Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01889 (ankylosing spondylitis)
5,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Infections can cause or exacerbate the rheumatic diseases in several ways, including immune cross-reactivity between bacterial heat shock proteins and similar proteins in normal human tissues. This may lead to autoimmunity in rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus. In addition, increased activation of the gene regulating the synthesis of a heat shock protein has been found in scleroderma fibroblasts. As an infection-induced model for other rheumatic diseases, rheumatic fever (RF), with its well-established link to prior group A streptococcal infection, will be revisited. The lessons learned from RF and other rheumatic diseases directly linked to infection will be applied to ankylosing spondylitis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's syndrome and polymyositis, for which a mounting body of circumstantial evidence suggests a probable infectious cause. The interplay of genetic susceptibility and infection with particular organisms and the implications of this new information for present and future therapy of the rheumatic diseases will also be presented.
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PMID:The role of infections in the rheumatic diseases: molecular mimicry between bacterial and human stress proteins? 201 3

Infection due to yersinia enterocolitica is a common antecedent illness in patients with reactive arthritis in Scandinavia, but appears to be less frequent in other countries. In order to examine the frequency of yersinia infection in patients with seronegative arthritis in Australia we examined 22 patients, 15 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and seven with Reiter's syndrome (RS). A sensitive ELISA assay was used to detect serum antibodies to the most common serotypes. Six patients (29%) had positive yersinia serology, all were HLA B27 and four had a history of diarrhea preceding the onset of their disease. Four patients with positive yersinia serology had AS and two had RS. Antibodies were directed against Y. enterocolitica biotype 0:3 in three cases, Y. enterocolitica 0:9 in two cases and Y. enterocolitica 0:8 in one subject. Twenty-nine control subjects (13 HLA B27) had no serum antibodies to yersinia. The results of this study indicate that preceding yersinia infection occurs in a significant (p less than 0.05; compared to controls) proportion of patients with HLA B27 related seronegative arthropathies.
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PMID:Seronegative arthritis associated with serological evidence of Yersinia infection in Australia. 278 9

An association between inflammatory bowel disease and enteroarthritis and the spondyloarthropathies has been known of for a while. Within the past few years, ileocolonic studies have expanded the diagnostic accuracy of asymptomatic gut inflammation, and it now seems evident that chronic gut inflammation is either associated with or is even the cause of chronicity of peripheral arthritis and the development of ankylosing spondylitis. This situation, previously studied in adult patients, now appears also to affect pediatric patients with spondyloarthropathies, who seem to have similar genetic and inflammatory bowel findings. Chronic infection in the gut has been demonstrated in Whipple's disease. Analogously, infection or immunologic aberrations probably contribute to chronicity in other forms of spondyloarthropathy. Infection also might be involved, at least partly in attacks of uveitis, but activation of immunologic mechanisms can mediate tissue destruction during eye inflammation.
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PMID:Enteropathic arthritis, Whipple's disease, juvenile spondyloarthropathy, and uveitis. 752 Jul 27

The sacrum is a structure that is imaged by both general and subspecialty radiologists. A wide variety of disease processes can involve the sacrum either focally or as part of a systemic process. Plain radiographs, although limited in evaluation of the sacrum, should be carefully examined when abnormalities of the sacrum are suspected. Cross-sectional imaging, particularly computed tomography and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, plays a crucial role in identification, localization, and characterization of sacral lesions. Congenital lesions of the sacrum, including sacral agenesis and meningocele, are optimally imaged with MR. The most common sacral neoplasm is metastatic disease. Primary neoplasms of the sacrum, which include giant cell tumor, chordoma, and teratoma, are infrequent. Infection of the sacrum or sacroiliac joint is most often due to contiguous spread from a suppurative focus. A wide variety of arthritic disorders such as ankylosing spondylitis and osteoarthritis can involve the sacroiliac joints as part of a localized or systemic process. Sacral fractures related to acute trauma or repetitive stress are difficult to diagnose and treat. Knowledge of these abnormalities and familiarity with the imaging of these processes will allow radiologists of all subspecialties to contribute to the diagnosis and management of sacral disorders.
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PMID:The sacrum: pathologic spectrum, multimodality imaging, and subspecialty approach. 1115 46

