Search for: rheumatoid arthritis methotrexate autoimmune disease biomarker gene expression GWAS HLA genes non-HLA genes
ID | PMID | Title | PublicationDate | abstract |
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8543380 | Cancer risk assessment for health care workers occupationally exposed to cyclophosphamide. | 1995 | In the present study a cancer risk assessment of occupational exposure to cyclophosphamide (CP), a genotoxic carcinogenic antineoplastic agent, was carried out following two approaches based on (1) data from an animal study and (2) data on primary and secondary tumors in CP-treated patients. Data on the urinary excretion of CP in health care workers were used to estimate the uptake of CP, which ranged from 3.6 to 18 micrograms/day. Based on data from an animal study, cancer risks were calculated for a health care worker with a body weight of 70 kg and a working period of 40 years, 200 days a year (linear extrapolation). The life-time risks (70 years) of urinary bladder cancer in men and leukemias in men and women were found to be nearly the same and ranged from 95 to 600 per million. Based on the patient studies, cancer risks were calculated by multiplication of the 10-year cumulative incidence per gram of CP in patients by the estimated mean total uptake in health care workers over 10 years, 200 days a year. The risk of leukemias in women over 10 years ranged from 17 to 100 per million using the secondary tumor data (linear extrapolation). Comparable results were obtained for the risk of urinary bladder tumors and leukemias in men and women when primary tumor data were used. Thus, on an annual basis, cancer risks obtained from both the animal and the patient study were nearly the same and ranged from about 1.4 to 10 per million. In The Netherlands it is proposed that, for workers, a cancer risk per compound of one extra cancer case per million a year should be striven for ("target risk") and that no risk higher than 100 per million a year ("prohibitory risk") should be tolerated. From the animal and the patient study it appears that the target risk is exceeded but that the risk is still below the prohibitory risk. | |
9358610 | Ex-vivo whole blood cultures for predicting cytokine-release syndrome: dependence on targe | 1995 Aug | Ex-vivo whole blood assays have been evaluated for their ability to accurately predict the risk of a first-dose cytokine reaction developing in vivo following therapeutic antibody infusion. Tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) release was rapidly detected in cultures incubated with either anti-CD52 antibodies of the human IgG1 or rat IgG2b isotype, and to a lesser extent with a human IgG4 isotype. Endotoxin contamination of the antibodies was not responsive for cytokine release, since polymixin B failed to inhibit cytokine release using concentrations of this antibiotic which neutralized the enhanced cytokine release seen from LPS-spiked antibody. A rat IgG2b antibody to CD45 and a human IgG1 anti-CD3 also induced significant TNF release, however, an aglycosyl anti-CD3 mutant devoid of adverse side-effects in vivo, did not result in cytokine release in vitro. Since the pattern of cytokine release seen following the clinical use of these antibodies was in good agreement with the findings of the ex-vivo whole cultures, this demonstrates the usefulness of this assay to predict cytokine release in vivo. | |
8506429 | [Rheumatological manifestations and HIV infection]. | 1993 Apr 6 | The spectrum of clinical manifestations in HIV infection has expanded considerably over the last few years. Several rheumatological syndromes have been associated with HIV infection such as Reiter's syndrome and other reactive arthritides, undifferentiated spondylarthropathy, but also HLA-B27-negative oligoarthritis, myopathy, Sjögren-like syndrome and vasculitis. Systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis appear to be modified by the HIV infection. Further insight into interactions between HIV infection and these rheumatological syndromes will enlarge our epidemiological and pathogenetical understanding of the complex mechanisms involved. Awareness of such interactions is critical with respect to factors regarding both prognostic and therapeutic implications in the management of HIV infected patients. | |
8625990 | Specificity of an HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted T cell response to type II collagen. | 1996 Apr | A panel of HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted CD4+ mouse T cell hybridomas specific for bovine type II collagen were generated from transgenic mice expressing the human HLA-DRA1*0101/-DRB1*0401 and CD4 molecules. The vast majority recognized a single peptide determinant corresponding to residues 261-273 (CII 261-273). This determinant was rapidly defined by the use of a predictive algorithm for peptide binding to DRB1*0401. CII 261-273 is conserved in bovine and human type II collagen and overlaps with an important I-A q - restricted T cell determinant in mice with collagen-induced arthritis. This study demonstrates how HLA-DR and human CD4-transgenic mice can be used to identify a T cell epitope in a potential or candidate autoantigen. | |
