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Query: UNIPROT:P01889 (
ankylosing spondylitis
)
5,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Radiological sacroiliac (SI) changes were found in 3 patients, 2 with primary hyperparathyroidism (1 also with associated chondrocalcinosis) and 1 with osteomalacia. Osteomalacia was due to celiac disease. None of the 3 patients, all females, had a history of psoriasis,
urethritis
, iritis or chronic colitis. There was no renal function impairment. Peripheral joints were affected in the patient with associated condrocalcinosis. HLA B 27 was negative in all cases. Low back pain and vertebral stiffness were present in the patient with osteomalacia. A dramatic improvement in pain and stiffness ensued after vitamin D injections. These SI lesions, which may simulate
ankylosing spondylitis
, were attributable to subchondral bone changes related to the metabolic bone diseases. In the case of osteomalacia the SI lesions were predominantly on the right side, where there was a Looser's zone on the ischial ramus suggesting that pseudofractures could be a cause of SI changes. Metabolic osseous diseases such as osteomalacia or primary hyperparathyroidism should be investigated in cases of HLA B 27 negative radiological "sacroiliitis".
...
PMID:[Sacroiliac changes, HLA-B27 negative, in primary hyperparathyroidism and osteomalacia]. 46 71
Starting from index patients with confirmed Reiter's disease, a clinical and immunogenetic study was performed on 12 families in which there were further cases of arthritis. Altogether 51 family members were investigated and some information was available on 15 additional members. In most families there were two or three affected members in addition to the proband. The manifestations included acute polyarthritis (16 cases), which frequently followed
urethritis
or occurred as a complication of Yersinia or Shigella infection, and chronic arthritis (9 cases), either
ankylosing spondylitis
or peripheral arthritis. The latter characteristically had a remitting course, affecting mainly the large joints. Not a single subject had sero-positive rheumatoid arthritis. The HLA B27 gene was detected in all 12 families, and served as the main indicator of the familial trait for developing arthritis. In individual patients however, the association was not especially close, since there were members with this antigen who did not have arthritis in spite of a seemingly adequate triggering stimulus and others who had arthritis but not the antigen.
...
PMID:Family study of Reiter's disease and HLA B27 distribution. 88 57
Classification criteria for most of the disorders belonging to the spondylarthropathy group already exist. However, the spectrum of spondylarthropathy is wider than the sum of these disorders suggests. Seronegative oligoarthritis, dactylitis or polyarthritis of the lower extremities, heel pain due to enthesitis, and other undifferentiated cases of spondylarthropathy have been ignored in epidemiologic studies because of the inadequacy of existing criteria. In order to define classification criteria that also encompass patients with undifferentiated spondylarthropathy, we studied 403 patients with all forms of spondylarthropathy and 674 control patients with other rheumatic diseases. The diagnoses were based on the local clinical expert's opinion. The 403 patients included 168 with
ankylosing spondylitis
, 68 with psoriatic arthritis, 41 with reactive arthritis, 17 with inflammatory bowel disease and arthritis, and 109 with unclassified spondylarthropathy. Based on statistical analysis and clinical reasoning, we propose the following classification criteria for spondylarthropathy: inflammatory spinal pain or synovitis (asymmetric or predominantly in the lower limbs), together with at least 1 of the following: positive family history, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease,
urethritis
, or acute diarrhea, alternating buttock pain, enthesopathy, or sacroiliitis as determined from radiography of the pelvic region. These criteria resulted in a sensitivity of 87% and a specificity of 87%. The proposed classification criteria are easy to apply in clinical practice and performed well in all 7 participating centers. However, we regard them as preliminary until they have been further evaluated in other settings.
...
