The current study was designed to test the hypothesis that intramuscular (i.m.) injection of naked DNA leads to distribution of the injectate remote from the site of needle placement, a finding that might be expected to facilitate i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) promotes angiogenesis and vascular permeability. The extent to which VEGF may cause tissue edema in humans has not been established.
Objective: To evaluate patients undergoing VEGF gene transfer for evidence of lower-extremity edema.
Langenbecks Arch Chir Suppl Kongressbd
April 1999
Ascending varicophlebitis can cause pulmonary embolism by entering the deep venous system. Classification into four stages permits a differentiated therapeutic strategy: if the thrombus reaches or enters the deep venous system, immediate surgery consisting of crossectomy, resection of the saphenous vein, radical excision of all varicosed veins and ligature of insufficient perforating veins are indicated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Thromboangiitis obliterans (TAO), or Buerger's disease, a distinct form of vascular occlusive disease that afflicts the peripheral arteries of young smokers, is often characterized by an inexorable downhill course even in patients who discontinue smoking once a stage of critical limb ischemia associated with ulceration or gangrene is reached. As part of a phase I clinical trial to document the safety and efficacy of intramuscular gene transfer of naked plasmid DNA-encoding vascular endothelial growth factor (phVEGF165) in the treatment of critical limb ischemia, we treated TAO in 6 patients.
Methods: Seven limbs in 6 patients (3 men, 3 women; mean age, 33 years; range, 33 to 51 years) who satisfied the criteria for TAO and had signs or symptoms of critical limb ischemia were treated twice, 4 weeks apart, with 2 or 4 mg of phVEGF165, which was administered by direct intramuscular injection at 4 arbitrarily selected sites in the ischemic limb.
Clin Rheumatol
December 1998
Factor XIII (FXIII) links soluble fibrin monomers and collagen fibres to stable fibrin connections. Deficiency of FXIII, caused by dyspoiesis or increased consumption, results in a bleeding tendency and wound healing complications. Although the decrease of FXIII and successful replacement in patients with wound healing complications after surgery have been described by several authors, it is rarely considered that patients with autoimmune diseases, bleeding or healing complications may suffer from FXIII deficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCholesterol emboli are a known complication after arterial catheterization, arterial surgery, and after lysis with plasminogen activators. The clinical presentation of cholesterol emboli is variable ranging from a localized blue toe syndrome to a multisystem disease. The purpose of this case report is to report on a patient with blue toe syndrome and livedo reticularis occuring two months after initiation of low-dose oral anticoagulation with phenproucomon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelapsing polychondritis (RP) is an extremely rare multisystemic disease thought to be of autoimmune origin. In order to assess if RP is associated with anti-phospholipid antibodies (aPL), clinical data and sera of 21 patients with RP were collected in a multicentre study. Concentration of anti-cardiolipin antibodies (aCL) (IgG-, IgM- and IgA-isotypes), anti-phosphatidylserine-antibodies (aPS) (IgG- and IgM-isotypes) and anti-beta-2-glycoprotein I-antibodies (a beta 2 GPI) were measured by ELISA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Med Res
October 1997
A patient with osteolysis of the right hand after a metatarsal fracture at the age of 12 years is reported. The osteolysis progressed until the age of 21 years and was stable until the age of 59 years, when the patient died from a metastatic colon cancer. The article discusses the clinical, radiographic, and histologic features, and prognosis of idiopathic osteolysis (Gorham-Stout disease).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: In this study we describe clinical and immunogenetic findings in 62 unselected patients with relapsing polychondritis.
Methods: In a multicenter study, clinical data of 26 (41.9%) female and 36 (58.