7540832 | Co-variation of neuropeptide Y, calcitonin gene-related peptide, substance P and neurokini | 1995 Feb | Forty-one patients (37 female and four male) with signs and symptoms of temporomandibular joint arthritis, were separated into two diagnostic groups (group I: inflammatory; group II: degenerative/non-specific joint disease). They were examined clinically, fluid was aspirated from the joint with saline and venous blood samples were collected at the same time. The joint fluid and plasma samples were analysed for neuropeptide-like immunoreactivity, i.e. neuropeptide Y (NPY-LI), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP-LI), substance P (SP-LI) and neurokinin A (NKA-LI), using competitive radioimmunoassays. The aim was to investigate any co-variation of the peptides in the joint fluid and plasma. In group I, the median values of peptide concentrations in joint fluid were SP-LI = 129, CGRP-LI = 75, NKA-LI = 36 and NPY-LI = 676 pmol/l and in group II, SP-LI = 52, CGRP-LI = 64, NKA-LI = 45 and NPY-LI = 318 pmol/l. There were no significant differences between the groups for peptide concentrations. In group I, all the neuropeptides were strongly correlated. In group II, SP-LI and NKA-LI were strongly correlated while CGRP-LI was weakly correlated with NPY-LI and NKA-LI. Multiple step-wise regression analysis showed that most of the variation in NPY-LI, CGRP-LI and SP-LI in group I was explained by NKA-LI, but the regression did not reach statistical significance in group II. | |
8218932 | Differential regulation of tumour necrosis factor receptors (TNF-R) by IL-4; upregulation | 1993 May | Interleukin 4 (IL-4) has previously been shown to downregulate the production of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-alpha, and hence has been considered to be a potential anti-inflammatory agent. In this study we have investigated the effects of IL-4 on the expression of both p55 and p75 TNF receptors (TNF-R) by flow cytometry and radioligand binding analyses and demonstrate that IL-4 downregulates both p55 and p75 TNF-R on HeLa and Jijoye cell lines in a dose dependent manner. IL-4 reduced the number of p55 TNF-R on HeLa cells from 6400 (Kd 5.1 nM) to 3900 (Kd 3.7 nM), and p75 TNF-R on Jijoye cells from 4800 (Kd 1.6 nM) to 3250 (Kd 1.5 nM). However, different effects were observed on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). IL-4 inhibited the increase in p55 and p75 TNF-R on PBMC following adherence, whereas IL-4 upregulated p75 TNF-R expressed on PHA induced T cell blasts. To assess further the possible anti-inflammatory properties of IL-4, we studied its effects on synovial joint mononuclear cell cultures from 15 patients with inflammatory synovitis. In contrast to the differential effects of IL-4 on monocytes and T cells, IL-4 upregulated both p55 (P < 0.05) and p75 TNF-R (P < 0.005) on synovial joint cells in culture. IL-4 treatment caused a small decrease in levels of bioactive TNF-alpha in RA synovial culture supernatants, together with an increase in soluble p75 TNF-R levels although differences were not significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | |
8088330 | Different cytokine production profiles of gamma delta T cell clones: relation to inflammat | 1994 Sep | This study was performed to investigate whether gamma delta T cells could also be divided into subsets, identified by a cytokine profile, as described for alpha beta T helper (Th) cell subsets. Cytokine production was studied in 22 gamma delta T cell clones obtained from the synovial fluid and peripheral blood of one patient with inflammatory arthritis and compared to that of 26 alpha beta T cell clones of the same and different patients. Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) was produced by 18 (82%) and interleukin-4 (IL-4) by 17 (77%) out of 22 gamma delta T cell clones, respectively. In contrast, IL-10 was not produced, except at very low level in one case. The mean levels of IL-4 were lower for clones derived from synovial fluid. When considering the production of IFN-gamma as an indicator of Th1 and that of IL-4 as an indicator of Th2, respectively, the most common pattern was a gamma delta Th1-like pattern, with the combination of high levels of IFN-gamma and low levels of IL-4. This pattern was found in V delta 1+ clones, all from synovial fluid. Additional patterns were also observed: a mixed, probably gamma delta Th0-like pattern with a more balanced production of both IFN-gamma and IL-4; a gamma delta Th1 pattern with the production of IFN-gamma alone; a gamma delta Th2 pattern with the production of IL-4 alone. These three patterns were also seen in blood gamma delta T cells which were all V delta 2, indicating that these patterns were independent of the V delta phenotype. gamma delta T cell clones produced lower levels of IFN-gamma (p = 0.001) and higher levels of IL-4 than alpha beta clones (p < 0.02). These differences in cytokine production between alpha beta and gamma delta subsets and within these subsets may contribute to their respective role in chronic inflammation. | |
