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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8237359 | Still's disease: experience in 12 children. | 1993 Sep | Over a 9-year period, twelve patients (8 boys, 4 girls), from 3 to 14 years old, were diagnosed as having Still's disease. Intermittent spiking high fever, poly- or pauci- articular arthritis, and typical evanescent skin rash were the most prominent clinical features. Hemogram examinations showed that 36% of the patients had anemia, ninety-two percent had neutrophilic leukocytosis and 78% had thrombocytosis. Serologically, none had positive results of rheumatoid factor and anti-nuclear antibody. Serum ferritin level was obtained from six patients and all revealed marked elevation during active disease. C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were both invariably elevated. Immunologically, elevated serum concentrations of IgG, IgA, and complements (C3, C4) were found in 33%, 20%, and 17%, respectively. Furthermore, eighty percent of patients showed an increased serum level of circulating immune complexes. Aspirin (ASA) was used in all patients, but 92% of them required non-steroid antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in combination to get a better response. Sixty-seven percent of patients needed corticosteroids to control the acute systemic manifestations. Other disease-modifying agents were also used in 33% of our patients. ASA-induced liver function impairment was found in two cases. In addition, one patient experienced an episode of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Generally speaking, the overall prognosis was good. One patient (8%) died of internal bleeding after a needle liver biopsy. | |
8892141 | Head and neck pain review: traditional and new perspectives. | 1996 Oct | A variety of conditions are frequently associated with the occurrence of head and neck pain. The purposes of this review are: to describe the characteristics of several musculoskeletal, neurological, and systemic conditions frequently cited as possible causes of head and neck pain and to suggest a new technique for treating head and neck pain. The characteristics of musculoskeletal conditions, such as muscle spasm, tendinitis, trigger points, and joint inflammation, and their relationship to head and neck pain are considered. The features and clinical implications of neurologic conditions, such as atypical facial pain, trigeminal and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and neurogenic inflammation, are also described. The distinguishing characteristics of headaches, including cluster, tension, chronic daily, rebound, posttraumatic, and postlumbar puncture, are detailed. This review also addresses the contributions of systemic disorders, such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and the variants, and rheumatoid-related conditions, like dermatomyositis, temporal arteritis, Lyme's disease, and fibromyalgia, to head and neck pain. The results of a recent pilot study of the effectiveness of intraoral circulating ice water for resolving symptoms related to head and neck pain secondary to neurogenic inflammation are presented in this work. Ice water circulating through hollow metal tubes was placed intraorally for 15 minutes in the posterior maxillary area on 12 individuals with cervical pain and muscle spasm. In nine of these individuals, reduced cervical pain perception, upper trapezius electromyography signal reduction, and increased cervical range of motion was produced. Six out of 12 individuals had accompanying headache, which was reduced or eliminated in four cases. These findings suggest a strong trigemino-cervical relationship to neck pain and headache. | |
8718723 | Diagnosis and management of the infected total knee arthroplasty. | 1996 Spring | While infection in TKA is a relatively infrequent complication, it can be devastating in terms of morbidity and cost. Prevention of infection begins with patient selection. Prior knee sepsis surgery, rheumatoid arthritis, and poor general health may lead to an increased rate of infection. Prophylactic antibiotics, meticulous surgical technique, and control of the intraoperative environment have been shown to be beneficial in prevention of infection after TKA. Diagnosis can be difficult and often is heralded by the onset of pain in a previously pain-free knee. Aspiration is an excellent screening tool and is also beneficial in determining management of potentially infected TKAs. In cases posing a diagnostic dilemma, radiographs and nuclear medicine studies also may prove beneficial as well as intraoperative frozen section. Management is based on chronicity of the infection and fixation of the components. Antibiotic suppression is unlikely to yield a cure but may be indicated in the medically infirm. Debridement with component retention may be used with varying degrees of success, especially in the acute postoperative period. The current treatment of choice for chronic infections in this country is a two-stage revision with interim intravenous antibiotics. This would be expected to yield a cure in approximately 80% of patients. Arthrodesis may be necessary in the patient who is status post-multiple revisions with particular virulent organisms. Resection arthroplasty should be reserved for the older rheumatoid patient with limited functional demands. Finally, amputation should be considered in the patient with life-threatening sepsis or the patient who is status post-multiple revisions with intractable pain and poor bone stock. | |
