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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16640655 | Interleukin-6 trans-signalling in chronic inflammation and cancer. | 2006 May | Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a cytokine, which plays an important role in many chronic inflammatory diseases. IL-6 belongs to a family of 10 cytokines, which all act via receptor complexes containing the cytokine receptor subunit gp130. On cells, IL-6 first binds to a specific membrane-bound IL-6R and the complex of IL-6 and IL-6R interacts with gp130 leading to signal initiation. Whereas gp130 is widely expressed throughout the body, the IL-6R is only found on some cells including hepatocytes and some leucocytes. A soluble form of the IL-6R is an agonist capable of transmitting signals through interaction with the gp130 protein. In vivo, the IL-6/soluble IL-6R complex stimulates several types of target cells, which are unresponsive to IL-6 alone, as they do not express the membrane-bound IL-6R. We have named this process trans-signalling. We provided evidence that a soluble form of the IL-6 family signalling receptor subunit gp130 is the natural inhibitor of IL-6 trans-signalling responses. We showed that in chronic inflammatory diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, peritonitis, rheumatoid arthritis, asthma as well as in colon cancer, IL-6 trans-signalling is critically involved in the maintenance of the disease state. Moreover, in all these animal models, the progression of the disease can be interrupted by specifically interfering with IL-6 trans-signalling using recombinant-soluble gp130Fc protein. The pathophysiologic mechanisms by which the IL-6/soluble IL-6R complex perpetuates the inflammatory state are discussed. | |
16638417 | Atopic dermatitis and systemic autoimmune diseases: a descriptive cross sectional study. | 2006 Mar 30 | Atopic dermatitis (AD) has a Th2 (T-helper 2) immune-reactivity pattern. However, the majority of systemic autoimmune diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and insulin dependent diabetes mellitus show a Th1 (T-helper 1) reactivity pattern. From this, one may hypothesize that AD and the Th1 autoimmune diseases could be inversely associated and AD may be more common in the minority of autoimmune diseases with a Th2 overactivity pattern such as systemic lupus erythematosus. A cross sectional study was designed. Our patients were enrolled from a general university hospital (all systemic autoimmune patients in every medical ward based on definite diagnoses in their medical records). Information on atopic dermatitis was obtained by questionnaires and physical examination by a dermatologist. A total of 63 patients were studied; 17.5 percent of cases had atopic dermatitis in the past or present. There were 31 patients 49.2 %) who carried a diagnosis known to be associated with Th1 reaction, and 21 patients (33.3 %) who had a disease associated with Th2-type reactivity. In 11 patients (17.5 %) the T-cell reaction type was not definitively classified. The relative frequency of AD was 9.7 percent (3 of 31 cases) in Th1-related autoimmune diseases, 28.6 percent (6 of 21 cases) in Th2-related autoimmune diseases and 18.2 percent (2 of 11 cases) in the unclassified category, a difference not statistically significant. Although the power of this study is not high enough to show a statistical significance, AD seems to be uncommon in patients with autoimmune diseases associated with Th1 overactivity. | |
16484987 | Analysis of chromosome 5q31-32 and psoriasis: confirmation of a susceptibility locus but n | 2006 May | We have previously reported a region on chromosome 5q as a possible susceptibility region for psoriasis. This cytokine cluster-rich region has also been suggested as a susceptibility locus in other autoimmune or inflammatory diseases including Crohn's disease (CD) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Three specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been reported to associate with RA and CD and to change the functional activity of two organic cation transporters, solute carrier family 22 member 4/5 (SLC22A4) and (SLC22A5). In this study, we have analyzed these SNPs for an association with psoriasis. We have also performed a denser linkage analysis of this region with an additional 31 microsatellite markers. We were not able to detect any association with any of the three SNPs analyzed. However, our linkage result supports the involvement of this region in the etiology of psoriasis. We obtained a peak non-parametric linkage value of 3.1 for marker D5S436 in a subgroup of patients with joint complaints. This result supports the findings in another study of psoriasis patients originating from Iceland in which the authors obtained a peak logarithm of the odds score of 2.6 for marker D5S2090, only 2 Mb from D5S436. This suggests a psoriasis susceptibility locus on chromosome 5q32 that is involved in the arthritic phenotype of the disease. | |