8931419 | Prevention with sucralfate gel of NSAID-induced gastroduodenal damage in arthritic patient | 1996 Nov | OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the efficacy of a new formulation of sucralfate as gel (Gastrogel) in the short-term prevention of gastroduodenal lesions in arthritic patients receiving nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. METHODS: One hundred seven patients with arthritis (M/F 18/89, mean age 55.2 +/- 9.7 yr) enrolled in two centers were considered eligible for the study if initial endoscopy showed the absence of any relevant mucosal damage. Patients were randomly allocated to receive diclofenac 200 mg/day or naproxen 1 g/day plus either sucralfate gel 1 g b.i.d. (N = 53) or identical placebo (N = 54) for 14 days in a randomized double-blind study. Repeated assessment of GI symptoms and endoscopy were performed at the end of the study period. RESULTS: At final endoscopy the incidence of erosion and the mean endoscopic score for both stomach and duodenum were significantly lower in the sucralfate gel group compared with placebo group (p < 0.05). Both heartburn and epigastric pain were significantly less frequent in patients receiving sucralfate gel than placebo (51 vs 30% and 49 vs 28% for heartburn and epigastric pain, respectively, p < 0.05). No differences were observed in the incidence or in the mean score for nausea. An unexplained difference in the incidence of ulcers was found between the two centers, but in both a similar reduction in the incidence of ulcers was observed between patients receiving sucralfate gel compared with those receiving placebo. The overall difference (8% in sucralfate-treated patients, 28% in patients receiving placebo) of gastroduodenal ulcers was statistically significant (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Sucralfate gel reduces both the incidence of acute gastroduodenal mucosal lesions and symptoms in patients with arthritis receiving short-term nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. | |
8391545 | Mutual antagonism between interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha on fibroblast-l | 1993 May | We recently described mutual antagonism between IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha on human fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLS). TNF-alpha inhibits IFN-gamma-induced HLA-DR expression and IFN-gamma blocks TNF-alpha-dependent synoviocyte proliferation, collagenase production, and GM-CSF secretion. To study the mechanism of antagonism we have analyzed the effect these factors on the expression of cytokine surface receptors. 125I-Labeled cytokine binding was measured on cultured FLS and the results were analyzed by Scatchard plots. Unstimulated synoviocytes expressed 9300 +/- 1560 IFN-gamma binding sites per cell. A single class of high-affinity receptor was observed (Kd = 4.5 +/- 2.5 x 10(-10) M). TNF-alpha did not competitively inhibit 125I-IFN-gamma binding. When FLS were incubated with TNF-alpha (100 ng/ml), there was a paradoxical 49.5 +/- 5.6% increase in the number of binding sites for IFN-gamma (P = 0.001), with no change in the Kd. Unstimulated FLS also expressed 2850 +/- 700 TNF-alpha receptors per cells, with a single Kd consistent with the lower-affinity TNF-alpha receptor (7.4 +/- 0.2 x 10(-10) M). IFN-gamma did not directly interfere with TNF-alpha binding. Preincubation of FLS with 100 U/ml of IFN-gamma resulted in a 28.9 +/- 9.0% increase in TNF-alpha receptor expression (P < 0.008), with no change in the Kd. Low levels of the soluble 55-kD TNF receptor were detected in FLS supernatants. IFN-gamma did not effect soluble TNF receptor production.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | |
8883430 | Oncoprotein expression in human synovial tissue: an immunohistochemical study of different | 1996 Oct | Based on the fact that synovial lining cells have some properties of transformed-appearing cells, we have examined the expression of Myc, Myb, Fos, Jun and Ras oncoproteins in synovial tissues from patients with different types of arthritis. Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded sections of synovial tissue from 12 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 14 with reactive arthritis (ReA), nine with other seronegative arthritis (OSA), seven with bacterial arthritis (BA), eight with probable bacterial arthritis (PBA) and eight with osteoarthritis (OA) were studied using the immunoperoxidase staining technique. The oncoproteins studied were expressed both in the synovial lining layer and in the sublining layer, consisting of lymphocytes, other inflammatory cells and blood vessels. Among the six disease entities, RA and OA appeared to be the most distinct, whereas the results obtained for ReA and OSA, and on the other hand for BA and PBA, closely resembled each other. The expression of Myc, Myb, Fos and Jun was significantly correlated both to the degree of synovial hypercellularity and the synovial lymphocytic infiltration. For Ras, such a correlation could not be seen. We conclude that we find no evidence of a cell lineage-specific or a disease-specific abnormality of proto-oncogene products in RA, and the expression of these oncoproteins is consistent with inflammation rather than with any primary abnormality of cell growth. | |
8870112 | Distinctive features of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies in French Canadians. | 1996 Aug | This is the first report on idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) in French Canadians. We reviewed retrospectively 30 French Canadian adults (20 women and 10 men) with IIM seen consecutively over 12 years. The median age at diagnosis was 45 years. The IIM were 8 (27%) primary polymyositis (PM), 9 (30%) primary dermatomyositis (DM), 5 (17%) IIM with neoplasia (lymphoma, breast, esophageal, colonic, and skin cancer) and 8 (27%) IIM with a connective tissue disease (4 with systemic sclerosis, 2 with mixed connective tissue disease, and 2 with rheumatoid arthritis). The most common presenting symptom was proximal muscle weakness (n = 10,33%). Of the remaining 20 patients, 6 (20%) had the onset of their weakness within 1 month of the presenting symptom. Only 3 (10%) patients did not have proximal muscle weakness. Twenty-six (87%) patients had weakness in the pelvic girdle, 25 (83%) in the shoulder girdle, and 7 (23%) in the neck muscles. Other common symptoms included dyspnea on exertion and dysphagia, each present in 13 (43%) patients. Gottron's papules and the heliotrope rash were the most common skin lesions documented in 11 (37%) and 10 (33%) patients, respectively. The serum creatine kinase (CK) level was between 171 and 1,000 U/L in 13 (43%) patients and between 1,001 and 6,000 U/L in 13 (43%) patients. Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) on HEp-2 cells were positive in 16 (53%) patients, of which 2 (13%) expressed autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes. Autoantibody specificities were anti-La (n = 4, 13%), anti-U1RNP (n = 3, 10%), and anti-Ro (n = 2, 7%). None of the patients expressed anti-Jo-1, anti-topoisomerase I, or anticentromere antibodies. Twenty-eight (93%) patients received corticosteroid therapy, and 8 (27%) patients responded to prednisone alone. Thirteen (43%) patients were treated with methotrexate, and 9 (69%) responded. The mean follow-up was 62 months: 23 (77%) had their disease controlled, 3 (10%) patients were lost to follow-up, and 4 (13%) died (no death occurred because of IIM or its treatment). Therapy was discontinued because of remission in 5 (17%) patients. Cumulative survival rates at 2, 5, and 10 years were 89%, 89%, and 85%, respectively. The presence of autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes and anti-La autoantibodies, the rare occurrence of anti-Jo-1 autoantibodies, the response to conventional therapies, and a high survival rate may distinguish IIM in French Canadians from that of other reported series. | |
7539763 | Purification and characterization of endogenous peptides extracted from HLA-DR isolated fr | 1995 May | We have purified HLA-DR from the spleen of a patient with rheumatoid arthritis. The patient had Felty's syndrome and was heterozygous for the DR4Dw4 antigen. We have isolated endogenous peptides from purified HLA-DR molecules. The peptides were purified by reverse phase HPLC and the major peaks were subjected to N-terminal sequencing. The peptides were derived from a variety of proteins: human serum albumin, human erythroid protein 4.1, 60S ribosomal proteins L31 and L35, VCAM-1, human immunoglobulin lambda chain and cathepsin-S. A peptide corresponding to the sequence of human serum albumin (HSA) residues 106-120 was synthesized and shown to bind to HLA-DR4Dw4 (IC50 = 1.41 microM). We have confirmed and refined current ideas about the structural motif for the binding of peptides to HLA-DR and HLA-DR4Dw4. | |