1427525 | Great toe metatarsophalangeal joint arthrodesis: a user-friendly technique. | 1992 Sep | Thirty-four feet (23 patients) were treated with a metatarsophalangeal (MP) joint fusion of the hallux using five threaded 0.062-in K wires for fixation. Operations were done for the following diagnoses: rheumatoid arthritis (26 procedures), hallux rigidus (1), salvage of previous bunionectomies (3), hallux valgus with absent toe, bilateral fusion (2), severe hallux valgus with chronic MP joint synovitis (1), and congenital hallux varus (1). The ages ranged from 17 to 73 years, with an average of 55 years. Follow-up was available on 31 of the fusions by questionnaire and telephone contact, with an average follow-up of 24 months and a minimum of 1 year. The successful arthrodesis rate was 97%. In 9% of the procedures (three cases), the patients were dissatisfied: This was due to pain under the first metatarsal head in two cases and to impingement between the first and second toes in a third case. In 91% of the fusions (29 of 32 patient responses), the patients stated that they would have the surgery if they had to choose again. Patients indicated "complete satisfaction" in 15 fusions and "satisfaction with reservations" in 14. Patients felt that their ability to wear desired shoes was improved in 48% of the procedures, was unchanged by the fusions in 26%, and was worse than before the operation in 26%. Based on this study and review of the literature, a recommendation is made for fusing the rheumatoid hallux with 25 degrees to 30 degrees of valgus and 10 degrees of extension. In general, selection of toe position for fusion is based on reducing stress on the hallux interphalangeal joint and accommodating the position of the second toe. The multiple pin fixation technique gives a high incidence of fusion, it is easy to perform, and it is adaptable to the varying requirements for toe position. | |
8489106 | A clinical and immunologic evaluation of women with silicone breast implants and symptoms | 1993 Jun 15 | OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical and serologic features of women with silicone breast implants who were referred for symptoms of rheumatic disease. DESIGN: A case series. SETTING: University and private rheumatology practices. PATIENTS: A total of 156 women with silicone breast implants and rheumatic disease complaints. Controls for the serologic studies included women with silicone implants and no rheumatic symptoms (n = 12) and women with fibromyalgia without silicone implants (n = 174). MEASUREMENTS: Complete physical examination and testing for immunoglobulins; complement; C-reactive protein; rheumatoid factor; and autoantibodies by indirect immunofluorescence, immunodiffusion, and Western blot. RESULTS: Three subgroups of patients were defined based on clinical and laboratory findings: joint and muscle pain (n = 95), joint swelling (n = 32), and connective tissue disease (n = 29). Most women had normal immunologic studies. The patients with joint swelling had mild, asymmetric, rheumatoid-factor-negative synovitis that did not meet American College of Rheumatology criteria for rheumatoid arthritis. Fourteen patients had a scleroderma-like illness and anti-centromere or anti-PM-Sci antibodies by Western blot. Ten patients had a positive Western blot for BB' polypeptide, a small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP), but did not meet criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus. No autoantibodies to known disease-related polypeptides were detected on Western blot in the control groups. CONCLUSION: Most women with silicone implants and rheumatic complaints had normal results of serologic tests and nonspecific symptoms, suggesting no serious connective tissue disease. However, a subset of women had clinical signs and serologic tests that were unusual even for referred patients. These observations suggest, but cannot establish, that some women with silicone breast implants may develop atypical immunologic reactions. | |
