| Literature DB >> 30111321 |
Sachi Matsubayashi1, Manabu Suzuki2, Tomoyuki Suzuki1, Ayako Shiozawa1, Konomi Kobayashi1, Satoru Ishii1, Motoyasu Iikura1, Shinyu Izumi1, Koichiro Kudo3, Haruhito Sugiyama1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Yellow nail syndrome (YNS) is a rare disease characterized by the triad of thickened, slow-growing yellow nails, lymphedema, and chronic respiratory manifestations. The cause of YNS is not known; however, it is suggested to be due to a congenital lymph abnormality. Since YNS is accompanied by chronic bronchial infection in more than half of patients, we hypothesized that treatment with clarithromycin (CAM) could be effective. We therefore evaluated the effectiveness of CAM against nail discoloration and respiratory manifestation in patients with YNS.Entities:
Keywords: Bronchiectasis; Clarithromycin; Signs and symptoms, respiratory; Yellow nail syndrome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30111321 PMCID: PMC6094584 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-018-0707-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Characteristics of patients at treatment initiation
| Age (years) | Sex | Comorbidities | Primary signs | Triad | Nail Manifestation | Medication | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 80 | Female | SBS | Fever, cough | Bronchiectasis, yellow nails, leg edema | Yellow-green | Antifungal drug |
| Patient 2 | 67 | Male | SBS, RA | Dyspnea, cough | Pleural effusion, yellow nails | Yellow | Bucillamine, predonisolone, SASP, FK-506 |
| Patient 3 | 58 | Female | Duodenal ulcer | Dyspnea, cough | Bronchiectasis, yellow nails, periorbital edema | Whitish-yellow | Antifungal drug |
| Patient 4 | 70 | Male | SBS | Fever, cough | Bronchiectasis, yellow nails | Yellow | None |
| Patient 5 | 80 | Female | SBS, RA | Dyspnea, leg swelling | Pleural effusion, yellow nails, leg edema | Yellow | Bucillamine |
RA rheumatoid arthritis, SASP salazosulfapyridine, SBS sinobronchial syndrome
Fig. 1Initial computed tomography chest images of each patient
Clinical course and treatment
| CAM dosage (mg/day) | Nail discoloration | Time to nail improvement | Time to best nail improvement | Respiratory manifestations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 400 | Improved, all fingers | 1 month | 9 months | Improved |
| Patient 2 | 200 ➔400 (4 months) | Slightly improved (index and middle fingers) | 4 months on 400 mg/day | 4 months | Uncontrolled |
| Patient 3 | 200 ➔600 (2 years), then 400 (3 years) | Improved, all fingers | 2.5 years on 600 mg/day | 10 years | Improved |
| Patient 4 | 200 ➔600 (2 years), then 400 (4 years) | Improved, all fingers | 3 years on 600 mg/day | 4 years | Improved |
| Patient 5 | 400 | Improved, all fingers | 1 month | 5 months | Improved |
CAM clarithromycin
Fig. 2Nail discoloration of each patient before and after clarithromycin treatment. *Y: years; M: months
Fig. 3Chest radiographs of each patient before and after clarithromycin treatment. *Y: years; M: months