Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sulphasalazine, devised by Dr Nana Svartz for the treatment of 'infective polyarthritis', has been used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease for more than 40 years. Many controlled trials have shown that sulphasalazine 4g daily will induce remissions in between one-half and three-quarters of patients with acute attacks of ulcerative colitis. When given in a dosage of 2g daily it will prevent relapses in quiescent colitis. Relapses are 5 times more likely in untreated patients. It is less effective in Crohn's disease, where it exerts only a transient benefit in patients with active colonic disease and fails to prevent relapse or recurrence. Sulphasalazine is absorbed from the small intestine, re-excreted in bile and carried to the colon, where its azo bond is split by bacteria to release sulphapyridine, which is absorbed and is responsible for most of the drug's side effects, and 5-aminosalicylic acid, which is the active therapeutic moiety of the drug and exerts a beneficial topical action on the colonic mucosa. Side effects are common but are mainly reversible and not serious. Those related to high concentrations of sulphapyridine and to poor acetylation of the drug include gastrointestinal intolerance, malaise, headache, arthralgia, drug fever, effects on red blood cells and reversible male infertility. More serious, idiosyncratic side effects are skin rashes, leucopenia and agranulocytosis. Rarely, neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, polyarteritis, pulmonary fibrosis, a lupus-like syndrome and haemorrhagic colitis are produced. It is possible to desensitise most patients with drug-induced skin rashes. A number of less toxic alternatives to sulphasalazine have been devised and are undergoing trial. They either convey 5-aminosalicylic acid in a coated tablet to the colon or, when conjugated to a non-toxic carrier, release 5-aminosalicylic acid by bacterial cleavage there. Sulphasalazine remains a most useful drug in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease after 40 years of use.
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PMID:Sulphasalazine: a review of 40 years' experience. 287 47

Sulphasalazine-induced Raynaud's phenomenon is reported in a patient who showed no other features of a drug-induced lupus syndrome. The vascular disturbance disappeared when the drug was withdrawn on 3 occasions. A simple technique for assessing the circulatory abnormality in Raynaud's phenomenon is described.
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PMID:Raynaud's phenomenon induced by sulphasalazine. 610 5

A case is reported of lupus syndrome in a 13-year-old girl with ulcerative colitis treated with sulphasalazine. She had antibodies to nuclear factor and double-stranded DNA. The clinical pattern resembled drug-induced systemic lupus erythematosus and has resolved since her sulphasalazine was discontinued. Sulphasalazine-induced lupus syndrome has never been reported in a child. The history illustrates the role of sulphasalazine in the development of this syndrome.
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PMID:Sulphasalazine-induced systemic lupus erythematosus in a child. 613 11

Sulphasalazine is a commonly used second line agent in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and other inflammatory joint diseases and is reported to be one of the least toxic of this group of drugs. Recently a severe allergic reaction and cases of lupus-like disease have been described in patients with RA after treatment with sulphasalazine. We describe five patients, all with inflammatory arthropathy who developed cutaneous vasculitis, lupus-like disease or atypical serology after exposure to sulphasalazine. Three of four cases investigated were found to have the slow acetylator phenotype. These reactions can complicate the diagnosis and delay discontinuation of the drug. Moreover, present guidelines for the diagnosis of drug-induced lupus do not apply to the majority of patients with sulphasalazine-induced lupus.
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PMID:Sulphasalazine-induced autoimmune abnormalities in patients with rheumatic disease. 862 17