8607901 | The effect of leukotriene synthesis inhibitors in models of acute and chronic inflammation | 1996 Mar | OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of leukotriene synthesis inhibitors, alone and in combination with a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug, as potential treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), using the mouse air pouch model and the collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) model. METHODS: Two selective leukotriene synthesis inhibitors, Bay x 1005 and Bay y 1015, were compared with zileuton in terms of their ability to decrease exudate volume, cell infiltration, and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) production in response to zymosan injection in the mouse air pouch model. The mouse CIA model was used to assess the effect of leukotriene synthesis inhibitors in a model of chronic inflammation. Bay y 1015 and Bay x 1005, and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor naproxen, were evaluated individually and in combination, for their antiarthritic potency in the mouse CIA model. RESULTS: The results indicate that neither zileuton, Bay x 1005, nor Bay y 1015 inhibited exudate production. All 3 compounds decreased LTB4 levels in be air pouch, with Bay y 1015 being the most effective. Cell infiltration was significantly decreased with Bay x 1005, but the degree of this decrease did not appear to correlate with LTB4 levels. No inhibition of arthritis was observed with any compound administered alone. In contrast, a significant inhibition of CIA was observed in animals that received both naproxen and either Bay y 1015 or Bay x 1005. CONCLUSION: Inhibitors of both cyclooxygenase and leukotriene synthesis in combination may be a more effective treatment of RA than either class of inhibitors alone. | |
7877351 | [Arthropathy associated with infection by parvovirus B19. Description of 4 cases]. | 1995 Jan 14 | Four cases of human parvovirus infection in which the main clinical manifestation was a polyarthritis are described. Four females with ages ranging from 30 to 32 years presented with acute symmetrical polyarthralgias involving hands and knees. In addition, evidence of synovitis in the ankles and tenosynovitis of the fingers was found in two and three cases respectively. Half of the patients noticed an erythematous rash in the preceding days. Laboratory studies were normal in all cases. Antinuclear antibodies and rheumatoid factor were not detected in any case. All patients had significant levels of IgG and IgM antibodies to parvovirus B19 at the time of presentation and a rise in IgG and a fall in IgM levels were seen at two months. All cases cleared up within two weeks without treatment. | |
7589090 | Oxpentifylline inhibits tumor necrosis factor-alpha mRNA transcription and protects agains | 1995 Oct | The phosphodiesterase inhibitor oxpentifylline (OXP) has a number of potentially important immunomodulatory actions which include a selective inhibition of the Th1 subset of CD4+ cells in vitro and inhibition of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha mRNA transcription. In vivo, it has a dramatic protective effect against experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. In this animal model, tissue injury is associated with both a Th1 response and with TNF-alpha production, either of which could be targets for the protective action of OXP. In an attempt to clarify the relative importance of the Th cell subsets and TNF-alpha in pathogenesis, we investigated the effect of OXP on a Th2 model of T cell-dependent disease, mercuric chloride (HgCl2)-induced autoimmunity in the Brown Norway rat. The effects of OXP on the Th1:Th2 response, TNF-alpha mRNA transcription in spleen and ankle joints, and on the incidence and severity of arthritis and cecal vasculitis have been examined and the effects in vivo have been compared with those of a soluble TNF receptor-IgG1 fusion protein (sTNFR) that neutralizes rat TNF-alpha. In two separate experiments, OXP significantly enhanced unstimulated levels of splenic interleukin-4 (IL-4) mRNA (median 62%, of an artificial IL-4 mRNA construct, vs. 36.5% in controls) and in one experiment, exaggerated the total IgE response to HgCl2. OXP inhibited HgCl2-induced TNF-alpha mRNA transcription in spleen and ankle joints. In three separate experiments, OXP had a significant protective effect against arthritis, with the mean incidence reduced from 100% to 30% and mean peak score reduced from 7.2 to 2.59 (experiments 1 and 2). The protection against arthritis was indistinguishable from that produced by sTNFR. There was no such protection against cecal vasculitis with either OXP or sTNFR. These results demonstrate that OXP induces a shift towards a Th2 response, inhibits TNF-alpha mRNA transcription locally in joint and systemically in spleen, and has a protective effect against arthritis similar to that produced by sTNFR in the HgCl2-treated BN rat. We conclude that TNF-alpha is a critical cytokine in the pathogenesis of arthritis but not cecal vasculitis in this model, and that inhibition of TNF-alpha transcription is the most important mode of action of OXP in this situation. OXP may be a potential therapeutic agent in the treatment of other arthritides, such as human rheumatoid arthritis, in which TNF-alpha has been implicated in pathogenesis. | |