16296393 | [Chemoprophylaxis for tuberculosis]. | 2005 Oct | In Japan, a person who is 29 or younger, contacted a tuberculosis patient recently and judged to have received infection is the object of the chemoprophylaxis by the public expenditure. On the other hand, in ATS/CDC, they call chemoprophylaxis as the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection, and if there is a strong possibility that a person may appear tuberculosis, they start chemoprophylaxis, regardless of age. We usually prescribe isoniazid for latent tubercular infection. The period of prescription is at least 6 months, which is effective, but 9 months is more desirable. Recently, in the West, tuberculosis are frequent among patients who are administered Infliximab, anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha. In Japan, after 6 months' evaluation period for Infliximab medication to rheumatoid arthritis, 11 out of 2,000 became tuberculosis (100,000 to 550). As for the tuberculin reaction before Infliximab medication, 2 were un-carrying out and 4 were negative. Moreover, even in positive examples, many of them were small redness. From this result, the Japanese Society for Tuberculosis and the Japan College of Rheumatology advised jointly. Those who are using immunosuppressant drugs and a doctor judged that they need chemoprophylaxis are supposed to the start medication if they are positive in tuberculin reaction, or there are some proof of tubercular infection on chest X-ray film, or there are high possibility of having received tubercular infection. By carrying out active chemoprophylaxis regardless of age, tuberculosis from high risk group is expected to decrease. | |
16273781 | Development of a multi-dimensional health assessment questionnaire (MDHAQ) for the infrast | 2005 Sep | The HAQ has become the pre-eminent patient questionnaire used in rheumatology. It is easily completed by patients, but not easily reviewed and scored in standard clinical care and has some minor psychometric limitations, as do all questionnaires. Modifications of the HAQ been made to facilitate use in standard care, particularly to include 8-10 activities of daily living, along with scores for pain and global status and other information on one side of one page for rapid review by the clinician. A patient questionnaire for standard care should be limited to 2 sides of 1 page, in a format amenable to "eyeball" review by the clinician in 5 seconds or less. It can be scored formally in 15-20 seconds or less, and is useful in patients with all rheumatic diseases. The current version of a multi-dimensional HAQ (MDHAQ) includes scoring templates on the questionnaire to allow formal scoring in less than 15 seconds by a rheumatologist or an assistant, for possible entry onto a paper and/or computerized flow sheet. Various versions of the MDHAQ may also include a "constant" region of physical function, pain and patient global status, and "variable" regions of fatigue, morning stiffness, psychological distress, change in status, a review of systems, a rheumatoid arthritis disease activity self-report joint count (RADAI), review of recent health events, and review of medications. The MDHAQ can be used in the infrastructure of rheumatology care to include quantitative data in standard care of all patients with all rheumatic diseases. | |
16173249 | Perceived efficacy among patients of various methods of complementary alternative medicine | 2005 Sep | OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this cross-sectional survey was to obtain and analyze data on self-perceived efficacy of different types of complementary alternative medicine (CAM) by patients with various rheumatologic conditions. METHODS: Patients followed in rheumatology outpatient clinics were screened for the use of CAM. Patients reporting the use of CAM were asked to participate in face-to-face structured interviews, specifying the various CAM types they used, and grading their subjective impression of efficacy of each CAM type on a scale of 1-10. RESULTS: 350 consecutive patients were screened and 148 reported using CAM. In general, homeopathy and acupuncture were the most commonly used CAM types (44% and 41% of the CAM users, respectively). The mean number of different CAM methods used by a CAM user was 1.9 +/- 1.1. Patients with fibromyalgia used significantly more CAM methods (2.7 +/- 1.4, p = 0.005). On patients' self-perceived efficacy scale of 1-10, the mean score of the whole group was 5.3 +/- 3.2. Acupuncture and homeopathy achieved significantly higher self-perceived efficacy scores in CAM users with spondylo-arthropathies and osteoarthritis, respectively, when compared to some of the other disease groups. Satisfaction was lowest among CAM users with rheumatoid arthritis, vasculitis and connective tissue diseases. CONCLUSION: In general, CAM users were less than moderately satisfied with self-perceived-efficacy of CAM therapies. However efficacy of specific CAM methods differed significantly among patients in different disease groups. | |
