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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Considerable experimental and clinical data indicate that sex has an important influence on cardiovascular physiology and pathology. This report integrates selected literature with new data from the Women's
Ischemia
Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) on vascular findings in women with ischemic heart disease (IHD) and how these findings differ from those in men. A number of common vascular disease-related conditions are either unique to (e.g., hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, gestational diabetes, peripartum dissection, polycystic ovarian syndrome, etc.) or more frequent (e.g., migraine, coronary spasm,
lupus
, vasculitis, Raynaud's phenomenon, etc.) in women than men. Post-menopausal women more frequently have many traditional vascular disease risk conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes, obesity, inactivity, and so on), and these conditions cluster more frequently in them than men. Considerable evidence supports the notion that, with these requisite conditions, women develop a more severe or somewhat different form of vascular disease than men. Structurally, women's coronary vessels are smaller in size and appear to contain more diffuse atherosclerosis, their aortas are stiffer (fibrosis, remodeling, and so on), and their microvessels appear to be more frequently dysfunctional compared with men. Functionally, women's vessels frequently show impaired vasodilator responses. Limitations of existing data and higher risks in women with acute myocardial infarction, need for revascularization, or heart failure create uncertainty about management. A better understanding of these findings should provide direction for new algorithms to improve management of the vasculopathy underlying IHD in women.
...
PMID:Some thoughts on the vasculopathy of women with ischemic heart disease. 1645 68
It has been widely accepted that the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is an autoimmune hypercoagulability syndrome in which a variety of venous and arterial thrombotic events may occur. Peripheral obliterating arterial disease characterized by aortoiliac steno-occlusion occurring in young women, is reported in the literature under the name of Small Aorta Syndrome (SAS). Although it remains unclear whether SAS represents a separate entity, the small size of the distal aorta increases the risk for aortoiliac occlusive disease. A 41-year old white woman was admitted with acute digital
ischemia
of the left foot. She had positive
lupus
anticoagulant and IgG anti-cardiolipin antibodies (61 UI/mL), but antinuclear antibodies and anti-ds-DNA antibodies were negative. She previously had two deep venous thromboses of the legs and, despite the oral anticoagulant therapy, pulmonary embolism occurred. Shortly thereafter, abdominal angio-magnetic resonance imaging suggested that the infra-renal aorta was narrowed more than 50%, without thrombotic occlusion of the terminal aorta and common iliac arteries. These findings were compatible with the features of SAS. There were no atherosclerotic changes in the artery wall and no other prediposing risk factors such as smoking, oral contraceptive or hyperlipidemia. After adequate anticoagulation and intravenous prostacyclin treatment the patient's symptoms and the ischemic lesions improved markedly. To our knowledge this is the first report of the association of SAS and primary APS. The occurrence of SAS in patients with APS may dramatically increase the risk of trombothic events.
Lupus
2006
PMID:Primary antiphospholipid syndrome associated with small aorta syndrome: a case report. 1668 64
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a connective tissue disease of unknown etiology, is generally considered to occur in women of child-bearing age and to be uncommon among men . Because of the female predominance in most studies, less is known about the disease in men. To begin to better understand
lupus
in men, we retrospectively analyzed all the SLE patients from all the hospitals in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) system, a population that is predominantly male. Between 1987 and 1996, 2614 SLE patients were retrieved from the VA databank; 2144 were male, making this the largest group of male patients with SLE reported in United States of America. Age, racial and geographic distribution, comorbidities, and mortality of the SLE patients are reported. This study suggests that SLE men in this population are older at onset of disease, have different comorbidities, and have a higher mortality at 1 year than women with SLE. These findings suggest that men with SLE have a more complex clinical course than women, although the data do not illuminate whether the comorbidities are due to or coincident with SLE. On the basis of these data, practitioners are reminded to consider SLE in the differential diagnosis for older men and be attentive to the frequent presence of comorbidities such as cardiac
ischemia
and neoplasms. Because of the identified regional variations in demographics, comorbidities, and mortality, this study suggests the need for future SLE studies to include data from multiple geographic areas.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus in men: a retrospective analysis in a Veterans Administration Healthcare System population. 1703 19
Several autoimmune diseases are thought to be mediated in part by interleukin (IL)-18. Many are those with associated increased interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) levels such as systemic lupus erythematosus, macrophage activation syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, psoriasis, and graft-versus-host disease. In addition,
ischemia
, including acute renal failure in human beings, appears to involve IL-18. Animal studies also support the concept that IL-18 is a key player in models of
lupus erythematosus
, atherosclerosis, graft-versus-host disease, and hepatitis. Unexpectedly, IL-18 plays a role in appetite control and the development of obesity. IL-18 is a member of the IL-1 family; IL-1beta and IL-18 are related closely, and both require the intracellular cysteine protease caspase-1 for biological activity. The IL-18 binding protein, a naturally occurring and specific inhibitor of IL-18, neutralizes IL-18 activities and has been shown to be safe in patients. Other options for reducing IL-18 activities are inhibitors of caspase-1, human monoclonal antibodies to IL-18, soluble IL-18 receptors, and anti-IL-18 receptor monoclonal antibodies.
...
