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)

Five hundred and sixty intact skeletons and several thousand disarticulated vertebrae have been examined with special reference to spinal fusion. In period they ranged from a 21st dynasty Egyptian mummy to a mid-19th century skeleton. Osteophytes were found in about half of the specimens, as reported previously. Fifteen skeletons with extensive blocks of spinal fusion were also identified. Sacroiliitis was present in two, but the asymmetrical spinal disease and peripheral joint changes suggested Reiter's disease or psoriatic spondylitis rather than ankylosing spondylitis. The remaining 13 had typical features of Forrestier's disease, and extraspinal findings indicative of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) were also common. A review of the available literature suggests that many palaeopathological specimens previously reported as anklylosing spondylitis are examples of DISH or other seronegative spondylarthropathies. The antiquity and palaeopathology of AS needs reappraisal.
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PMID:Palaeopathology of spinal osteophytosis, vertebral ankylosis, ankylosing spondylitis, and vertebral hyperostosis. 388 15

Two cases of inflammatory joint disease during attacks of aseptic palmo-plantar pustulosis are reported. Both patients had vertebral involvement: disco-vertebral erosions at several levels in one case and spondylitis and intersomatic ossification in the other. One patient also had sacroiliitis and involvement of the anterior thoracic skeleton (costoclavicular joints, costal cartilages ans xiphoid) confirmed by bone scintigraphy. The relation between this cutaneous-articular syndrome and other inflammatory joint diseases, especially ankylosing spondylitis and psoriatic arthropathy are discussed. The very unusual involvement of the anterior thoracic skeleton, the coexistence of aseptic palmo-plantar pustulosis and absence of antigens HLA B27, B13 and B17 suggest a similarity to the pustular osteoarthritis recently described by Japanese workers who grouped this condition with other spondylarthropathies.
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PMID:[Vertebral and thoracic osteoarticular manifestations in palmoplantar pustulosis]. 391 25

Ankylosing spondylitis (Marie Strumpell's disease) is a chronic inflammatory disease which principally affects the axial skeleton. The earliest radiographic sign in 90% of the patients with ankylosing spondylitis is a bilateral sacroiliitis. Up to 3% of the patients with ankylosing spondylitis will not present with the initial sacroiliitis. A case is reported of a patient with an atypical presentation. The patient's radiographic presentation consisted of syndesmophytosis without sacroiliac involvement. However, due to the patient's symptoms, radiographic appearance, and laboratory studies, the diagnosis of an atypical ankylosing spondylitis was chosen.
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PMID:Atypical presentation of ankylosing spondylitis: a case study. 400 69

Computed tomography (CT) was compared with plain radiography and quantitative sacroiliac (SI) scintigraphy in 28 patients with early ankylosing spondylitis (AS) of less than or equal to 10 years duration. Compared with conventional radiography, CT improved delineation of the SI joints and revealed more abnormalities and higher grades of sacroiliitis; this was significant in patients with early AS of less than or equal to 3 years duration. Quantitative sacroiliac scintigraphy showed higher SI joint: sacrum ratios of radioisotope uptake in patients with AS compared with controls. However, its diagnostic usefulness was limited by the frequency of inconsistent results and the lack of specificity. CT examination of the SI joints may be a useful adjunct in the diagnosis of early AS.
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PMID:Computed tomography in the diagnosis of early ankylosing spondylitis. 402 89

The frequent development of sacroiliitis and ankylosing spondylitis (AS) in patients suffering from Reiter's Syndrome (RS) has been stressed by a number of authors. This study was designed to ascertain the frequency of these problems in our RS patients, whether they were related to other clinical features of RS and what was the extent of the resulting disability. Fifty-five patients (50 men and 5 women) with RS with a mean duration of 9.3 years were assessed radiologically to determine the prevalence of sacroiliitis and thoracolumbar syndesmophyte formation. These radiological findings were correlated with HLA-B27, clinical features and functional status. Sacroiliitis was found in 22 patients (40%) but was mild in severity, frequently asymmetrical and very rarely associated with syndesmophyte formation. Sacroiliitis occurred significantly more commonly in patients with iritis and/or a prolonged disease duration (p less than 0.05) but although it was also found more frequently in HLA-B27 positive patients this was not significant (0.1 greater than p greater than 0.05). Some restriction in back movement was observed in 31 patients (56.3%) but only two patients satisfied New York criteria for AS and just one was functionally impaired by his back disease. Although the frequent finding of sacroiliitis in RS may provide an interesting insight into the interrelationship between RS and AS, our study shows that this sacroiliitis is commonly asymptomatic and does not provide a problem in management.
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PMID:The functional significance of sacroiliitis and ankylosing spondylitis in Reiter's syndrome. 408 61

