1,721,248 research outputs found

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    These findings highlight the need to explore SAA in patients with interstitial lung involvement associated with SSc. SAA can be considered a bioindicator of fibrotic lung disease, isolated IPF as well as that associated with autoimmune systemic disorders such as SSc

    Exhaled nitric oxide is not increased in pulmonary sarcoidosis

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    Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) is a non-invasive biomarker of airway inflammation and nitrosative stress. Previous studies have suggested a possible role of FeNO in the management of patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis, but published data are discordant

    Cytokine modulators in the treatment of sarcoidosis

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    Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous lung disease in which several cytokines play a pivotal pathogenetic role. Steroid-resistant disease can be treated with immunosuppressive drugs, antimalarial therapies and recently with anti-TNFα agents. The use of biological agents for the treatment of sarcoidosis springs from research into the pathogenesis of the disease and also from the experience of rheumatologists with other chronic inflammatory diseases. Rituximab, golimumab and ustekinumab are cytokine modulators, useful in the treatment of immunoinflammatory disorders, for which randomized trials to evaluate safety and efficacy in sarcoidosis are not yet available. Novel anticytokine drugs administered alone or in association may offer a new approach to treatment of the disease. This review focuses on recent advances in anti-TNFα agents and cytokine modulators for the treatment of sarcoidosis and their therapeutic prospects. PMID: 21644041 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE

    Human chitotriosidase: a potential new marker of sarcoidosis severity

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    Sarcoidosis is a multisystemic granulomatous disorder of unknown etiology. The unpredictable clinical course of the disease has prompted research into biomarkers useful for predicting outcome. Among the potential markers of sarcoidosis, a recently proposed indicator was chitotriosidase, a chitinase produced by activated macrophages. Chitotriosidase is involved in the defense against pathogens containing chitin. Increased concentrations of chitotriosidase have been observed in a number of lysosomal storage diseases including Gaucher disease and more recently also in sarcoidosis. In 2004, significantly higher serum chitotriosidase activity was reported for the first time in sarcoidosis patients with respect to controls (p < 0.01); a similar increase was subsequently observed in bronchoalveolar lavage of these patients. In 2007, an increase in enzyme activity was described in juvenile sarcoidosis. Chitotriosidase activity was found to be correlated with angiotensin-converting enzyme levels in serum, radiological stages and quantitative high-resonance CT score for sarcoidosis, suggesting that this enzyme could be a potential marker of disease severity worthy of further study. To evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of this marker, further analysis was done in other granulomatous and diffuse lung diseases. Here, we review the principal literature and the recent evidence of chitotriosidase as a possible marker of sarcoidosis

    Sarcoidosis: a review for the internist

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    Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous lung disease of unknown origin affecting people of any age, mainly young adults. The disease is extremely heterogeneous with an unpredictable clinical course. Different phenotypes have been identified: an acute syndrome can be distinguished from subacute and chronic variants. About 20% of patients are chronically progressive and may develop lung fibrosis. Sarcoidosis usually involves the lungs and thoracic lymph nodes, although the skin, eyes, bones, liver, spleen, heart, upper respiratory tract and nervous system can also be affected. No reliable indicators of clinical outcome are available, and there is no single serological biomarker with demonstrated unequivocal diagnostic and prognostic value. Diagnosis requires histological confirmation although a presumptive diagnosis may be acceptable in special conditions. This review examines the diagnostic approach to sarcoidosis involving a multidisciplinary team of specialists in which the internist has the task of identifying all pulmonary and extrapulmonary localizations of the disease and of managing complications and comorbidities
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