8006892 | Effects of a novel azaspirane (SK&F 105685) on arthritic lesions in the adjuvant Lewis rat | 1994 Mar | OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of SK&F 105685 (N,N-dimethyl-8,8-dipropyl-2-azaspiro[4.5] decane-2-propanamine dihydrochloride) on the arthritic lesions in the tibiotarsal joint of adjuvant arthritic (AA) rats. METHODS: Inhibition of hindpaw inflammation was measured by water displacement. The protective effects on joint integrity were determined by measuring radiographic and histological changes and by scanning electron microscopy. RESULTS: Compared to AA control rats, SK&F 105685 suppressed hindpaw edema 64% or 41-54% in AA rats receiving 30 or 20 mg/kg/day, respectively. Radiographic evaluation showed marked decreases in soft tissue swelling and in the severity of skeletal tissue loss at the tibiotarsal joint in both dose groups. Histologically SK&F 105685 markedly attenuated the extent and severity of the inflammatory lesion and preserved the basic integrity of bone and cartilaginous tissues, including the content and distribution of proteoglycans of the articular cartilages. Cellular changes included decreases in the inflammatory infiltrate and in the number of osteoclasts and chondroclasts. Whereas AA control rats exhibited marked to severe loss (41-70%) of skeletal tissue mass, the loss in rats given 30 mg/kg SK&F 105685 was mild (< 20%). Scanning electron microscopy of the talus revealed only slight erosion of the articular cartilage and general preservation of the underlying bone. In contrast, in AA controls, there was marked erosion of the talar articular cartilage and severe loss of subchondral bone. Spleen cells from SK&F 105685 treated rats had a reduced capacity to respond to concanavalin A and contained suppressor cell activity as measured in a coculture assay. CONCLUSION: Our studies show that SK&F 105685 has remarkable protective effects on the joints of AA rats and suggests that it may attenuate the overall inflammatory process and retard the degenerative loss of skeletal tissue in rheumatoid arthritis in humans. | |
7664487 | Antigen-specific B cells present cartilage proteoglycan (aggrecan) to an autoreactive T ce | 1995 Sep | Cartilage proteoglycan (aggrecan)-induced polyarthritis in BALB/c mice is characterized by chronic inflammation and destruction of joint tissues similar to that observed in human rheumatoid arthritis. The immunization of mice with fetal human proteoglycan (PG) elicits specific antibodies to the immunizing antigen of which a population cross-reacts with native mouse PG. This (auto)antibody production is immediately followed by an explosive proliferation of autoreactive T cells, suggesting that PG-specific B cells may participate in antigen presentation of PG to autoreactive T cells. We therefore isolated B cells from the spleens and lymph nodes of PG-immunized mice and examined their ability to present PG to a PG-specific T cell hybridoma. The antigen-specific T cell responses elicited by B cells from PG-immunized mice (both arthritic and clinically asymptomatic) were markedly higher than those of non-immune mice and keyhole limpet haemocyanin (KLH)-immunized mice, and these B cells could present low PG concentrations. Levels of B cell presentation corresponded with the serum levels of PG-specific antibodies, implying that these B cells were presenting the PG specifically via their surface immunoglobulin. This B cell-T cell interaction was strongly dependent on MHC class II/T cell receptor (TCR), LFA-1/intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) and CD28/B7 interactions, as antibodies to Ia, ICAM-1 and B7-2 (but not to B7-1) markedly reduced presentation. These data indicate that PG-specific B cells may play an essential role in governing the development of PG-induced arthritis. | |
8877938 | Crescentic glomerulonephritis in juvenile chronic arthritis. | 1996 Sep | Juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) was diagnosed in 2 young girls. In one of them, antinuclear antibodies (ANA) were strongly positive during the course of erosive polyarthritis. After 5 years followup, severe renal insufficiency occurred. Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) were positive with a perinuclear pattern on indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) and antimyeloperoxidase (MPO) specificity. Renal biopsy showed severe crescentic glomerulonephritis without significant deposits on IIF. Treatment consisted of prednisone and monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide pulse. Renal failure worsened and hemodialysis was necessary. A 2nd patient was referred for polyarthritis with positive rheumatoid factors without positive ANA. The presence of microscopic hematuria led to the discovery of crescentic glomerulonephritis with positive ANCA of anti-MPO specificity. At latest examination, after prednisone for 10 months and azathioprine for 6 months, the patient had moderate proteinuria with normal renal function. These observations emphasize that in juvenile onset chronic polyarthritis, renal microscopic angiitis with ANCA of anti-MPO specificity may occur. | |