PMID:The European Spondylarthropathy Study Group preliminary criteria for the classification of spondylarthropathy. 193 Mar 11
As in other diseases of undetermined etiology, the diagnosis of
ankylosing spondylitis
(AS) and related spondyloarthropathies (SpA) is based on clinical and roentgenographic features. The current criteria for diagnosis of some of these diseases are too restricted, and do not recognize the existence of a much wider disease spectrum. For example, radiographically detected sacroiliitis is extremely frequent in AS, but may not be an obligate manifestation, especially in early or atypical forms of the disease. Arthritis involving the axial skeleton, including the sacroiliac joints, can be present in some patients without evidence of erosive disease roentgenographically. The disease spectrum of Reiter's syndrome has also been broadened considerably, and "incomplete" forms of Reiter's syndrome are observed much more commonly than the classical triad of arthritis, conjunctivitis, and
urethritis
. The term "B27-associated reactive arthritis" has been used in recent years to refer to SpA following enteric or urogenital infections, and the disease spectrum includes the clinical picture of typical Reiter's syndrome. The clinical spectrum of psoriatic SpA has been better clarified. Some of the less well defined B27-associated clinical syndromes include seronegative oligoarthritis, polyarthritis, or dactylitis ("sausagelike" toes) of the lower extremities, and heel pain caused by calcaneal (and tarsal) periostitis. These and other undifferentiated SpA have been ignored in previous epidemiological studies because of the inadequacy of the existing classification criteria. The European Spondylarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) has completed a study aimed at developing preliminary classification criteria for the whole group of SpA patients, with the specific intention of encompassing patients with undifferentiated SpA.
...
PMID:A wider spectrum of spondyloarthropathies. 225 5
Reiter's Syndrome (RS) is not common in children and adolescents. From 1982 to 1987 we have seen 13 pediatric patients (8 male and 5 female) with clinical manifestations that characterized RS. Age of onset was 13 years. Clinical findings have been arthritis (100%) involving the knee and ankle joints, heel pain (84%), lumbosacral pain (38%). One to three weeks before joint involvement, six patients (46%) complained of
urethritis
, 5 (38%) had enteritis and two patients had both. 46% of the patients had HLA-B27 antigen. Radiologic findings were sacroileitis in five patients and calcaneal spurs. All patients were treated with non-steroidal antiinflammatory therapy and, in general, there was a clinical remission in 1-3 months. Nevertheless, after 4 years of follow up, 2 patients had acute relapsing arthritis and 4 had chronic arthropathy. Three patients have developed secondary
ankylosing spondylitis
. RS is not all that infrequent in pediatric patients with joint involvements if one looks for
urethritis
, enteritis, eye involvement and cutaneous manifestations. The clinical course is favorable, but there might be some chronic or relapsing cases. Some patients can developed secondary
ankylosing spondylitis
. For that reason a prolonged follow up of these patients is necessary.
...
PMID:[Reiter's syndrome: considerations on the frequency and mid-term course of its juvenile form]. 323 76
The spondyloarthropathies of childhood present a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. It is important to differentiate this group of arthritides from JRA because the nature and frequency of extra-articular complications are quite different, as is the prognosis and the therapeutic approach. JAS is the prototype of the spondyloarthropathies and probably accounts for greater than 75 per cent of all children with diseases included in this category. Unlike adult-onset
ankylosing spondylitis
, axial skeleton disease (sacroiliac, lumbar spine) is infrequent at onset of JAS and may not develop for months or years after the onset of arthritis in peripheral joints (particularly those of the lower extremity). Enthesitis, the inflammation of the insertion of tendon, capsule, ligament, or fascia to bone, is an important clinical diagnostic feature of this group of diseases. Extra-articular disease, such as rash in psoriatic arthritis, erythema nodosum, weight loss of abdominal pain (in the arthropathies of inflammatory bowel disease),
urethritis
, conjunctivitis, or Reiter's syndrome help to differentiate these spondyloarthropathies from JAS. Laboratory studies are of little assistance in differentiating JRA from the spondyloarthropathies except that in the latter group, RF is absent and HLA-B27 is frequently present. The high frequency of ANA in JRA contrasts with its corresponding low frequency in JAS. The long-term follow-up of chronic arthritis in childhood has demonstrated the variable and evolving nature of these conditions, and stresses the importance of continually questioning the accuracy of the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Spondyloarthropathies of childhood. 376 52
Spondyloarthritis (Sp) is newly defined as arthritis that is clinically, pathologically, and genetically related to and predisposed to
ankylosing spondylitis
(AS) and Reiter's syndrome (RS) rather than to rheumatoid arthritis (RA). A diagnosis of Sp does not necessarily imply arthritis of the spine and does not depend on the demonstration of roentgenographic sacroiliitis that, in this conceptualization, is recognized not as the essential hallmark, but rather merely as a diagnostic "way station" on a continuum of disease, which may (but need not necessarily) begin with RS or be complicated during its course by AS or RS. Spondyloarthritis is distinctively characterized morphologically and clinically by disproportionate inflammation at the entheses, the sites of attachment of tendons and ligaments to bone. Family history or presence of enthesopathic pain, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, uveitis, recurrent
urethritis
, prostatitis or cervicitis, keratoderma blennorrhagicum, HLA-B27, and asymmetric pauciarticular lower lower extremity arthritis without rheumatoid factor or rheumatoid nodules suggests a diagnosis of Sp rather than RA.
