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Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease

Coronary symptoms associated with conditions related to mast cell activation and inflammatory cell interactions, such as those involving T-lymphocytes and macrophages, further inducing allergic, hypersensitivity, anaphylactic, or anaphylactic insults, are currently referred to as the Kounis syndrome...

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Autores principales: Kounis, Nicholas G., Koniari, Ioanna, Velissaris, Dimitrios, Tzanis, George, Hahalis, George
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Galenos Publishing 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6636655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31198019
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2019.2019.5.62
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author Kounis, Nicholas G.
Koniari, Ioanna
Velissaris, Dimitrios
Tzanis, George
Hahalis, George
author_facet Kounis, Nicholas G.
Koniari, Ioanna
Velissaris, Dimitrios
Tzanis, George
Hahalis, George
author_sort Kounis, Nicholas G.
collection PubMed
description Coronary symptoms associated with conditions related to mast cell activation and inflammatory cell interactions, such as those involving T-lymphocytes and macrophages, further inducing allergic, hypersensitivity, anaphylactic, or anaphylactic insults, are currently referred to as the Kounis syndrome. Kounis syndrome is caused by inflammatory mediators released during allergic insults, post-inflammatory cell activation, and interactions via multidirectional stimuli. A platelet subset of 20% with high- and low-affinity IgE surface receptors is also involved in this process. Kounis syndrome is not just a single-organ but also a complex multisystem and multi-organ arterial clinical condition; it affects the coronary, mesenteric, and cerebral arteries and is accompanied by allergy–hypersensitivity–anaphylaxis involving the skin, respiratory, and vascular systems in the context of anesthesia, surgery, radiology, oncology, or even dental and psychiatric medicine; further, it has significantly influences both morbidity and mortality. Kounis syndrome might be caused by numerous and continuously increasing causes, with broad clinical symptoms and signs, via multi-organ arterial system involvement, in patients of any age, thereby demonstrating predominant anaphylactic features in terms of a wide spectrum of mast cell-association disorders. Cardiac symptoms, such as chest pain, coronary vasospasm, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis, acute cardiac failure, and sudden cardiac death associated with subclinical, clinical, acute, or chronic allergic reactions, constitute the clinical manifestations of this syndrome. Since its first description, a common pathway between allergic and non-allergic coronary events has been demonstrated. The hypothesis is based on the existence of a much higher degree of mast cell degranulation at plaque erosion or rupture sites compared with at the adjacent areas or even more distant segments in post-acute myocardial infarction of non-allergic etiology. Although mast cell activation, differentiation, and mediator release takes days or weeks, the mast cell degranulation may occur just before any acute coronary event, further resulting in coronary artery vasoconstriction and atheromatous plaque rupture. It seems that medications and natural molecules stabilizing the mast cell membrane as well as monoclonal antibodies protecting the mast cell surface can emerge as novel therapeutic modalities for acute coronary and cerebrovascular event prevention.
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spelling pubmed-66366552019-07-19 Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease Kounis, Nicholas G. Koniari, Ioanna Velissaris, Dimitrios Tzanis, George Hahalis, George Balkan Med J Invited Review Coronary symptoms associated with conditions related to mast cell activation and inflammatory cell interactions, such as those involving T-lymphocytes and macrophages, further inducing allergic, hypersensitivity, anaphylactic, or anaphylactic insults, are currently referred to as the Kounis syndrome. Kounis syndrome is caused by inflammatory mediators released during allergic insults, post-inflammatory cell activation, and interactions via multidirectional stimuli. A platelet subset of 20% with high- and low-affinity IgE surface receptors is also involved in this process. Kounis syndrome is not just a single-organ but also a complex multisystem and multi-organ arterial clinical condition; it affects the coronary, mesenteric, and cerebral arteries and is accompanied by allergy–hypersensitivity–anaphylaxis involving the skin, respiratory, and vascular systems in the context of anesthesia, surgery, radiology, oncology, or even dental and psychiatric medicine; further, it has significantly influences both morbidity and mortality. Kounis syndrome might be caused by numerous and continuously increasing causes, with broad clinical symptoms and signs, via multi-organ arterial system involvement, in patients of any age, thereby demonstrating predominant anaphylactic features in terms of a wide spectrum of mast cell-association disorders. Cardiac symptoms, such as chest pain, coronary vasospasm, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis, acute cardiac failure, and sudden cardiac death associated with subclinical, clinical, acute, or chronic allergic reactions, constitute the clinical manifestations of this syndrome. Since its first description, a common pathway between allergic and non-allergic coronary events has been demonstrated. The hypothesis is based on the existence of a much higher degree of mast cell degranulation at plaque erosion or rupture sites compared with at the adjacent areas or even more distant segments in post-acute myocardial infarction of non-allergic etiology. Although mast cell activation, differentiation, and mediator release takes days or weeks, the mast cell degranulation may occur just before any acute coronary event, further resulting in coronary artery vasoconstriction and atheromatous plaque rupture. It seems that medications and natural molecules stabilizing the mast cell membrane as well as monoclonal antibodies protecting the mast cell surface can emerge as novel therapeutic modalities for acute coronary and cerebrovascular event prevention. Galenos Publishing 2019-07 2019-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6636655/ /pubmed/31198019 http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2019.2019.5.62 Text en ©Copyright 2019 by Trakya University Faculty of Medicine http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ The Balkan Medical Journal published by Galenos Publishing House.
spellingShingle Invited Review
Kounis, Nicholas G.
Koniari, Ioanna
Velissaris, Dimitrios
Tzanis, George
Hahalis, George
Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title_full Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title_fullStr Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title_full_unstemmed Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title_short Kounis Syndrome—not a Single-organ Arterial Disorder but a Multisystem and Multidisciplinary Disease
title_sort kounis syndrome—not a single-organ arterial disorder but a multisystem and multidisciplinary disease
topic Invited Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6636655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31198019
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2019.2019.5.62
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