8746611 | Prescribing rationale and budgetary outcomes associated with the introduction of a combine | 1995 Nov | The budgetary impact of prescribing a combined formulation of diclofenac sodium and misoprostol to patients previously using nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDs), cytoprotective agents, or a combination of agents from both therapeutic categories is assessed, as is the clinical rationale for prescribing the combined formulation. Analysis of data for Canada on claims paid by third parties showed that the use of the combined formulation in Canada had resulted in significant initial overall savings and that the greatest cost savings were made for those who had previously used both an NSAID and a cytoprotective concomitantly. The inclusion of shadow costs (secondary costs) indicates that the use of the combined formulation over a 6-month period involves very low shadow costs (medical expenses related to ulcer treatment) compared with other NSAIDs: the shadow cost multiplication factor was 1.03 for the combined formulation compared with 1.22 to 3.47 for other NSAIDs. Pharmaceutical costs alone are insufficient for evaluating total budgetary impacts. | |
8639856 | The pathophysiology of pure red cell aplasia: implications for therapy. | 1996 Jun 1 | To determine the utility of marrow culture in defining the natural history and therapeutic response of pure red cell aplasia we have studied 37 patients. Patients were evaluated at the University of Washington before specific therapies (n = 21) or at the time of treatment failure in = 16). Evaluation included a medical and drug exposure history, a physical examination, a chest x-ray or computed tomography to rule out thymoma, lymphocyte immunophenotype studies, anti-nuclear antibody and rheumatoid factor determinations, marrow cytogenetics, and marrow progenitor cell cultures. Retrospective Southern analyses to detect human parvovirus B19 was performed in the 27 patients for whom sera was stored. Clinical follow-up was obtained to document therapeutic responses. Normal burst forming unit-erythroid (BFU-E) growth (>30 bursts/10(5) marrow mononuclear cells [MMNC]) in culture proved an outstanding predictor of clinical response, as 27 of 29 individuals with normal frequencies of erythroid bursts in culture responded to immunomodulating therapies (sensitivity 96%, specificity 78%, predictive value 93%, P = .0001 with two-tailed chi square analysis). Overall, 28 patients responded to either immunomodulating therapies or drug withdrawal. Twenty-four patients obtained a normal hematocrit (complete response [CR] and 4 additional patients became transfusion independent (partial response). Although responding patients often required several therapies, 20 of 24 (83%) patients who obtained a CR have sustained a normal hematocrit without maintenance therapy at the time of last follow-up (median 5 years). In contrast, of 8 patients with poor in vitro BFU-E growth (<6 bursts/10(5) MMNC), 7 failed to respond to any therapy and all died (median survival time 17 months). Our data suggest that in individuals, from whom BFU-E mature appropriately in culture, immunosuppressive drugs should be used sequentially until a CR is obtained and a durable remission is the expected outcome. | |
7976728 | Naturally occurring human autoantibodies to defined T-cell receptor and light chain peptid | 1994 | We used synthetic peptides duplicating the structures of a human lambda light chain (Mcg), and a human T-cell receptor (Tcr) alpha and a Tcr beta chain predicted from gene sequence to determine the presence and loci of activity of natural human autoantibodies directed against these antigen recognition molecules. We report that normal individuals and patients suffering from autoimmune diseases have antibodies directed against regions of lambda light chains and Tcr beta chains corresponding to the first complementarity determining region and the third framework region of the variable domain and to constant region determinants. The levels of IgM natural antibodies particularly against the CDR1 peptides tend to be higher in RA patients than in normals or SLE patients. Although polyclonal IgG immunoglobulins from healthy individuals did not show detectable reactivity to Tcr alpha peptides, such reactivity was found in the IgM immunoglobulins of RA patients, thereby showing that Tcr alpha peptides can be autoantigenic in man. The levels of IgM autoantibodies to V beta CDR1 peptides tend to decrease with age. By contrast, there was a marked increase in IgG natural autoantibodies to certain CDR1 sequences with advancing age. We suggest that the natural antibodies to defined regions of immunoglobulins and T-cell receptors are part of a physiological network for the regulation of the immune response. | |
