients supports the concept that adrenal haemorrhagic infarction may possibly be related to adrenal vein thrombosis. In the present article,we review the pathogenic mechanisms and main clinical, laboratory and treatment features of patients suffering adrenal involvement with aPL to support the idea that APS leads to the development of adrenal insufficiency.
Lupus
2003
PMID:Adrenal involvement in the antiphospholipid syndrome. 1289 1
Autoimmune diseases (AD) are conditions in which there is the development of antibodies against self cells/ organs. AD could either be organ-specific or non-organ specific (systemic) in clinical presentation. Commonly reported ADs includes: Myasthenia gravis, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Guillian-Barre syndrome, vitiligo, type 1 diabetes mellitus, Graves diseases, Goodpastures syndrome, pemphigus, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic
lupus
erythematosis,
Addisons disease
, multiple sclerosis, pernicious anaemia, autoimmune haemolytic anaemia, chronic active hepatitis, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. There is paucity of locally documented information on the occurrence of AD in same patient in our environment. We therefore report the case of a 66 year old woman who presented at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, with a spectrum of the AD, Vitiligo, rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, impaired glucose tolerance.
...
PMID:Autoimmune diseases in a Nigerian woman--a case report. 1500 10
Generalized vitiligo is an autoimmune disorder in which acquired white patches of skin and overlying hair result from autoimmune loss of melanocytes from involved areas. Although usually sporadic, family clustering of vitiligo may occur, in a non-Mendelian pattern typical of multifactorial, polygenic inheritance. Sporadic vitiligo is associated with autoimmune thyroid disease, pernicious anemia,
Addison's disease
, and
lupus
; these same disorders occur at increased frequency in patients' first-degree relatives. Here, we studied 133 'multiplex' generalized vitiligo families, with multiple affected family members. The age of onset of vitiligo is earlier in these 'multiplex' families than in patients with sporadic vitiligo. Affected members of the multiplex vitiligo families have elevated frequencies of autoimmune thyroid disease, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, adult-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, pernicious anemia, and
Addison's disease
. Probands' unaffected siblings have elevated frequencies of most of these same autoimmune diseases, particularly if the proband had non-vitiligo autoimmune disease. Familial generalized vitiligo is thus characterized by earlier disease onset and a broader repertoire of associated autoimmune diseases than sporadic vitiligo. This mostly likely reflects a greater inherited genetic component of autoimmune susceptibility in these families. These findings have important implications for autoimmune disease surveillance in families in which multiple members are affected with vitiligo.
...
PMID:Early disease onset and increased risk of other autoimmune diseases in familial generalized vitiligo. 1602 22
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