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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our study ellucidates the utility of endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) in various cardiac-muscle disorders seen in a tropical country like India. The procedure has been successfully performed in 501 patients (572 procedures) at our centre from April 1985 to December 1992. This included 60 infants and children. The indications were dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in 214, non-specific aortoarteritis in 91, rheumatic heart disease in 75, restrictive cardiomyopathy in 45, constrictive pericarditis in 14 and miscellaneous in 62 patients. There was no mortality, however, one patient developed cardiac tamponade and another sustained ventricular tachycardia requiring cardioversion. There was transient atrial fibrillation in six patients and all these had acute rheumatic heart disease. Transient complete heart block occurred in six patients with underlying left-bundle branch-block. Histological examination of EMB revealed myocarditis in 34/214 (15.4%) patients in DCM group and helped in following up these cases on immunosuppressive treatment. In the presence of restrictive haemodynamics it could identify amyloidosis in four patients. It was also helpful in differentiating between endomyocardial fibrosis and chronic constrictive pericarditis. In patients with non-specific aorto-arteritis significant histological changes of inflammatory myocarditis were observed in patients especially in congestive heart failure. Furthermore, it was helpful in identifying the nature of cardiac tumour in one patient. Its utility has also been evaluated in disorders, including rheumatic heart disease, peripartum cardiomyopathy and systemic disorders like systemic lupus erythematosis. Even in the absence of cardiac-transplant programmes at national level we have found EMB to be a useful investigation in a tropical country like India.
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PMID:Endomyocardial biopsy--technical aspects experience and current status. An Indian perspective. 818 91

A critically ill infant with congenital complete heart block and neonatal lupus was treated with pulse steroids, exchange transfusion and intravenous gammaglobulin. Transient improvement in clinical status and laboratory results occurred, although the infant died. Based on this report and review of prior experience with immunosuppressive therapy, prenatal treatment of the mother with betamethasone or dexamethasone has been successful in resolving the cardiomyopathy/myocarditis associated with neonatal lupus. Postnatal treatment of the infant with steroids appears to be beneficial for persistent hepatic and hematologic manifestations. The evidence for exchange transfusion is less certain.
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PMID:Treatment of neonatal lupus: case report and review of the literature. 837 Nov 99

A case of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) associated with fever, heart failure, and left ventricular (LV) aneurysm is reported. A diagnosis of SLE was suspected owing to the presence of active lymphocytic myocarditis and fibrinous endocarditis at LV endomyocardial biopsy and was confirmed by identification of 4 of the 11 criteria proposed by the American Rheumatism Association for the definition of SLE. A 2-month period of steroid therapy was followed by a remarkable recovery of LV function and progression of endomyocarditis to a healed phase at control LV biopsy. The LV aneurysm disappeared, likely because thrombosis occurred as a result of the hypercoagulable state accompanying the presence of anticardiolipin antibodies. This is the first reported case of LV aneurysm induced by SLE and is a rare clinicohistologic documentation of the effectiveness of steroid treatment on lupus endomyocarditis.
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PMID:Acute myocarditis and left ventricular aneurysm as presentations of systemic lupus erythematosus. 854 1

We report a case of neonatal lupus erythematosus (NLE) with congenital heart block and severe myocardial failure, which was followed from the 25th week of gestation because of fetal bradycardia. The child was delivered at the 37th week of gestation by elective cesarean section because of echocardiographically documented heart enlargement, pericardial effusion and moderate insufficiency of the mitral and tricuspid valves. In spite of immediate pacing, intubation and supportive treatment, the newborn developed progressive heart failure. Echocardiography showed endocarditis of the mitral valve and diffuse myocarditis. The heart failure resolved under steroid treatment. Our experience supports the early use of steroids in treating myocarditis due to NLE. Intrauterine steroid treatment in the presence of fetal hydrops and congenital heart block is discussed.
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PMID:Neonatal lupus erythematosus with congenital heart block and severe heart failure due to myocarditis and endocardititis of the mitral valve. 879 3