8676591 | [Video-assisted thoracic surgical (VATS) biopsy as a technique for differential diagnosis | 1996 May | The authors experienced two cases of multiple pulmonary tuberculomas, which were suspected of metastatic lung tumors. First patient was a 63-years-old male, who was found to have multiple pulmonary nodular shadows on his check up chest X-ray film, suspected of pulmonary metastases of rectal cancer. VATS biopsy, performed for one of nodules revealed that it was caseating granuloma, suggestive of pulmonary tuberculosis. Second patient was a 55-years-old female with rheumatoid arthritis and a chest X-ray film showed multiple pulmonary nodules, which were thought to be metastatic lung tumor from unknown origin. VATS biopsy for a subpleural nodule showed epitheloid granuloma with caseous necrosis of lung, indicating pulmonary tuberculosis. VATS biopsy is, therefore, an useful technique for differential diagnosis of small pulmonary nodules of unknown origin. | |
8972451 | Endoscopic carpal tunnel release. | 1996 Winter | Open carpal tunnel release has been the standard treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome for the past three decades. Since its introduction in the late 1980s, endoscopic carpal tunnel release has generated excitement and controversy. Two basic techniques have developed: the single portal and the double portal. Data from many clinical series and cadaver studies are available for review. The endoscopic carpal tunnel release offers several advantages over the standard open technique, including less scar tenderness, earlier return to work and activities of daily living, and earlier return of pinch and grip strength. Endoscopic carpal tunnel release may be safer than many of the new "mini" open techniques. The indications and threshold for surgery are the same in both techniques. The major contraindications are rheumatoid arthritis, mass lesions, and repeat surgery. Many adjunctive procedures done with open carpal tunnel release such as exploration of the motor branch, release of Guyon's canal, epineurotomy or neurolysis, and flexor tenosynovectomy are unnecessary. With proper training and equipment, endoscopic carpal tunnel release can be done safely, with complication rates comparable to those for the open technique and with high patient satisfaction. | |
7855338 | Musculoskeletal causes of spinal axis compromise: beyond the usual suspects. | 1994 Nov | The majority of cases of spinal canal compromise are caused by common pathologic conditions, including degenerative spondylosis, infection, trauma, and metastatic disease. However, there are other causes of spinal canal compromise that, though unusual, may be seen in everyday practice. Congenital abnormalities of the spine that may produce spinal canal compromise include the os odontoideum, hemivertebra, diastematomyelia, and achondroplasia. Arthritides and enthesopathies such as rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, synovial cysts of the facet joint, calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate deposition or hydroxyapatite deposition, and ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament or ligamentum flavum may lead to narrowing of the spinal canal. Primary spinal tumors and tumorlike lesions such as hemangioma, aneurysmal bone cysts, osteochondroma, and osteoblastoma may also cause spinal canal stenosis. Finally, Paget disease of bone may compromise the spinal cord. Radiologists should be aware of these unusual musculoskeletal causes of spinal canal compromise and their radiologic and clinical features. | |
7548883 | Histopathological and ultrastructural modifications of the arthrosis articular cartilage. | 1994 Jul | Thirty samples of articular cartilage taken during the operation from patients with incipient arthrosis, arthrosis with radiological modifications and arthrosis under study for Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) were investigated using histopathological (HE, VG, PAS-Alcian, Gömöri, Safranine O) and electronmicroscopic techniques. The control material was made of posttraumatic cartilage (Moore prosthesis). Histopathologically, the incipient arthrosis cartilage had superficial exfoliations associated with reduced saframinophilic tinctorial perichondrocytic activity. The arthrosic cartilage with typical radiological modifications was individualized at the synovia-cartilage junction by villous aspects of the synovia associated with perichondrocytic gaps, reduction of safraninophilia and modifications of reticuline-collagenic network. The arthrosic cartilage under study for RA revealed destructive fibrous modifications of the synovia and severe affection of the articular cartilage at synovia-cartilage junction. Electronmicroscopically, the ultrastructural affection was minimum in the incipient arthrosis cartilage developing to chondrocytic degeneration in arthrosis with radiological correspondent. Both histopathological and ultrastructural data emphasize the fact that arthrosis is associated with synovitis following a primitive degenerative process similar to rheumathoid synovitis in arthrosis under study for RA. | |