16156353 | Robust active appearance models and their application to medical image analysis. | 2005 Sep | Active appearance models (AAMs) have been successfully used for a variety of segmentation tasks in medical image analysis. However, gross disturbances of objects can occur in routine clinical setting caused by pathological changes or medical interventions. This poses a problem for AAM-based segmentation, since the method is inherently not robust. In this paper, a novel robust AAM (RAAM) matching algorithm is presented. Compared to previous approaches, no assumptions are made regarding the kind of gray-value disturbance and/or the expected magnitude of residuals during matching. The method consists of two main stages. First, initial residuals are analyzed by means of a mean-shift-based mode detection step. Second, an objective function is utilized for the selection of a mode combination not representing the gross outliers. We demonstrate the robustness of the method in a variety of examples with different noise conditions. The RAAM performance is quantitatively demonstrated in two substantially different applications, diaphragm segmentation and rheumatoid arthritis assessment. In all cases, the robust method shows an excellent behavior, with the new method tolerating up to 50% object area covered by gross gray-level disturbances. | |
16006380 | The health impact of childhood trauma: an interdisciplinary review, 1997-2003. | 2005 Apr | Research has shown a strong relationship between childhood trauma and psychological difficulties in later life; more recent research has indicated that the long-term effects are even greater for physical illness. These long-term effects have highlighted Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) as a possible mediator variable. The illnesses identified include, but are not limited to, eating disorders, substance abuse, phobias, multiple personality disorders, irritable bowel syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, and autoimmune disorders. Childhood trauma is an area of interdisciplinary interest; therefore, a variety of disciplines have been carrying out research in this area. This article is an integrative review of the literature over the last five years across disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, education, social services, and government agencies. The review searched for themes, common constructs, and definitions, plus gaps in the present literature that need to be addressed. Particular attention was paid to measurement tools, and the importance of post traumatic stress disorder. Databases included were Medline, Proquest, Canadian Health Network (CHN), Canadian Business and Current Affairs (CBCA) Education, Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) Plus, Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), American Psychological Association Database Information (PsychINFO), and Cochrance. | |
15983902 | Tumor necrosis factor inhibition and invasive fungal infections. | 2005 Aug 1 | Candida albicans and Aspergillus fumigatus occur ubiquitously in nature; C. albicans is part of the natural flora of most healthy individuals, and A. fumigatus is commonly found in soil, plant debris, and indoor air. Neither fungus poses a threat to healthy individuals, but each can cause fatal infections in immunocompromised patients. The use of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) antagonists for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and other autoimmune diseases has been associated with an increased incidence of opportunistic infections, including infections with both of these fungi. Because the use of TNF antagonists is expected to increase in the future, understanding the role that TNF plays and the effect of its antagonism on host defense against infections with these fungi is critical for reducing the associated morbidity and mortality. | |
15926131 | [Autoimmune diseases and multiple sclerosis]. | 2005 May 16 | INTRODUCTION: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease affecting the central nervous system with an unknown origin, although the immunological system plays a crucial role in its pathogenesis. It has been observed that the relatives of MS patients very often have other autoimmune diseases (ADs) and it has been suggested that there may be susceptibility genes that are common to this group of diseases. AIMS: Our aim was to estimate the prevalence of ADs in first and second degree relatives of patients with MS and to determine the coexistence of other ADs in MS patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We selected 251 patients with MS defined by the Poser criteria and face-to-face interviews with the patients and/or their relatives were conducted to investigate the following ADs: MS, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, polyarteritis nodosa, autoimmune thyroid disease (ATD), inflammatory bowel disease, myasthenia gravis, type I diabetes mellitus (DMI) and psoriasis. RESULTS. 29.9% of the patients with MS had a first and/or second degree relative with an AD. Prevalence of ADs in first degree relatives was 15.5%, 30% in familial MS and 40% if the patient had both MS and another AD. The most frequent ADs were: MS 27%, psoriasis 18%, ATD 16% and DMI 15%. 15 patients had MS and another AD: six ATD, three DMI, four psoriasis, one inflammatory bowel disease and one myasthenia gravis. CONCLUSIONS: These findings lend support to the existence of susceptibility genes that are common to the different ADs and would act as risk factors. | |