Relapsing poly(peri)chondritis (RP) is a connective tissue disorder characterized by recurrent inflammatory episodes of cartilaginous structures and the involvement of special sense organs. The diagnostic criteria of McAdam 1976 include at least three of the following criteria: a) bilateral auricular chondritis, b) nonerosive sero-negative inflammatory polyarthritis, c) nasal chondritis, d) ocular inflammation, e) respiratory tract chondritis, f) audiovestibular chondritis. A cartilage biopsy according to these criteria is not mandatory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) is a common cause of retinal vascular visual loss second to diabetic retinopathy. Atherosclerotic risk factors are thought to affect vascular flow or cause retinal vascular wall abnormalities, thereby contributing to development of CRVO. Previous studies did not fully evaluate the degree of atherosclerotic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA twenty-five-year-old Caucasian man with Takayasu arteritis, who was formerly diagnosed as suffering from premature arteriosclerosis, is described. Necropsy disclosed involvement of the entire aorta and its major branches, the pulmonary arteries, the coronary arteries, the intramyocardial arteries, and the heart valves, a combination hitherto not described. Literature concerning heart involvement in Takayasu arteritis is reviewed, and the differential diagnosis is discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHaemopathologic changes were studied in 19 patients (13 male, six female, age 33-85 years, mean 56 years) with relapsing polychondritis (RP). Anaemia was found in eight, thrombocytopenia in two and splenomegaly in three patients. A total of 17 bone marrow biopsies were obtained from seven individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDtsch Med Wochenschr
November 1993
A 45-year-old man with AIDS was treated for a recurrence of cerebral toxoplasmosis with sulphadiazine, 4 g, and pyrimethamine, 75 mg, daily. Owing to a lack of appetite and dysphagia he drank rather little water during the first week of treatment. On the 13th day after starting the drugs he had bilateral renal colics and renal failure was diagnosed (serum creatinine 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFamilial defective apolipoprotein B-100 (FDB) is characterized by a decreased affinity of low density lipoprotein (LDL) to the LDL receptor resulting in a dominantly inherited increase of plasma LDL. It is postulated that FDB is caused by a G to A mutation at nucleotide 10,708 in exon 26 of the apoB gene creating a substitution of glutamine for arginine in amino acid 3500. The arginine(3500)-->glutamine mutation has been identified on the same haplotype of the apoB gene in several populations from North America and Europe, suggesting that it occurred on a single ancestral gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine the frequency of HLA class II antigens in Caucasian central European patients with relapsing polychondritis (RP).
Methods: HLA class I, DR, and DQ specificities were identified in 41 patients with RP, and the frequencies were compared with those in 204 healthy, unrelated control subjects. HLA typing was performed using the standard complement-dependent microcytotoxicity assay.
Relapsing polychondritis (RP) is a recurrent, chronic und rare disease of unknown etiology, characterized by inflammation of cartilaginous structures of the ears, nose, respiratory tract and joints. The association with HLA-DR4 and the occurrence of antibodies to type-II collagen and other autoantibodies suggest that an immunologic mechanism is involved in its pathogenesis. In about 30% of occurrences RP is associated with other rheumatic or autoimmune diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelapsing polychondritis is an infrequently diagnosed, though not necessarily uncommon, systemic disorder characterized by recurrent and potentially destructive inflammation of cartilaginous structures, the eye, and the audiovestibular and cardiovascular systems. Although dermal involvement occurs in approximately 25% of patients with relapsing polychondritis, in only few cases has a skin biopsy been obtained revealing lesions such as leukocytoclastic vasculitis, livedo reticularis, erythema nodosum or keratodermia blenorrhagicum. We describe a patient with relapsing polychondritis in whom a cutaneous polyarteritis nodosa preceded cartilage inflammation by 6 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on a 62-year-old man from Ethiopia with a large solitary primary hepatocellular carcinoma. In spite of using modern imaging techniques (ultrasound, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, hepatobiliary function scintigraphy) it was not possible to distinguish between hepatocellular carcinoma, focal nodular hyperplasia and adenoma. Surgery with histological examination was necessary to obtain the diagnosis of a hepatocellular carcinoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have combined the asymmetric polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with allele-specific PCR to detect a single point mutation. A set of two priming oligonucleotides and a third allele-specific primer were used to identify heterozygotes for a G to A mutation at nucleotide 10,708 in the apolipoprotein B (apo B) gene. The system requires neither restriction enzyme digestion nor allele-specific oligonucleotides as conventionally applied for allele-specific hybridization of slot blots.
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