8042486 | Survival of the Townley knee. 360 cases with 8 (0.1-15) years' follow-up. | 1994 Jun | We evaluated 360 Townley arthroplasties in 167 OA and in 193 RA knees, performed between 1978-1986. 35 revisions were performed during the follow-up time. The main reasons for revision were aseptic loosening (18 knees), instability (6 knees), and infection (5 knees). The durability of different prosthesis components and of different tibial trays in relation to loosening were analyzed separately. The probability of the prosthesis remaining in situ was 94 percent after 5 years and 89 percent after 10 years. The success rate at 10 years was not significantly higher in arthrosis (94 percent) than in rheumatoid arthritis (85 percent). The other patient-related factors, age, sex, weight, did not influence the results. Comparing the different prosthesis components and the different designs of the tibial tray, we found no differences in success rates. | |
8169992 | Cardiac tamponade and pericardial disorders in connective tissue diseases: case report and | 1994 Feb | Pericardial disorders occurring in connective tissue diseases are not uncommon and may present as acute or chronic pericarditis with or without an effusion. In many instances, a diagnosis of pericardial involvement is not found until autopsy. Echocardiography and other currently employed radiographic techniques have enhanced the ability to make a diagnosis. Approximate frequencies of common connective tissue disorders with pericardial involvement include scleroderma (59%), systemic lupus erythematosus (44%), mixed connective tissue disease (30%), rheumatoid arthritis (24%), and polymyositis/dermatomyositis (11%). Cardiac tamponade or constriction is rare. This article describes a patient with clinical features consistent with mixed connective tissue disease that presented with a pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade. In addition, a review of pericardial involvement in connective tissue diseases and the occurrence of cardiac tamponade or constriction is included. | |
7598794 | Influence of mouse peritoneal macrophages on cartilage matrix and integrins in vitro. A mo | 1994 | The problem of cartilage breakdown in rheumatoid arthritis can partially be studied using in vitro techniques. Among the numerous models, organoid (high density) cultures have proved to be quite suited for these purposes. Chondroblasts/chondrocytes, obtained by cultivating precartilage cells of limb buds from day-12 mouse embryos, were cocultivated with mouse peritoneal macrophages in high-density or monolayer cultures. The result was an extensive breakdown of the cartilage matrix. Numerous chondrocytes detached from the matrix and became fibroblast-like cells. Immunomorphological methods showed that collagen type II, fibronectin and several integrins (beta 1-, alpha 3-, and alpha 5 beta 1 types) disappeared from the surface of chondrocytes. These pathological findings in cartilage tissue could be due to degradative products of macrophages and also chondrocytes. The in vitro model introduced here should be useful for studying matrix components and the turnover of matrix receptors of cartilage tissue in vivo under pathological conditions. | |
8296613 | ANCA in systemic vasculitides, collagen vascular diseases, rheumatic disorders and inflamm | 1993 | It was the aim of this study to reevaluate the diagnostic significance and clinical implication of ANCA after testing sera from 13,606 patients for the presence of ANCA. Our data confirm the high specificity (97%) and sensitivity (80%) of cANCA for Wegener's granulomatosis. pANCA were found in renal vasculitides (60%), collagen vascular diseases (SLE 20%, Sjögren's syndrome 26%, polymyositis 16%) and rheumatic disorders (Felty's syndrome 50%, rheumatoid arthritis 20%). A third fluorescence pattern in sera of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis 28/72, Crohn's disease 6/84), here called xANCA, was seen. Target antigens of granule proteins from PMN and monocytes (proteinase 3, myeloperoxidase, elastase, cathepsin G, lactoferrin, lysozyme) were identified. | |
1287679 | Clinical relevance of antibodies against serotonin and gangliosides in patients with prima | 1992 Nov | The fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a non-articular rheumatic disorder associated with disturbances in serotonin metabolism. In order to evaluate whether patients with FMS suffer from an autoimmune disorder, we tested sera from 50 clinically well-defined FMS patients for non-organ-specific and organ-specific antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and immunofluorescence test. Common antibodies against nuclei, mitochondria, and microsomes were not increased in these patients compared to healthy controls. However, 74% had antibodies against serotonin and gangliosides. The clinical and diagnostic relevance of these antibodies is supported by the absence of anti-serotonin antibodies in other rheumatic disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, polymyalgia rheumatica, and collagen diseases. These antibodies may belong to the group of antireceptor antibodies, considering the fact that gangliosides are an important component of the serotonin receptor. It remains to be determined whether these antibodies are of pathogenetic relevance, interfering with serotonin binding and thereby inducing symptoms associated with FMS. |