15909739 | [Analysis of the ulsefulnes of contrast echocardiography and nuclear medicine in cardiovas | 2005 Jan | A significant correlation between autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and premature or accelerated coronary atherosclerosis was found. The objectives of the study were: a) evaluate myocardial perfusion in patients with rheumatic diseases by means of contrast echocardiography (CE) and to establish its usefulness as compared to the results obtained by nuclear medicine (NM) (reference method). b) evaluate the prevalence of alterations in subclinical myocardial perfusion in autoimmune diseases and to establish a strategy to evaluate the cardiovascular changes in this disease. Myocardial perfusion in 37 outpatients of the rheumatology department was evaluated by CE at rest and with pharmacological stress (dobutamine) and NM. The prevalence of alterations in the myocardial perfusion in autoimmune diseases by CE and NM, when these methods were analyzed independently or when both methods were used was 27%. The positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of both tests was 80% and 93%, respectively, the sensitivity was 80% and the specificity was 93%. The prevalence of alterations of perfusion in the primary antiphospholipid syndrome (PAPS) was of 30%. In this patients it was found that when both diagnostic tests are performed, NM reaches a sensitivity of 100% if the CE is positive and an specificity of 100% when the CE is negative. We can conclude that it is important to determine the presence of subclinic coronary artery disease in patients with autoimmune disease by noninvasive studies such as Sestamibi SPECT and/or CE for assessment of myocardial perfusion in order to plan an adequate treatment and follow-up. | |
15756053 | ICAM G241A polymorphism and soluble ICAM-1 serum levels: evidence for an active immune pro | 2005 | OBJECTIVES: We have previously reported reduced serum levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1) in schizophrenic patients. A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) of the ICAM-1 gene was described at position 241. The G-->A SNP results in a nonsynonymous amino acid exchange of the ICAM-1 protein, and the A allele was shown to be also associated with several immunological disorders like rheumatoid arthritis. METHODS: We investigated 70 schizophrenic patients and 128 unrelated healthy control persons regarding the relationship between the serum levels of sICAM-1 and the ICAM-1 G214A polymorphism. RESULTS: We were able to replicate our previous finding of reduced sICAM-1 levels in schizophrenia. Healthy control persons carrying the polymorphic A allele showed markedly lower sICAM-1 serum levels than carriers of the homozygous GG wild type (p < 0.004). In contrast, no significant difference in the sICAM-1 serum levels were seen regarding the G241A genotype distribution in schizophrenic patients. CONCLUSION: We hypothesize that the biochemical effect of the G241A SNP is masked in schizophrenic patients, indicating a disease-related mechanism leading to reduced levels of sICAM-1 in schizophrenia. | |
15707482 | Theories of schizophrenia: a genetic-inflammatory-vascular synthesis. | 2005 Feb 11 | BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia, a relatively common psychiatric syndrome, affects virtually all brain functions yet has eluded explanation for more than 100 years. Whether by developmental and/or degenerative processes, abnormalities of neurons and their synaptic connections have been the recent focus of attention. However, our inability to fathom the pathophysiology of schizophrenia forces us to challenge our theoretical models and beliefs. A search for a more satisfying model to explain aspects of schizophrenia uncovers clues pointing to genetically mediated CNS microvascular inflammatory disease. DISCUSSION: A vascular component to a theory of schizophrenia posits that the physiologic abnormalities leading to illness involve disruption of the exquisitely precise regulation of the delivery of energy and oxygen required for normal brain function. The theory further proposes that abnormalities of CNS metabolism arise because genetically modulated inflammatory reactions damage the microvascular system of the brain in reaction to environmental agents, including infections, hypoxia, and physical trauma. Damage may accumulate with repeated exposure to triggering agents resulting in exacerbation and deterioration, or healing with their removal. There are clear examples of genetic polymorphisms in inflammatory regulators leading to exaggerated inflammatory responses. There is also ample evidence that inflammatory vascular disease of the brain can lead to psychosis, often waxing and waning, and exhibiting a fluctuating course, as seen in schizophrenia. Disturbances of CNS blood flow have repeatedly been observed in people with schizophrenia using old and new technologies. To account for the myriad of behavioral and other curious findings in schizophrenia such as minor physical anomalies, or reported decreased rates of rheumatoid arthritis and highly visible nail fold capillaries, we would have to evoke a process that is systemic such as the vascular and immune/inflammatory systems. SUMMARY: A vascular-inflammatory theory of schizophrenia brings together environmental and genetic factors in a way that can explain the diversity of symptoms and outcomes observed. If these ideas are confirmed, they would lead in new directions for treatments or preventions by avoiding inducers of inflammation or by way of inflammatory modulating agents, thus preventing exaggerated inflammation and consequent triggering of a psychotic episode in genetically predisposed persons. | |
