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2.
Rev. bras. reumatol ; 57(6): 605-609, Nov.-Dec. 2017.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-899463

ABSTRACT

Abstract The first International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference was held in 1994. There have been suggestions about the nomenclature of systemic vasculitis. Important categories were added to the classification of vasculitis, and many changes were made for disease names in the second Chapel Hill Consensus Conference 2012, which were not included in the Chapel Hill Consensus Conference 1994. The new nomenclature was introduced instead of being referred to by many names such as Churg-Strauss and Wegener"s. New categories such as Behçet"s and Cogan etc. were also added. These people are honored by the classification. They contribute to science through their case studies, scientific articles, and observations. This article reviews only eponyms present in the current classification of vasculitis. The aim of this paper is to give information about scientists mentioned in the classification of vasculitis.


Resumo A primeira International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference (CHHC) ocorreu em 1994. Fizeram-se sugestões sobre a nomenclatura das vasculites sistêmicas. Na segunda CHHC, 2012, adicionaram-se importantes categorias à classificação da vasculite e fizeram-se várias mudanças em nomes de doenças que não estavam incluídas na CHCC 1994. Introduziu-se uma nova nomenclatura em vez de se usarem nomes como Churg-Strauss e Wegener. Também foram adicionadas novas categorias, como de Behçet e Cogan etc. Essas pessoas são homenageadas pela classificação. Elas contribuíram para a ciência com seus estudos de caso, artigos científicos e observações. Este artigo analisa apenas epônimos presentes na classificação atual das vasculites. O objetivo é prestar informações sobre os cientistas mencionados na classificação das vasculites.


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Vasculitis/history
3.
Rev Bras Reumatol Engl Ed ; 57(6): 605-609, 2017.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29173695

ABSTRACT

The first International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference was held in 1994. There have been suggestions about the nomenclature of systemic vasculitis. Important categories were added to the classification of vasculitis, and many changes were made for disease names in the second Chapel Hill Consensus Conference 2012, which were not included in the Chapel Hill Consensus Conference 1994. The new nomenclature was introduced instead of being referred to by many names such as Churg-Strauss and Wegener"s. New categories such as Behçet"s and Cogan etc. were also added. These people are honored by the classification. They contribute to science through their case studies, scientific articles, and observations. This article reviews only eponyms present in the current classification of vasculitis. The aim of this paper is to give information about scientists mentioned in the classification of vasculitis.


Subject(s)
Vasculitis/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
4.
Emerg Infect Dis ; 23(8): 1400-1403, 2017 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28726606

ABSTRACT

In England, UK, hospital admissions caused by bacterial infections associated with opioid use have increased annually since 2012, after 9 years of decline, mirroring trends in overdose deaths. The increase occurred among persons of both sexes and in all age groups and suggests preventive measures need reviewing.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis/epidemiology , Dermatitis/etiology , Opioid-Related Disorders/complications , Opioid-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Soft Tissue Infections/epidemiology , Soft Tissue Infections/etiology , Vasculitis/epidemiology , Vasculitis/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Dermatitis/history , England/epidemiology , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitalization , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Soft Tissue Infections/history , Substance Abuse, Intravenous/complications , Substance Abuse, Intravenous/epidemiology , Vasculitis/history , Young Adult
5.
Neurol Clin ; 34(4): 887-917, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27720000

ABSTRACT

The epidemiology of vasculitis has witnessed extraordinary advances in the past decade influenced by the worldwide increased recognition and accurate classification and diagnosis of the vasculitides, and insights brought by genome-wide association studies and other genetic investigations that contribute to the understanding of the heritable factors of some of the disorders. This article reviews the current knowledge of the epidemiology of vasculitides in different global regions.