The traditional approach to the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has been the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs usually in combination with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) such as hydroxychloroquine, gold, sulfasalazine, methotrexate, leflunomide or cyclosporin. Each of these DMARDs has its own distinct toxicities but has also been shown to be effective in reducing signs and symptoms of disease and to some extent, reduce radiological progression. Within the past 10 years, the combination of several traditional DMARDs has been shown to have increased efficacy over monotherapy without a significant increase in toxicity in a majority of studies. Recently, the US Food and Drug Administration has approved infliximab, a chimeric monoclonal antibody to tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha in combination with methotrexate, for the treatment of signs and symptoms of RA, delay of radiological progression of disease and improvement of physical function while anakinra, an interleukin-1 receptor antagonist, has been approved for the treatment of the signs and symptoms of RA either as monotherapy or in combination with methotrexate. Etanercept is the first biological response modifier approved for use in RA in the US. Double-blind, randomised controlled studies have shown etanercept to be effective therapy in patients with RA who have had inadequate response to DMARDs, in combination with methotrexate, and as early monotherapy. Similar results were seen in juvenile and psoriatic arthritis in DMARD nonresponders. Open-label studies have shown efficacy in adult Still's disease, ankylosing spondylitis, progressive systemic sclerosis, Wegener's granulomatosis and chronic uveitis. Safety issues are a concern because of the ubiquitous role of TNF. To date the only consistent adverse event seen with etanercept has been injection site reactions. Infections occur at the same rate and with the same frequency as the placebo population. There should be caution, however, with using etanercept in patients with a serious infection, or recurrent infections or patients with untreated or latent tuberculosis. As of yet there has not been seen an increase of malignancies. Rare neurological and haematological events have been noted. Etanercept has been a significant addition to the armamentarium of medications for the treatment of RA, juvenile and psoriatic arthritis. Preliminary data show that it may be well tolerated and effective in other rheumatic diseases in which there is over production of TNFalpha.
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PMID:Safety and efficacy of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic agents: focus on the benefits and risks of etanercept. 1194 14

Infection of the spine is a rare but serious cause of back pain. Conventional radiographs remain the initial screening procedure. Typically two adjacent vertebral bodies and the intervening disk space are affected. Early in the course of the disease, radiographs may be normal or nondiagnostic. Magnetic resonance imaging or radionuclide bone scan will establish pathology centered in the vertebral body. Because of the ability to image soft tissues, magnetic resonance imaging is particularly helpful in detecting paravertebral and extradural abscesses. Four other conditions may mimic infectious spondylitis: degenerative disk disease associated with Modic type 1 changes, pseudoarthrosis in ankylosing spondylitis, dialysis spondyloarthropathy, and neuropathic spondyloarthropathy. Advanced imaging studies in combination with radiographs and clinical information are essential in determining the correct diagnosis.
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PMID:Infectious spondylitis. 1566 17

Since the year 2000, Danish rheumatologists have been collecting data on a routine basis in the nationwide DANBIO registry, which includes all rheumatologic patients receiving biological drugs. Demographic data, markers of disease activity, current treatment, serious and non-serious adverse events and reasons for discontinuation are registered at each visit either on paper forms or on-line. By June 2005, approximately 3000 treatment courses (18,000 visits) were in the registry, corresponding to close to 90% of eligible patients. Rheumatoid arthritis was the most prevalent diagnosis (75%) followed by ankylosing spondylitis (11%) and psoriatic arthritis (7%). Infections occurred in 43% of the treatment series.
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PMID:DANBIO: a nationwide registry of biological therapies in Denmark. 1627 9

