58 research outputs found

    Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) induced by quinidine

    Get PDF
    Only two definite cases of quinidine-induced systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are reported in the English-language literature. We have treated five patients who had an SLE-like syndrome while receiving quinidine. Symptoms, signs, and abnormal laboratory values improved after quinidine therapy was discontinued and prednisone therapy was started. The disease did not return after steroids were withdrawn. These cases indicate that quinidine can indeed cause an SLE-like syndrome

    Controlling Activity and Selectivity Using Water in the Au-Catalysed Preferential Oxidation of CO in H\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e

    Get PDF
    Industrial hydrogen production through methane steam reforming exceeds 50 million tons annually and accounts for 2–5% of global energy consumption. The hydrogen product, even after processing by the water–gas shift, still typically contains ∼1% CO, which must be removed for many applications. Methanation (CO + 3H2 → CH4 + H2O) is an effective solution to this problem, but consumes 5–15% of the generated hydrogen. The preferential oxidation (PROX) of CO with O2 in hydrogen represents a more-efficient solution. Supported gold nanoparticles, with their high CO-oxidation activity and notoriously low hydrogenation activity, have long been examined as PROX catalysts, but have shown disappointingly low activity and selectivity. Here we show that, under the proper conditions, a commercial Au/Al2O3 catalyst can remove CO to below 10 ppm and still maintain an O2-to-CO2 selectivity of 80–90%. The key to maximizing the catalyst activity and selectivity is to carefully control the feed-flow rate and maintain one to two monolayers of water (a key CO-oxidation co-catalyst) on the catalyst surface

    Autoimmune polyarthritis induced by cancer immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitor

    No full text

    Revisiting jaccoud arthropathy as an ultrasound diagnosed erosive arthropathy in systemic lupus erythematosus

    No full text
    Jaccoud arthropathy (JA), now most commonly associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), is widely perceived as a benign joint deformity that is radiographically nonerosive and that confers little if any disability. Advances and accessibility of imaging modalities such as ultrasound (US) are challenging the complacency in perceiving SLE-JA and SLE arthritis as benign processes. Prompted by a patient with SLE-JA in which joint erosion was detectable on US but not evident on radiograph, this review assesses the potential utility of US to guide management and promote understanding of SLE arthritis and its poorly understood pathogenesis

    Phrenic nerve paralysis secondary to Lyme neuroborreliosis

    No full text

    Enbrel-induced interstitial lung disease

    No full text

    Celecoxib-related renal papillary necrosis

    No full text
    Selective cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) inhibitors are known to affect renal prostaglandins (epoprostenol and dinoprostone), which are at least in part COX-2 dependent. Consequently, adverse events including hypertension, peripheral edema, hypercalemia, hyponatremia, and acute renal failure have been reported to occur with the new COX-2-specific inhibitors. This case report posits celecoxib as a likely cause of renal papillary necrosis and alerts physicians to the possibility of this additional renal complication with COX-2-specific inhibitors
    • …
    corecore