Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A rare premature maturation of the carpal bones in combination with swelling and flexion contracture of the wrist is demonstrated in two cases of
juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
. The radiologically verified premature and
asymmetrical
maturation of the carpal bones was the earliest diagnostic sign in
juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
.
...
PMID:[Premature maturation of the carpal bones as an early diagnostic sign of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis]. 193 85
Structural scoliosis occurs more commonly in patients with juvenile chronic arthritis than in the normal population. We have reviewed 32 patients with both
juvenile arthritis
and a scoliosis and suggest that structural curves may arise from postural curves associated with
asymmetrical
involvement of lower limb joints.
...
PMID:Scoliosis in juvenile chronic arthritis. 381 44
Radiological changes depend on the age of onset as well as the pattern of disease present (Ansell & Kent 1977). Seronegative disease tends to be associated with modelling abnormalities of the epiphyses, loss of joint space and the late development of erosions, although an occasional polyarthritis following systemic disease has a very destructive arthritis and overall failure of growth. Pauciarticular disease is associated with growth anomalies of epiphyses and also metaphyses in
asymmetrical
fashion. In spondylitic children, enthesiopathies are marked and there is a high incidence of hip involvement. Seropositive
juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
shows a severe erosive arthropathy early, combined with minor growth changes, particularly bony overgrowth in the hands and feet in the early teens. The hallmark of the psoriatic is the asymmetry and, in a few cases, the destructive nature of asymmetrically involved joints.
...
PMID:Uncommon radiological features of chronic arthritis in childhood: a review. 703 33
The diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis in case of joint and muscular presentations is generally suggested by epidemiological factors. However, as a rule, laboratory testing is required to confirm the diagnosis. When considering the epidemiology of Lyme borreliosis in France, the only areas free of ticks infected by Borrelia burgdorgeri sl, are those close to the Mediterranean sea or at high altitude. The risk is greatest in the Alsace region. Exposure is particularly high among forest workers and people who use the countryside for their leisure activities. The likelihood of infection following a tick bite is difficult to assess; indeed, the bite site may remain unnoticed. A medical history of erythema migrans, if untreated, is a major diagnostic clue, although the association appears to be less consistent in France than in the US. Lyme arthritis generally arises apparently spontaneously. It is characteristically mono- or oligo-articular,
asymmetrical
, predominantly affects the knee, and has an intermittent course. Synovial cysts and enthesitis are common. Myositis is rare, polymorphic, and has been linked to other symptoms in the same localizations. Minor arthralgia and myalgia frequently occur, principally early in the course of the infection. It was suggested that sequels of the disease include so-called fibromyalgic syndromes. The principal differential diagnosis as far as arthritis is concerned, is made on spondylarthropathy and chronic
juvenile arthritis
. Rheumatoid arthritis is another pathology, although Lyme arthritis does sometimes evolve to chronicity.
...
PMID:[Clinical diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis in case of joint and muscular presentations]. 1736 83
A 46-year-old woman with a medical history of chronic
juvenile arthritis
with bilateral prosthetic hips presented with vulvoperineal ulcerations of 3 years' duration. There was no diarrhea or recent weight loss. Cutaneous examination showed
asymmetrical
vulvar edema of the labia minora and labia majora with deep and linear ulcerations having verrucous borders located on the inguinocrural regions and the buttocks fold (Figure 1). On physical examination there was bilateral limited mobilization of the hips. A biopsy specimen was taken from the border of the vulvar ulceration and histologic examination showed under a hyperplasic epidermis an epithelioid granuloma with multinucleated giant cells of the dermis without caseification. Laboratory analyses and results from chest x-ray were normal. Results for Koch bacilla in the spittle, microbiologic studies (staining for microorganisms and cultures), and tuberculin intradermoreaction were negative. There was no Crohn's disease aspect on colonoscopy, and there was normal small bowel enterography. Systematic intestinal biopsies were also with normal aspect. Based on the clinical data and granulomatous histologic characteristics, the diagnosis of metastatic Crohn's disease without digestive involvement was obtained. The patient was started on metronidazole 1 g/d. After 6 months of treatment, there was an almost-complete healing of ulcerations (Figure 2). Treatment was well-tolerated.
...
PMID:Vulvoperineal Crohn's disease: response to metronidazole. 2113 14
We here present 3 Venezuelan children with acute leukemia, initially diagnosed as idiopathic
juvenile arthritis
because of the occurrence of pain and joint swelling at the onset of disease. Joint pain was aggravated at night and the arthritis showed a migratory pattern, mainly affecting large joints in an
asymmetrical
fashion. One patient presented with persistent unilateral sacroiliac pain leading to a wrong diagnosis of spondyloarthritis. The elevation of acute phase reactants, disproportionate to the extent of joint disease, and marked elevation of serum lactate dehydrogenase, as well as characteristicradiological changes allowed the correct diagnosis in all cases. This combination of clinical manifestations, clinical laboratory findings, and joint and bone imaging should prompt the clinician to an early diagnosis of acute leukemia in children with arthritis.
...
PMID:[Acute leukemia in children erroneously diagnosed as idiopathic juvenile arthritis]. 2179 1
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
(JIA) is the most common chronic arthritis of childhood. Currently, it is characterized by seven categories. The enthesitis-related arthritis (ERA) category usually affects boys older than 6 years and presents with lower limb
asymmetrical
arthritis associated with enthesitis. Later, these children can develop inflammatory lumbosacral pain (IBP). These children are at risk of developing acute anterior uveitis. A recently devised disease activity index, Juvenile Spondyloarthropathy Disease Activity Index (JSpADA), has been validated in retrospective cohorts. The corner stone of treatment is NSAIDs, local corticosteroid injections, and exercise. Methotrexate and sulfasalazine can be used for peripheral arthritis while anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) agents are sometimes used to treat refractory enthesitis and sacroiliitis. Almost two third of patients with ERA have persistent disease and often have impairments in their quality of life. The presence of hip or ankle arthritis and a family history of spondyloarthropathy or polyarticular joint involvement at onset are associated with poorer prognosis.
...
PMID:Enthesitis-related arthritis. 2623 20