PMID:Interleukin-18 and the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases. 1733 92
Young patients with migraine are at increased risk for stroke, particularly patients with an aura of focal neurologic deficits. Other causes of
ischemia
are often identified in patients with migraine, including patent foramen ovale,
lupus
anticoagulant, cervical carotid dissection, arteriovenous malformation, and hyperactivity of the clotting system. Migrainous stroke is only diagnosed when all other possible causes of stroke have been eliminated and the patient has irreversibility of the usual aura, associated with an ischemic infarct in the appropriate brain territory. Prophylactic therapy of migraine with aura may be beneficial in preventing migrainous stroke.
...
PMID:Stroke and migraine. 1736 79
In order to avoid the toxicities associated with prescription drug use today, we have explored novel methods for delivering drugs selectively to pathologic cells, thereby avoiding the collateral damage that accompanies their uptake by healthy cells. In this Account, we describe our quest for the ideal targeted therapeutic agent. This effort began with a search for ligands that would bind selectively to pathologic cells, displaying no affinity for healthy cells. After identification of an optimal targeting ligand, effort was focused on construction of linkers that would carry the attached drug to pathologic cells with receptors for the selected ligand. In the case of cancer, we exploited the well-characterized up-regulation of folate receptors on malignant cells to target folate-linked pharmaceuticals to cancer tissues in vivo. Drugs that have been linked to folic acid for tumor-selective drug delivery to date include (i) protein toxins, (ii) chemotherapeutic agents, (iii) gene therapy vectors, (iv) oligonucleotides (including small interfering RNA (siRNA)), (v) radioimaging agents, (vi) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents, (vii) liposomes with entrapped drugs, (viii) radiotherapeutic agents, (ix) immunotherapeutic agents, and (x) enzyme constructs for prodrug therapy. Current clinical trials of four folate-linked drugs demonstrate that folate receptor-targeting holds great promise for increasing the potency while reducing toxicity of many cancer therapies. In the course of developing folate-conjugated drugs for cancer, we discovered that folate receptors are also overexpressed on activated (but not resting or quiescent) macrophages. Recognizing that activated macrophages either cause or contribute to such diseases as rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, atherosclerosis,
lupus
, inflammatory osteoarthritis, diabetes,
ischemia
reperfusion injury, glomerulonephritis, sarcoidosis, psoriasis, Sjogren's disease, and vasculitis, we initiated studies aimed at developing folate-conjugated imaging and therapeutic agents for the diagnosis and treatment of such diseases. In very brief time, significant progress has been made towards identification of clinical candidates for targeted treatment of several inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. This Account summarizes the discovery and development of a variety of folate-targeted drugs for the diagnosis and therapy of cancers and inflammatory/autoimmune diseases.
...
PMID:Discovery and development of folic-acid-based receptor targeting for imaging and therapy of cancer and inflammatory diseases. 1765 75
Abnormal increases of antiphospholipid antibody and plasma homocysteine levels are recently emerging as nonlipidic risk factors for cerebral atherogenesis and thrombosis. Both antiphospholipid antibody and homocysteine share many similar bioeffects in hemostasis, but their interaction is still inconsistent. In this study, we examined the relation between the plasma homocysteine level and
lupus
anticoagulant, anticardiolipin antibody, and anti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibody in patients with noncardiac cerebral ischemia. Systemic
lupus
erythrematosus patients were excluded. The results showed a higher frequency of moderate hyperhomocysteinemia in patients with an abnormal increase of
lupus
anticoagulant only. Neither the serum folate and cobalamin levels nor methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase allele mutation contributes to this result. Accordingly, homocysteine interacts with
lupus
anticoagulant to promote cerebral atherosclerosis and
ischemia
. The role of vasculopathic or prothrombotic autoantibody generation in response to specific pathological change such as hyperhomocysteinemia warrants further investigation.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia relates to the subtype of antiphospholipid antibodies in non-SLE patients. 1791 Nov 91
We have described an unusual presentation of
lupus
retinopathy in the form of macular arterio-arterial and arterio-venular shunts with extensive macular
ischemia
as a presenting sign.
...
PMID:An unusual presentation of lupus retinopathy. 1815 11
The association of the antiphospholipid syndrome with malignancy has been extensively reported. Raynaud's phenomenon has also been reported to be associated with various malignancies. In this report, we describe two patients who presented with severe digital
ischemia
mimicking Raynaud's phenomenon. The patients were found to have antiphospholipid syndrome, and upon extensive evaluation, a diagnosis of a malignancy was made. This report highlights the importance of malignancy workup in patients with severe digital
ischemia
associated with antiphospholipid syndrome.
Lupus
2008 Mar
PMID:Severe digital ischemia-a presenting symptom of malignancy-associated antiphospholipid syndrome. 1837 61
Compartment Syndrome (CS) is a disease that has 2 etiologies, that of acute events and that of chronic. It occurs when the pressure in a fascia-encased compartment exceeds the profusion pressure in tissue. The end result, when left untreated, is muscle and nerve
ischemia
that can cause significant morbidity. Nerve paralysis, muscle necrosis and fibrosis and, when occurring in an extremity, loss of the limb are some of the potential outcomes of missed diagnosis. This case series involves 2 cases of CS that where caused by vasculitis with etiologies of human immunodeficiency virus and systemic
lupus
erythematosis. Autoimmune vasculitis has many systemic and local manifestations, but to our knowledge CS has not been described as one of its sequelae. The following is literature review and presentation of these 2 cases.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosis: potential causes of surgical emergencies of the hand. 1858 Jan 47
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