The purpose of this paper was to revisit the old concept of cannabis arteritis first described in the 1960s and report 10 new cases. Ten male patients, with a median age of 23.7 years developed subacute distal ischemia of lower or upper limbs, leading to necrosis in the toes and/or fingers and sometimes to distal limb gangrene. Two of the patients also presented with venous thrombosis and three patients were suffering from a recent Raynaud's phenomenon. Biological test results did not show evidence of the classical vascular risk factors for thrombosis. Arteriographic evaluation in all cases revealed distal abnormalities in the arteries of feet, legs, forearms, and hands resembling those of Buerger's disease. A collateral circulation sometimes with opacification of the vasa nervorum was noted. In some cases, arterial proximal atherosclerotic lesions and venous thrombosis were observed. All patients were moderate tobacco smokers and regular cannabis users. Despite treatment with ilomedine and heparin in all cases, five amputations were necessary in four patients. The vasoconstrictor effect of cannabis on the vascular system has been known for a long time. It has been shown that delta-8- and delta-9-tetrahydrocanabinols may induce peripheral vasoconstrictor activity. Cannabis arteritis resembles Buerger's disease, but patients were moderate tobacco smokers and regular cannabis users. These cases show that prolonged use of cannabis could be an additive risk factor for juvenile and young adult arteritis. Cannabis arteritis is a forgotten and severe occlusive vascular disease occurring in young adults. Search for cannabis use may be an important tool for a better knowledge of arteritis in young smokers.
Ergot alkaloids, such as ergotamine, have been associated with numerous vascular complications and with valvular heart disease. The authors describe a man who developed fibrosis of three heart valves during a 5-year treatment with bromocriptine for Parkinson disease. There were no other plausible causes. To our knowledge, such a side effect has never been described with this drug.
Autosomal dominant hereditary amyloidosis represents not 1 disease but a group of diseases, each the result of mutations in a specific protein. The most common form is transthyretin amyloidosis, which has been recognized clinically for over 50 years as a familial polyneuropathy. Nonneuropathic amyloidoses (Ostertag type amyloidosis) include those due to abnormalities in lysozyme, fibrinogen Aalpha-chain, and apolipoprotein A-I and A-II. The role of lysozyme in amyloid-related human disorders was first described in 1993; to date, there have been only 9 publications describing this disorder, which is a nonneuropathic form of hereditary amyloidosis. Reported cases have involved 7 unrelated families. We describe here our own experience with 4 families suffering from lysozyme amyloidosis: the first had prominent renal manifestations with sicca syndrome, the second and third had prominent gastrointestinal symptoms, and the fourth had a dramatic bleeding event due to rupture of abdominal lymph nodes. To our knowledge, this last symptom has not been reported previously, but is reminiscent of the hepatic hemorrhage seen in a previously reported case of a patient with lysozyme amyloidosis. To characterize the manifestations of this disorder, we performed an exhaustive literature review.Although hereditary amyloidosis is thought to be a rare disease, it is probably not as rare as we think and may well be underdiagnosed. Moreover, some cases of lysozyme amyloidosis are probably confused with acquired monoclonal immunoglobulin light-chain (AL) amyloidosis, formerly known as primary amyloidosis, which is the most frequent type of amyloidosis. Because treatment for each type of amyloidosis is different, and because therapy directed at 1 type may worsen symptoms of the other types, it is important to determine precisely the nature of the amyloid protein. Thus, hereditary lysozyme amyloidosis should be considered in all patients with systemic amyloidosis, particularly in patients who present with renal, gastrointestinal, or bleeding complications without evidence of AL or AA (secondary) amyloidoses.
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