Subject(s)
Vasculitis/epidemiology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Nervous System Diseases/drug therapy , Nervous System Diseases/epidemiology , Nervous System Diseases/history , Vasculitis/drug therapy , Vasculitis/history
6.
Postgrad Med J ; 91(1082): 665-9, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26489766

ABSTRACT

In 1925, Sir Thomas Horder, a leading physician of his day, gave a lecture, published in this journal, entitled 'Some cases of pyrexia without physical signs'. The paper highlighted what was already a familiar clinical presentation "which taxes our resources to the utmost". Fast-forward through 90 years of careful clinical description, technological innovation in diagnosis and treatment, emergent infections, novel diagnoses, demographic shifts, and radical changes in the health economy. Sir Thomas would find certain aspects familiar, and others revolutionary, in the differential diagnosis and management of the 21st century patient with pyrexia of unknown origin (PUO). Within high-income settings, the proportion of cases due to infection has declined, albeit unevenly. The era of untreated HIV, and the consequences of iatrogenic intervention and immunosuppression, led to Durack and Street's subclassification of the condition in the early 1990 s into classic, nosocomial, neutropenic and HIV-associated PUO. Shifts towards ambulatory care have driven a change in the definition of many diseases. An era of observant clinicians, who lent their names to eponymous syndromes, followed by meticulous serological, genetic and clinicopathological correlation, generated a battery of diagnoses that, along with malignancy, form a large proportion of diagnoses in more recent clinical care. In the current era, universal access to cross-sectional imaging and an infinite array of laboratory tests has undermined the attention paid to history and examination. In some areas of the clinical assessment, such as assessing the fever pattern, this shift is supported by research evidence. The issues that need to be addressed in the next 90 years of technological innovation, information sharing and health service transformation are likely to include: transcriptomic approaches to diagnosis; the place of positron emission tomography (PET) in the diagnostic pathway; the optimal management of high ferritin states; and the most cost-effective diagnostic environment, in the face of this era of specialisation and fragmentation of care. In the meantime, this review covers some important early 21st century lessons to be shared in avoiding diagnostic pitfalls and choosing empirical therapy.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Familial Mediterranean Fever/diagnosis , Fever of Unknown Origin/etiology , Medical History Taking/methods , Physical Examination/methods , Vasculitis/diagnosis , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Diagnosis, Differential , Familial Mediterranean Fever/complications , Familial Mediterranean Fever/drug therapy , Familial Mediterranean Fever/history , Fever of Unknown Origin/diagnosis , Fever of Unknown Origin/drug therapy , Fever of Unknown Origin/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Physical Examination/history , Vasculitis/complications , Vasculitis/drug therapy , Vasculitis/history
7.
Ter Arkh ; 87(6): 112-117, 2015.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26281206

ABSTRACT

The paper presents the steps for studying cryoglobulinemia from essential to cryoglobulinemic vasculitis associated with hepatitis C virus. It shows advances in the study of the etiology of cryoglobulinemia, diagnosis, specific features of renal injury, and current approaches to treating HCV infection-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis with renal involvement, by using 3 clinical cases (with a difference of a few decades during a follow-up).


Subject(s)
Cryoglobulinemia/history , Kidney Diseases/history , Vasculitis/history , Cryoglobulinemia/complications , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Kidney Diseases/etiology , Vasculitis/complications
10.
Cleve Clin J Med ; 79 Suppl 3: S54-6, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23203648

ABSTRACT

Adolf Kussmaul is well known for his contributions to the science of medicine and the specialty of rheumatology. A much-loved teacher and respected physician and researcher, Kussmaul's desire to understand disease, his careful clinical observations, and his innovative thinking in medical technology mark him as a pioneer in modern rheumatology.


Subject(s)
Rheumatology/history , Vasculitis/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century
12.
Curr Rheumatol Rep ; 13(6): 465-72, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21904885

ABSTRACT

Therapeutic management of the vasculitides is closely linked to modern rheumatologic advances, particularly as it relates to the discovery and first clinical use of glucocorticoids. These compounds were introduced in the late-1940s for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, but soon after, clinicians in Europe and the United States realized that they could have a significant positive impact in systemic vasculitides. However, once it was realized that glucocorticoid use was associated with a high degree of morbidity, the search for better immunosuppressive agents with similar efficacy but improved safety profiles was on. During the past several years, several agents have been utilized for the therapeutic management of systemic vasculitides, and the list keeps growing with the development of newer compounds that have retained efficacy but with a better safety profile.