Fertility is usually normal in systemic lupus erythematosus. However, cyclophosphamide therapy has been associated with an increased risk for sustained amenorrhea in these patients. There is still debate as to whether pregnancy increases systemic lupus erythematosus activity. We have known for decades that systemic lupus erythematosus is associated with an increased risk for pregnancy loss. Now we know that most excess fetal loss in women with systemic lupus erythematosus occurs in association with antiphospholipid antibodies, which also are associated with pregnancy loss in otherwise healthy women. Prematurity, intrauterine growth retardation, and preeclampsia are common features of lupus pregnancy, especially in women with antiphospholipid antibodies. Pregnancy complicated by antiphospholipid syndrome requires expert care and a team approach involving obstetricians, obstetric physicians, rheumatologists, and clinical hematologists. Treatment and close monitoring including uterine artery Doppler scans and timely delivery may improve fetal outcome in these cases. Although there is no evidence that maternal prednisone should be used prophylactically, fluorinated steroids may be efficacious after in utero identification of congenital heart block, especially in fetuses with associated myocarditis.
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PMID:Pregnancy in systemic lupus erythematosus. 894 45

We studied the frequency, location, clinical and histopathological features, associated manifestations, and prognosis of vasculitides in a cohort of 667 SLE patients. Exclusion of patients with previous vasculitis or insufficient information left 540 patients, 194 of whom has vasculitis (incidence density: 0.053 new cases/person/year, cumulative incidence of 0.051 at one year, 0.232 at 5 years and 0.411 at 10 years). Vasculitis was confirmed by biopsy in 46 cases, by arteriography in five, and by both in three. A single episode of vasculitis occurred in 119 and two or more in 75 patients. Vasculitis was cutaneous in 160, visceral in 24, both in 10. In the first episode of cutaneous vasculitides, 111 had punctuate lesions, 32 palpable purpura, 6 urticaria, 6 ulcers, 8 papules, 5 erythematous plaques or macules confirmed with biopsy, 2 erythema with necrosis, and 1 panniculitis (plus small vessel vasculitis). Of 29 with visceral vasculitis in the first episode, 19 had mononeuritis multiplex, 5 digital necrosis, 3 large artery vasculitis of limbs, one mesenteric, and one coronary, more than one type could appear simultaneously or in subsequent episodes. Patients with vasculitis had longer disease duration and followup, younger age of onset of SLE, and were more frequently males than those without. Lupus manifestations associated with vasculitis in univariate logistic regression included myocarditis, psychosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, serositis, leukopenia, lymphopenia and pleuritis. Vasculitis also associated with the antiphospholipid syndrome. The strength of this association increased when patients with vasculitis confirmed by biopsy and/or arteriography were considered separately. Visceral vasculitis associated with increased mortality when controlled for age of onset and nephropathy.
Lupus 1997
PMID:Vasculitis in systemic lupus erythematosus. 910 29

Takayasu arteritis (TA) is a chronic inflammatory and obliterative disease of large vessels particularly the aorta and its major branches. Recently, the disease has been shown to involve the parenchyma of various organs. Specific glomerular lesions reported in patients with TA are mesangial proliferative, membrano-proliferative, crescentic glomerulonephritis and amyloidosis. Dermatological manifestations of this disease are erythema nodosum, facial lupus rash and erythema induratum. Dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis and pericarditis have been reported in TA. Rarely, interstitial lung disease, pneumonic consolidation, idiopathic ulcerative colitis, rheumatoid arthritis and polymyositis have been described in association with TA. In this report, five patients of TA with primary parenchymatous involvement of kidneys, skin, heart and gastrointestinal tract have been described. An association of primary parenchymatous organ involvement and TA suggests an autosensitization to an unidentified antigen in the pathogenesis of TA.
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PMID:Systemic manifestations of Takayasu arteritis: the expanding spectrum. 911 17