7748022 | Defective repair of O6-methylguanine-DNA in primary Sjögren's syndrome patients predispos | 1995 Mar | OBJECTIVE: To investigate a role for mutation in the aetiogenesis of autoimmune disease by examining levels of repairing enzyme for the promutagenic DNA base lesion, O6-methylguanine, in lymphocyte extracts from patients with autoimmune diseases. We included primary Sjögrens syndrome (PSS) patients because of the additional relevance of their being at increased risk (> 40-fold) of developing lymphoma. METHODS: Lymphocytes were prepared from patients with PSS (n = 22) (12 with parotid gland enlargement, an indicator of extensive lymphoproliferation), rheumatoid arthritis (n = 12), primary biliary cirrhosis (n = 11), osteoarthritis (n = 12), and healthy individuals (n = 11). MGMT amounts were determined in lymphocyte extracts by direct enzyme assay and expressed in relation to total extract DNA, protein, or cell number. RESULTS: We found no defect in the repairing methyltransferase enzyme between any of the groups, except in PSS patients at increased risk of developing lymphoma (those with enlarged parotid glands): p < 0.0001 and p = 0.0056, compared with healthy controls and PSS patients without parotid gland swelling, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings implicate persistence of O6-methylguanine-DNA in the aetiology of lymphoma associated with PSS, and raise the possibility that an alternative repair process for O6-methylguanine-DNA, nucleotide excision repair, might be defective in autoimmune disease. | |
8697658 | Assessment of sulphasalazine as a treatment modality in Sjögren's disease in NZB/NZW F1 h | 1996 Jan | OBJECTIVE: Sulphasalazine is a recognised second-line agent in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. The aim of this study was to determine if it might prove useful in the treatment of Sjögren's syndrome. METHODS: The trial was performed in NZB/NZW F1 hybrid mice and efficacy was assessed on the basis of a reduction in the lymphocytic infiltration of the submandibular salivary and lacrimal glands. The animals were divided into three groups; the control group remained untreated, the second group received the drug from 14-42 weeks and the third group received sulphasalazine from 26-42 weeks. At four-weekly intervals throughout the study, five animals in each group were killed using ether and the glands assessed for lymphocytic infiltration using a modified focus scoring technique with light microscopy. RESULTS: No significant reduction in the lymphocytic infiltration occurred consistently throughout the trials with sulphasalazine. CONCLUSION: Sulphasalazine did not significantly alter the development of Sjögren's disease in NZB/NZW F1 mice. | |
7533678 | Regulatory effects of IL-13 on synovial fluid macrophages and blood monocytes from patient | 1995 Mar | Activated macrophages are central to the destructive processes of chronic inflammatory arthritis. In this study, it was hypothesized that IL-13, a product predominantly of 'Th2-type' lymphocytes, may be used therapeutically to down-regulate monocyte/macrophage activities at sites of chronic inflammation. Synovial fluid mononuclear cells were isolated from 12 patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated at the same time as synovial fluid cells from all 12 patients. IL-13 significantly inhibited lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) production by mononuclear cells from peripheral blood, but not synovial fluid. In contrast, IL-13 inhibited LPS-induced IL-1 beta production by all cells, and as a positive response to IL-13, CD23 expression was increased on both cell populations. Blood monocytes cultured for 7 days with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or M-CSF responded to IL-13 in a manner similar to that detected for synovial fluid-derived cells, with suppression of LPS-induced IL-1 beta, but not TNF-alpha, production. In all experiments, the responses to IL-13 were very similar to those detected to IL-4, but differed from those measured with IL-10. Thus, the responses to IL-13 by synovial fluid cells and cultured monocytes are not equal to those of blood monocytes. The similar responses to IL-4 and IL-13 support claims of a common element for signalling from the IL-4 and IL-13 receptors. Furthermore, the activity of a common receptor chain may be altered by monocyte activation and differentiation. | |
7906155 | Cytokine activation of human macro- and microvessel-derived endothelial cells. | 1993 | The effects of the inflammatory cytokines, tumor necrosis factor (TNF alpha), interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1), and gamma interferon (IFN gamma) on macro- and microvessel-derived endothelial cell proteolytic, adhesion protein and prostaglandin synthetic activities were compared. TNF alpha treatment of human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cells induced urokinase-type plasminogen (uPA) activity, increased HUVE uPA-dependent extracellular matrix (ECM) degradation, and accelerated matrix remodeling and endothelial differentiation into tubes or cord-like structures. All of the aforementioned effects of TNF alpha on HUVE uPA-dependent activities were abrogated by co- or pretreatment with IFN gamma. In contrast, endothelium derived from human lung (HLE) exhibited high constitutive uPA and uPA-dependent matrix degradation and rapid tube formation in Matrigel, activities all unaffected by TNF alpha or IFN gamma. Endothelium derived from human rheumatoid synovium (HSE) exhibited uPA-dependent activities