The objective of the study was to investigate potential triggering events for the onset of ankylosing spondylitis (AS). A large retrospective population survey of 1,080 AS patients was carried out by multi-faceted questionnaire. A nested case-control study compared the cohort to 102 patients with lumbar disc prolapse. Participants with AS had a mean age of 49.8 years, mean age of disease onset was 25.2 years and 63% of the cohort were male. Seventy-nine per cent knew they were human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-B27-positive, and a further 12.5% were unaware of their HLA-B27 status. Infections were relatively common in the 3 months leading to the first symptoms, 4.6% reporting gastrointestinal infection, 2.5% reporting urinary tract infection and 2.6% respiratory infection. Five per cent reported heavy physical activity in the 3 months prior to the onset of symptoms, 4.2% emotional stressors and 3.1% work stressors. Injury and surgery were less commonly reported (1.7 and 0.7%, respectively). Pregnancy was reported by 7.4% of the female participants. When the 12 months leading up to the first symptoms was compared to the 12 months previous to that, work stressors (OR 1.5), and pregnancy (OR 2.5) infection (OR 1.5 to 1.8) were significantly more common closer to disease onset. Infection and work stressors are potential triggers for the onset of AS; however, low rates suggest they are only a small part of the environmental milieu that combines with a genetic predisposition to cause the development of this chronic inflammatory disease.
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PMID:Infection and work stress are potential triggers of ankylosing spondylitis. 1663 12

The objective is to report a case of atypical acute infectious mononucleosis in a juvenile ankylosing spondylitis patient who was treated with infliximab. A 20-year-old man was hospitalized for the evaluation of lymphadenopathy and systemic symptoms. His symptoms developed at the eighth week of the infliximab treatment and he required hospitalization. Lymph node biopsy was performed and he was diagnosed as atypical infectious mononucleosis (absence of fever, pharyngitis, lymphocytosis and negative atypical lymphocytosis on blood smear). Infections have become major concerns in patients treated with TNF-blocking agents. In theoretical base, it is not surprising as TNF-alpha has a crucial role in the body's defense against both bacterial and viral invasion. Blocking the action of TNF may also change the course of the disease and could lead to a delay in the diagnosis. TNF-alpha-blocking treatment may mask the typical symptoms of infectious mononucleosis and atypical cases should be included in the differential diagnosis of lymphadenopathy in patients receiving anti-TNF-alpha agents.
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PMID:Atypical infectious mononucleosis in a patient receiving tumor necrosis factor alpha inhibitory treatment. 1903 55

Stiffness is a relatively uncommon complication after total knee arthroplasty. It has been defined as a painful limitation in the range of movement (ROM). Its pathogenesis is still unclear even if some risk factors have been identified. Patient-related conditions may be difficult to treat. Preoperative ROM is the most important risk factor, but an association with diabetes, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and general pathologies such as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis has been demonstrated. Moreover, previous surgery may be an additional cause of an ROM limitation. Postoperative factors include infections, arthrofibrosis, heterotrophic ossifications, and incorrect rehabilitation protocol. Infections represent a challenging problem for the orthopaedic surgeon, and treatment may require long periods of antibiotics administration. However, it is widely accepted that an aggressive rehabilitation protocol is mandatory for a proper ROM recovery and to avoid the onset of arthrofibrosis and heterotrophic ossifications. Finally, surgery-related factors represent the most common cause of stiffness; they include errors in soft-tissue balancing, component malpositioning, and incorrect component sizing. Although closed manipulation, arthroscopic and open arthrolysis have been proposed, they may lead to unpredictable results and incomplete ROM recovery. Revision surgery must be proposed in the case of well-documented surgical errors. These operations are technically demanding and may be associated with high risk of complications; therefore they should be accurately planned and properly performed.
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PMID:Stiffness in total knee arthroplasty. 1958 68


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