Propylthiouracil (PTU), used to treat Graves' disease, occasionally induces a lupus-like syndrome. A 39-year-old woman developed clinical manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus with rash, serositis, myocarditis, and acute renal insufficiency, associated with serologies for lupus, after 3 wk of exposure to the drug. Renal biopsy revealed diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis. This article reviews the side effects of PTU and the literature on PTU-induced nephrotoxicity. Possible mechanisms and management of drug-induced lupus nephritis are also reviewed. To facilitate early and specific intervention, clinicians should be aware of the propensity of PTU to cause lupus-like syndromes with renal involvement.
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PMID:Propylthiouracil-induced diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis: review of immunological complications. 921 72

Charts of 180 patients (147 women, 33 men) with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) complicated by renal involvement were retrospectively analyzed from a series of 436 patients. Mean age at renal disease onset was 27 years. Thirty-six percent of the patients had renal involvement after diagnosis of lupus, for 30.7% of that group it was more than 5 years later. Renal involvement occurred more frequently in young male patients of non-French non-white origin. Patients with renal involvement suffered more commonly from malar rash, psychosis, myocarditis, pericarditis, lymphadenopathy, and hypertension. Anemia, low serum complement, and raised anti-dsDNA antibodies were more frequent. According to the 1982 World Health Organization classification, histologic examination of initial renal biopsy specimen in 158 patients showed normal kidney in 1.5% of cases, mesangial in 22%, focal proliferative in 22%, diffuse proliferative in 27%, membranous in 20%, chronic sclerosing glomerulonephritis in 1%, and other forms of nephritis in 6.5%. Distribution of initial glomerulonephritis patterns was similar whether renal involvement occurred before or after the diagnosis of lupus. Transformation from 1 histologic pattern to another was observed in more than half of the analyzable patients (those who underwent at least 2 renal biopsies). Nephritis evolved toward end-stage renal disease in 14 patients despite the combined use of steroids and cyclophosphamide in 12. Initial elevated serum creatinine levels, initial hypertension, non-French non-white origin, and proliferative lesions on the initial renal biopsy were indicators of poor renal outcome. Twenty-four patients died after a mean follow-up of 109 months from SLE diagnosis. Among our 436 patients, the 10-year survival rate was not significantly affected by the presence or absence of renal involvement at diagnosis (89% and 92%, respectively).
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PMID:Renal involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus. A study of 180 patients from a single center. 1035 47

A 29-year-old female with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) was admitted because of exertional dyspnea in January, 1996. The diagnosis of SLE was made on the basis of malar rash, discoid rash, polyarthritis, leukopenia, positive antinuclear antibody and focal glomerulonephritis in 1991. She did not have any cardiac symptoms in 1994, when the electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormalities, such as poor R wave progression and right axis deviation, were present. On admission, she developed congestive heart failure without any signs of active SLE. Laboratory findings were unremarkable. There were new ECG abnormalities, such as left atrial overload and low voltage in limb leads. Chest roentgenogram showed mild pulmonary congestion and marked cardiomegaly. Echocardiography showed enlargement and diffuse hypokinesis of the left ventricle. Cardiac catheterization confirmed that the coronary arteries were normal and that the left ventricular function was poor (ejection fraction, 21%). Myocardial biopsy obtained from left ventricle revealed interstitial fibrosis. After furosemide, digoxin and captril were administered with predonisolone (PSL), her symptoms gradually improved. Since the Holter monitoring showed nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, the doses of PSL and mexiletine were increased up to 20 mg and 300 mg daily, respectively. Unexpectedly, she was found dead in her hospital room in May, 1996. The postmortem findings of the heart revealed mild infiltration of inflammatory cells, predominantly lymphocytes, and plasma cells, and interstitial fibrosis, which were consistent with interstitial myocarditis. In this case ECG abnormalities preceded cardiac symptoms, which may suggest that myocarditis subclinically developed. Serum creatinine kinase levels had not been elevated throughout the entire course. While several cases of acute myocarditis associated with a flare of SLE have been reported, there were few cases regarding interstitial myocarditis that chronically progress and can be fatal. This case is thought to be suggestive of elucidating the pathogenesis of lupus myocarditis.
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PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus with interstitial myocarditis leading to sudden death]. 1043 53


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