...
PMID:Spondyloarthritis and enthesopathy. Current concepts in rheumatology. 621 89
Fifty-one North Indian patients with
ankylosing spondylitis
(AS) are described with mean age of onset 21.2 years and male to female ratio of 16:1. AS began with peripheral arthritis in 47%, low back pain in 41%, acute anterior uveitis in 10%, and heel pain in 2% of the patients. 76% of 51 patients had one of the extra-axial features of AS: peripheral arthritis (61%), heel pain (24%), anterior uveitis (22%),
urethritis
(12%), kidney disease (10%), mucosal ulcerations (6%), aortic incompetence (4%), and apical pulmonary fibrosis (4%). A majority (71%) of the patients with peripheral arthritis had mono- or oligoarthritis affecting mainly the lower limb joints. Two patients had coexistent rheumatoid arthritis also. HLA-B27 antigen was detected in 48 (94%) of 51 patients compared with 7 (6%) of 118 controls (relative risk 254; Fisher's exact p = 3.49(-29]. On comparing patients with juvenile onset AS and patients with adult onset disease we found peripheral arthritis to be more frequent at the beginning and during the course of disease in the former.
...
PMID:Ankylosing spondylitis in North India: a clinical and immunogenetic study. 661 Nov 38
146 men with rheumatoid factor-negative (sero-negative) arthritis, i.e., 97 patients with
ankylosing spondylitis
, 36 patients with Reiter's syndrome, and 13 patients with reactive arthritis, were examined for infections of the urogenital tract by following recently established criteria. 74 patients (50.7%) had infections of the male adnexes: 3 patients suffered from balanitis, 14 patients from
urethritis
, 49 patients from prostatitis, 1 patient from epididymitis, and 7 patients from urinary tract infection. Balanitis and
urethritis
were almost exclusively associated with Reiter's syndrome. In 37 of 97 patients with
ankylosing spondylitis
, a urogenital tract infection, mainly a prostatitis (31 patients), was detected. The microorganisms isolated most frequently from patients suffering from
urethritis
and prostatitis, were Chlamydia trachomatis and Ureaplasma urealyticum.
...
PMID:Rheumatoid factor-negative arthritis, especially ankylosing spondylitis, and infections of the male urogenital tract. 665 36
Thirty male patients with sexually acquired reactive arthritis (SARA) have been studied at the time of their initial presentation and thereafter. Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from the urethral exudate of 9 (36.0%) of the 25 patients from whom urethral specimens were taken, and elevated titres of IgM antibody of C. trachomatis were detected in 11 (36.6%) of the 30 initial sera. Thirteen (43.3%) of the patients has a positive urethral culture and/or elevated titre of IgM antibody, and it is therefore suggested that 43.3% of these patients suffered an acute chlamydial infection at or near the time of the onset of their joint disease. The demonstration of 4-fold or greater rises and/or falls in IgM antibody titre (8 patients) and IgG antibody titre (6 patients) in a group of 15 men studied throughout the course of their disease strongly supports this conclusion. A positive urethral culture and/or raised titre of IgM serum antibody was also detected in 25 (50%) of 50 men with uncomplicated nongonococcal
urethritis
(NGU), suggesting that the prevalence of chlamydial infections in the 2 conditions is similar. Titres of IgG serum antibody to C. trachomatis were, however, significantly higher in patients with SARA than in those with NGU or other rheumatic diseases, and in healthy controls. The geometric mean titres (GMT) of IgG serum antibody in patients with SARA, NGU, rheumatoid arthritis,
ankylosing spondylitis
, systemic lupus erythematosus, and in healthy controls were 1:47.5, 1:8.6, 1:2.2, 1;2.2, 1:3.5, and 1:1.4, respectively. These findings suggest that an exaggerated antibody response to acute infection by C. trachomatis may be an important factor in the development of SARA in some but not all patients.
...
PMID:Evidence of Chlamydia trachomatis infection in sexually acquired reactive arthritis. 689 52
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