intermediate between the HLE and HUVE. TNF alpha or IL-1 treatment of HUVE potently induced surface ICAM-1 expression, whereas these cytokines were relatively ineffective on HLE and HSE ICAM-1 expression. Co-incubation with IFN gamma synergistically elevated TNF alpha or IL-1 induced ICAM-1 expression in HUVE, HLE, and HSE. The major prostaglandin synthesized by HUVE was PGI2, in contrast to HLE and HSE which produced PGE2 as the major product. Although cytokine treatment increased prostanoid production in all three cell types, HLE were not responsive to IL-1, and HSE demonstrated the greatest increase in prostaglandin synthetic capacity. These studies underline important differences not only in the "constitutive" activities expressed by EC from different vascular beds, but also in the responsiveness to proinflammatory cytokines alone or in combination. These observations further emphasize the need to study the endothelial cell derived from the vascular bed of interest rather than extrapolate from results obtained with HUVE or other macrovessel-derived endothelium. | |
8666599 | Prophylaxis against deep venous thrombosis after total knee arthroplasty. Pneumatic planta | 1996 Jun | A prospective, randomized study was conducted to assess the efficacy of pulsatile pneumatic plantar compression for prophylaxis against deep venous thrombosis after total knee arthroplasty performed with use of regional anesthesia. One hundred and twenty-two patients (164 knees) who were scheduled to have a unilateral or a one-stage bilateral total knee arthroplasty were separately randomized to be managed with either aspirin alone or the pulsatile pneumatic plantar-compression device and aspirin. The prevalence of deep venous thrombosis was 27 per cent (twenty-two of eighty-one knees) in the group treated with pneumatic plantar compression compared with 59 per cent (forty-nine of eighty-three knees) in the patients managed with aspirin alone (the control group) (p < 0.001). A significant difference was also noted in the group that had had a unilateral arthroplasty (a prevalence of 27 per cent [eleven of forty-one knees] in the group treated with pneumatic plantar compression, compared with 67 per cent [twenty-six of thirty-nine knees] in that treated with aspirin alone; p < 0.006) and in the group that had had a one-stage bilateral procedure (a prevalence of 28 per cent [eleven of forty knees] in the group treated with pneumatic plantar compression, compared with 52 per cent [twenty-three of forty-four knees] in that treated with aspirin alone; p < 0.03). No proximal thrombi were noted in any patient who used the pulsatile pneumatic plantar-compression device, while the prevalence of proximal thrombosis in the popliteal or femoral veins was 14 per cent (twelve of eighty-three knees) in the group treated with aspirin alone (p < 0.0003). In the group treated with a unilateral procedure and aspirin alone the prevalence of proximal thrombosis was 13 per cent (five of thirty-nine knees; p < 0.02), while in the group treated with a bilateral procedure and aspirin alone it was 16 per cent (seven of forty-four knees; p < 0.01). Only in the patients who had had a unilateral procedure was use of the compression device associated with significantly less edema postoperatively than was use of aspirin alone. The change between the preoperative and postoperative circumferences of the thigh and leg was significantly less (9 +/- 4.1 millimeters [mean and standard deviation] less for the thigh [p < 0.01] and 6 +/- 3.9 millimeters less for the leg [p < 0.049]) with the compression device than with aspirin alone. In addition, there was significantly less mean drainage (98 +/- 61.1 milliliters) in the group treated with a unilateral procedure and pneumatic compression, compared with that treated with a unilateral procedure and aspirin alone (p < 0.041). An internal timer of the compression device was used to assess the compliance of the patient with use of the device, and a relationship between deep venous thrombosis and the total duration of treatment with the device was found. The patients in whom deep venous thrombosis did not develop used the device for a mean of 96 +/- 23.4 hours (range, sixty to 164 hours) postoperatively, or 19.2 +/- 5.1 hours a day, while those in whom thrombosis developed used it for a mean of 67 +/- 21.1 hours (range, twenty-six to 101 hours), or 13.4 +/- 4.3 hours a day (p < 0.001). No untoward effects were noted in any patient who used the device. This study confirms the safety and efficacy of pulsatile pneumatic plantar compression and aspirin compared with aspirin alone and supports the use of mechanical compression for prophylaxis against deep venous thrombosis and for reduction of edema in patients who have had a total knee arthroplasty. In addition, we found a direct relationship between compliance with the use of this device and its efficacy in reducing deep venous thrombosis. |