1. Late-onset gastrointestinal pain in juvenile dermatomyositis as a manifestation of ischemic ulceration from chronic endarteropathy
- Author
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Bracha Shaham, Lisa G. Rider, Frederick W. Miller, David E. Kleiner, Gulnara Mamyrova, and Laura James-Newton
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,Adolescent ,Immunology ,Perforation (oil well) ,Ischemia ,Late onset ,Gastroenterology ,Dermatomyositis ,Article ,Rheumatology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Ulcer ,Juvenile dermatomyositis ,Peripheral Vascular Diseases ,business.industry ,Immunoglobulins, Intravenous ,Arteries ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Connective tissue disease ,Abdominal Pain ,Surgery ,Intestines ,Gastrointestinal Pain ,Treatment Outcome ,Intestinal Perforation ,Chronic Disease ,Prednisone ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
We present the clinical and pathologic features of two patients with juvenile dermatomyositis (DM) with severe gastrointestinal ulceration or perforation who required surgery. Abdominal pain which is persistent, progressive or severe, even in patients with improving or mildly active juvenile DM, should be carefully evaluated. The absence of occult blood in the stool and normal radiographs do not exclude these potentially serious complications. Chronic endarteropathy, not an acute vasculopathy previously reported, is the pathology associated with the ischemic ulceration in these patients. The current approach to treatment of juvenile DM with immunosuppressive agents may have contributed to delay in the onset of these gastrointestinal manifestations and to their pathologic features.
- Published
- 2007
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