15702130 | Association between SLC11A1 (formerly NRAMP1) and the risk of sarcoidosis in Poland. | 2005 Jul | Sarcoidosis (SA) is a systemic granulomatous disorder of unknown etiology characterized by T helper 1-type inflammatory responses at sites of disease with signs of B cell hyperactivity. Like rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes, an infectious etiology has frequently been postulated but no single infectious trigger definitively identified. Polymorphic alleles at SLC11A1 have previously been associated with susceptibility to both the putative infectious agents and to these autoimmune disorders. We therefore investigated its candidacy as a genetic determinant of SA in Poland in an association-based study comparing 86 SA patients with 85 tuberculosis (TB) patients and 93 control subjects. The functional promoter (GT)(n) polymorphism and four of 10 other single nucleotide or insertion/deletion polymorphisms genotyped across SLC11A1 were informative in our sample. Consistent with previous autoimmune disease studies, allele 3 at the functional (GT)(n) promoter region repeat polymorphism was significantly associated with SA when compared with healthy controls (odds ratio 1.68; 95% CI: 1.01-2.81; P=0.04) or with TB patients (odds ratio 1.69; 95% CI: 1.042-0.78; P=0.03). | |
15679058 | Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antiplatelet medications and spinal axis anesthesia | 2005 Mar | Many individuals use cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors (COX-1 and COX-2 non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) and antiplatelet medications on a regular basis. This is particularly true of the elderly, who are more prone to having osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and cardiac disease. Some of these agents alter platelet function and may increase the risk of spinal/epidural hematoma formation if spinal axis anesthesia is utilized without following proper precautions. All anesthesiologists should be familiar with these agents and how they work. More importantly, they should be familiar with the established guidelines set forth by the American Society of Regional Anesthesia (ASRA) [Regional anesthesia in the anticoagulated patient-defining the risk (2002); Reg. Anes. Pain Med. 28 (2003)172], the German Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine (DGAI) [Anaesthesiol. Intensivmed. 38 (1997) 623], and the Spanish Consensus Forum [Rev. Esp. Anesthesiol. Reanim. 48 (2001) 270]. This article explains the mechanism of action of each of the medications which alter platelet function, defines the risks of hematoma formation should the medication be inadvertently continued into the perioperative period, and provides guidelines and recommendations on how to manage each class of drug prior to the placement of spinal/epidural blocks. | |
17434468 | Lineage tree analysis of immunoglobulin variable-region gene mutations in autoimmune disea | 2006 Dec | Autoimmune diseases show high diversity in the affected organs, clinical manifestations and disease dynamics. Yet they all share common features, such as the ectopic germinal centers found in many affected tissues. Lineage trees depict the diversification, via somatic hypermutation (SHM), of immunoglobulin variable-region (IGV) genes. We previously developed an algorithm for quantifying the graphical properties of IGV gene lineage trees, allowing evaluation of the dynamical interplay between SHM and antigen-driven selection in different lymphoid tissues, species, and disease situations. Here, we apply this method to ectopic GC B cell clones from patients with Myasthenia Gravis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, and Sjögren's Syndrome, using data scaling to minimize the effects of the large variability due to methodological differences between groups. Autoimmune trees were found to be significantly larger relative to normal controls. In contrast, comparison of the measurements for tree branching indicated that similar selection pressure operates on autoimmune and normal control clones. | |
17081761 | Discovery and synthesis of new immunosuppressive alkaloids from the stem of Fissistigma ol | 2007 Jan 15 | Three new alkaloids (1-3) and twenty-one known compounds were isolated from the stem of Fissistigma oldhamii (Hemsl.) Merr. which was the ruler herb in an approved Traditional Chinese herbal formula used for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis in China and synthesis of one new immunosuppressive alkaloid was achieved. These compounds, including the crude extracts of this herb, exhibited strong activities in the inhibition of T and B cell proliferation. | |