Subject(s)
Glucocorticoids/history , Immunosuppressive Agents/history , Rheumatology/history , Vasculitis/history , Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions , Glucocorticoids/adverse effects , Glucocorticoids/therapeutic use , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Immunosuppressive Agents/adverse effects , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Remission Induction , Vasculitis/drug therapy
13.
Clin Exp Immunol ; 164 Suppl 1: 35-8, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21447130

ABSTRACT

The era prior to 1990 was a time of careful observation of disease presentation, course, outcomes and meticulous pathology studies. These mainly single-centre studies introduced new life-saving therapies for drugs still used effectively today. In the 1970-1980s, cyclophosphamide (CyP) added to glucocorticosteroids (GCS) was shown to be life-saving. The trade-off was often severe adverse events. Some forms of vasculitis were found not as ominous as thought initially. Some could be treated with safer drugs [e.g. methotrexate (MTX)]. However, whether mild or severe, patients were not cured. From 1990 to the present large collaborative networks have provided studies were not possible heretofore. Randomized controlled trials captured and manipulated vast amounts of data, banked biological specimens and shared these resources and intellectual capital, moving the field forward at an extraordinary pace. We now know that even for severe forms of granulomatosis and polyangiitis [granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), Wegener's granulomatosus (WG)], microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) and Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), we do not need to use CyP for extended periods. We have learned recently that rituximab is as effective as CyP for severe WG and MPA. We should never again see the permanent toxicities born from years of chronic CyP use. However, short courses of CyP remain useful and can be life-saving. Step-down therapy from CyP is now a standard of care, perhaps to be replaced by rituximab in the future. If one accepts the premise that there are few cures at present for idiopathic large- and small-vessel vasculitis, we will serve our patients well if we can determine the most effective initial therapy that leads to a maintenance strategy for remission with least risk. Ultimately, we wish to identify causes of vasculitis so they can be used as a wedge to secure cures. Unmet needs and strategies are as follows: (1) to increase the numbers of vasculitis-trained physicians; (2) to define risk-benefit formulae for chronic maintenance therapy versus discontinuation of treatment after remission; (3) to define risk- and cost-benefit formulae for laboratory monitoring; (4) large-scale studies with longer follow-up that explore inhibition of interleukin-5 in CSS; (5) to explore the value of anti-interferon-γ for GCA, Takayasu's and other granulomatous vasculitides; and (6) identification of aetiological factors: cures will probably be linked to knowledge of the antigen driving the disease, plus vulnerabilities of the patient that prepare them to develop an illness phenotype. Improved outcomes using anti-inflammatory/immunosuppressive agents do not rule out infection as a driver for autoimmunity. Techniques that can facilitate pathogen discovery have never been more sophisticated.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived/therapeutic use , Cyclophosphamide/therapeutic use , Glucocorticoids/therapeutic use , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Vasculitis/drug therapy , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived/immunology , Azathioprine/immunology , Azathioprine/therapeutic use , Cyclophosphamide/immunology , Glucocorticoids/immunology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Interferon-gamma/antagonists & inhibitors , Interferon-gamma/immunology , Interleukin-5/antagonists & inhibitors , Interleukin-5/immunology , Methotrexate/immunology , Methotrexate/therapeutic use , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Rituximab , Severity of Illness Index , Treatment Outcome , Vasculitis/etiology , Vasculitis/history , Vasculitis/immunology
14.
Med Sci Monit ; 16(3): RA58-72, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20190698