Ninety-two patients who satisfied the criteria proposed by Kellgren for the diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis were re-evaluated by clinical, radiological and laboratory parameters after an average length of illness of 18.7 years. The following associated clinical lesions were studied: aortic insufficiency 8%, heart block 3%, iritis 11%, and other associated lesions. Long-term effects of x-ray therapy were evaluated by comparing irradiated and non-irradiated patients; no significant difference was noted in the clinical course of these two treatment groups. On serum protein electrophoresis no characteristic dysproteinemia was demonstrated; in no instance was there a marked hypergammaglobulinemia. Test results for rheumatoid factor, antinuclear factor and antithyroglobulin were all within the range expected for a normal population. In addition to bilateral sacroiliitis, several other characteristic radiological lesions, such as anterior spondylitis, were present in a high percentage of cases. It is suggested that the diagnostic criteria proposed by Kellgren, although useful, should be enlarged and refined.
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PMID:Ankylosing spondylitis: a late re-evaluation of 92 cases. 594 93

Sacroiliac uptake ratios based on 99Tcm methylene diphosphonate images were calculated in 14 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, 23 patients with non-specific backache, 33 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis 19, Crohn's disease 14) and 33 control subjects. Twenty-eight of the control subjects were patients referred from a breast cancer clinic. In the control subjects, and in 20 patients with inflammatory bowel disease who did not have back pain, sacroiliac ratios decreased significantly with increasing age (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01 respectively). Sacroiliac uptake ratios were significantly higher in ankylosing spondylitis than in patients with non-specific backache. Seven of the 14 patients with ankylosing spondylitis had higher sacroiliac ratios than any recorded in the control subjects. Eleven patients with inflammatory bowel disease had abnormally high sacroiliac uptake ratios; ten of these patients had back pain. Increased sacroiliac joint uptake in such patients may reflect early sacroiliitis. No relationship was detected between sacroiliac uptake and the activity of the bowel disease. Sacroiliac uptake ratios were significantly higher in the inflammatory bowel disease patients suffering from back pain than in age and sex matched patients with (a) inflammatory bowel disease but no back pain or (b) non-specific backache.
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PMID:Sacroiliac joint uptake ratios in inflammatory bowel disease: relationship to back pain and to activity of bowel disease. 621 68

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.
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PMID:Spondyloarthritis and enthesopathy. Current concepts in rheumatology. 621 89

This study attempts to reconcile the apparent differences in the reported frequency of ankylosing spondylitis and radiological sacroiliitis in HLA-B27 positive individuals. Pelvic radiographs from 125 Busselton subjects were mixed with 81 other films selected to illustrate the possible range of sacroiliac changes and were graded by observers who were involved in 2 of the conflicting studies and by a 3rd independent observer. Concordance was high for advanced bilateral disease but not for unilateral and milder changes. Variation between observers and the interpretation of sacroiliac radiographs is sufficiently large to account for much of the disagreement between frequency estimates.
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PMID:Observer variation in grading sacroiliac radiographs in HLA-B27 positive individuals. 622 40

To evaluate clinical usefulness of quantitative sacroiliac scintigraphy (QSS) in detecting sacroiliitis, we used a modified, pixel by pixel technique for calculating sacroiliac joint/sacrum uptake ratios (sacroiliac joint index - SII). We studied 90 controls, 18 selected patients with active sacroiliitis, 2 ankylosing spondylitis patients with completely ankylosed sacroiliac joints, 14 patients with nonspecific low back pain and 5 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. In the controls, we found that the SII decreases with increasing age (P less than 0.001) and is higher in males than in females (P less than 0.005). In the patients with active sacroiliitis, 9 out of 14 older than 30 had an abnormal SII; 3 of these patients showed no radiographic or CT abnormalities of the sacroiliac joints. None of the 4 patients with sacroiliitis under 30 years of age had values which fell out of the normal range for their age and sex. Only 1 of the 14 patients with non-inflammatory low back pain had an abnormally high SII. A borderline SII was found in 1 of the 5 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. QSS may be useful in detecting active sacroiliitis, sometimes even before the occurrence of radiologic abnormalities. However, because of its low sensitivity, its clinical usefulness is limited, especially in patients under 30 years of age.
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PMID:The value of quantitative sacroiliac scintigraphy in detection of sacroiliitis. 623 86


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