ABSTRACT

A literature review utilizing Fepafem, Bireme, LiLacs, Scielo Colombia, Scielo Internacional, former MedLine, Pubmed, and BVS Colombia as well as manual searches in the libraries of major Latin American universities was performed to study vasculitis in Latin America. Since 1945, a total of 752 articles have been published by Latin American authors. However, only a minority are devoted to primary vasculitides, and even fewer have been published in indexed journals. Approximately 126 are in OLD, Medline, Pubmed, Bireme, and Scielo. Most publications are from Mexico, followed by Brazil and Colombia. Systematic studies of the epidemiology of primary idiopathic vasculitis are available for a few countries, i.e. Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Peru. Takayasu arteritis and ANCA-associated vasculitis are the best studied forms of vasculitis in Latin America. Interest and expertise in vasculitis is growing in Latin America, as reflected in the increased number of published articles from this region of the world in the last decade. Racial and environmental factors are possibly responsible for the differential expression of various types of primary vasculitis observed in Latin America. With time, the unique features, epidemiology, and better treatment strategies for idiopathic vasculitides in Latin America will emerge.


Subject(s)
Vasculitis/epidemiology , Vasculitis/history , Bibliographies as Topic , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Internationality , Latin America/epidemiology
19.
Curr Opin Rheumatol ; 19(1): 10-6, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17143090

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Recent developments in the nosology of primary systemic vasculitis are placed in the context of an historical overview. The ongoing attempts to develop criteria for classification and diagnosis are discussed. RECENT FINDINGS: Giant cell arteritis has supplanted temporal arteritis as the preferred term for chronic granulomatous arteritis in older adults. A new classification system for childhood vasculitis has been proposed by a European collaborative group. A study of idiopathic polyarteritis nodosa demonstrates greater similarity to microscopic polyangiitis in relapse rate than previously reported. Controversy has arisen over the eponym Wegener's granulomatosis because of alleged involvement of Friedrich Wegener in the Nazi regime during World War II. Diagnostic criteria for Kawasaki disease are problematic because many patients with coronary artery involvement do not fulfill current criteria at the time of presentation. Classification of antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibody-associated small vessel vasculitis based on antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibody specificity has been complicated by the finding that different ethnic groups may have very different clinical features relative to antigen specificity; for example, most patients with Wegener's granulomatosis in China have myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies rather than proteinase 3-antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies. SUMMARY: Within the past year, new classification systems for primary vasculitis have been proposed, new classification criteria have been developed, and the appropriateness of a longstanding eponym has been challenged.


Subject(s)
Vasculitis , Arteritis/classification , Arteritis/diagnosis , Arteritis/history , Giant Cell Arteritis/classification , Giant Cell Arteritis/diagnosis , Giant Cell Arteritis/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Polyarteritis Nodosa/classification , Polyarteritis Nodosa/diagnosis , Polyarteritis Nodosa/history , Takayasu Arteritis/classification , Takayasu Arteritis/diagnosis , Takayasu Arteritis/history , Vasculitis/classification , Vasculitis/diagnosis , Vasculitis/history , Vasculitis, Central Nervous System/classification , Vasculitis, Central Nervous System/diagnosis , Vasculitis, Central Nervous System/history
20.
Rev. colomb. reumatol ; 13(2): 142-152, jun. 2006. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-434997

ABSTRACT

Aunque las enfermedades de los vasos sanguíneos han sido reconocidas desde la antigüedad, la inflamación de los vasos sólo ha sido considerada como entidad clínica distinta aproximadamente los pasados 150 años. Los primeros informes de casos de vasculitis proporcionan un contexto y fundamento histórico para entender los conceptos actuales de estas enfermedades. Estos reportes iniciales de casos son valiosos como puntos de referencia para los esfuerzos actuales en diagnóstico, tratamiento y clasificación de las vasculitis. Además, esos casos recalcan la importancia de la observación clínica cuidadosa en estos esfuerzos y la naturaleza esencial de la ciencia médica. La Poliarteritis nodosa fue la primera vasculitis no infecciosa descrita y estudiada en detalle. Las investigaciones en este grupo de vasculitis han sido la piedra angular para entender la fisiopatología de otras formas de vasculitis primarias. Históricamente, la mayoría de las formas de vasculitis descritas posteriormente han sido caracterizadas y clasificadas sobre la base de manifestaciones similares o distintas de la poliarteritis


Subject(s)
Vasculitis/etiology , Vasculitis/history
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