17039308 | Evaluation of Pneumocystis pneumonia infection risk factors in patients with connective ti | 2006 | We conducted a retrospective, clinical evaluation of connective tissue disease (CTD) patients who were tested for either sputum or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid Pneumocystis polymerase chain reaction (PC-PCR) and analyzed the risk factors that cause Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) susceptibility and fatality. PC-PCR was performed on 66 CTD patients who presented with symptoms, data, or radiological findings strongly suggesting respiratory infection. Patients with higher oral corticosteroid doses, use of oral methotrexate (MTX), bilateral lung findings, positive beta-D-glucan, and no prophylaxis use were more susceptible to PCP. They had significantly low immunoglobulin G and significantly high beta-D-glucan and lactate dehydrogenase. Survivors and nonsurvivors of PCP were also evaluated. Poor prognoses were observed with older age, elevated beta-D-glucan, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients using MTX, hypoxemia, bilateral lung findings, and mechanical ventilation use. Nonsurvivors had significantly lower lymphocytes, oxygen saturation, and significantly higher beta-D-glucan. In RA, poor prognoses were seen with those taking MTX. Disease duration, underlying pulmonary complications, and oral corticosteroid doses did not lead to poor prognoses in RA. Because PCP in CTD leads to abrupt onset of symptoms with poor survival rates, early diagnosis and initiation of treatment are critical, and it is essential for clinicians to recognize risk factors that predispose patients to PCP and its mortality. | |
17038928 | Temporomandibular joint cyst presenting as trigeminal neuropathy and middle fossa mass: ca | 2006 Oct | OBJECTIVE: We describe the case of a temporomandibular joint cyst eroding into the middle fossa, initially causing compression of the trigeminal nerve and trigeminal neuropathy, and ultimately causing destruction of the second division of the nerve with facial numbness. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 50-year-old woman with rheumatoid arthritis on prednisone developed right-sided, initially lancinating facial pain that ultimately became dull in nature in the maxillary division of the trigeminal nerve. This change in pain was associated with the development of numbness in the same distribution. The facial pain gradually resolved, but the facial numbness persisted. Imaging revealed a heterogeneously enhancing mass in the middle fossa lateral to Meckel's cave. INTERVENTION: During surgery, the dura was elevated, and a smooth, firm lesion with several thinly encapsulated, cystic areas containing viscous, white fluid was identified. The mass had eroded through the floor of the middle cranial fossa. The thick, fibrous capsule was freed from the bone edges and was sectioned sharply extracranially. Pathological evaluation was consistent with a cyst originating from the temporomandibular joint. CONCLUSION: Extracranial mass lesions involving the middle fossa structures are uncommon and typically arise from the parotid gland. This case represents the first example of a middle fossa mass originating from an abnormal temporomandibular joint and a unique cause of trigeminal neuropathy. After excision, there has been no recurrence after 2 years of follow-up. | |
16967610 | [Polymyalgia rheumatica and giant cell arteritis--first results of a year-long study]. | 2006 Jul | INTRODUCTION: Due to ageing of population, gerontorheumatology becomes more and more important. Both polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) and giant cell arteritis (GCA) typically develop in later life and they have many other common features. The aim of our study was to explore diagnostic and prognostic markers and, prospectively, establish diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for patients with PMR and GCA. SAMPLE AND METHODS: We examined 27 patients with suspected PMR or OBA. The diagnosis was verified in 22 patients. Three of them were in a long-term clinical remission. Besides examination for basic clinical and laboratory parameters, all other patients were subjected to ultrasonography of temporal artery and peripheral joints to detect any exudates. Also, they were examined for T-cell subpopulations in peripheral blood and HLA antigens. RESULTS: Exudate was confirmed in 7 patients; some of them had exudate in multiple joints. Puncture of synovial fluid was done in 4 patients. Increased resistance index of temporal artery was found in 2 patients with GCA and 4 patients with PMR. GCA patients showed lower level of T-cells and increased activation of CD8-cells. Decreased count of CD8+ T-cells was observed in 56 % of PMR patients. Analysis of HLA antigens indicates that GCA, rheumatoid arthritis and, probably, PMR are associated with HLA-DR4 antigen in Slovak population. CONCLUSION: The importance of assessment of disease activity and its prognosis in PMR or GCA patients via ultrasonographic evaluation of exudate in peripheral joints and resistance index of temporal artery as well as the analysis of T-cell distribution in peripheral blood and incidence of HLA-antigens has not been proved yet. Practical significance of monitoring the above-mentioned parameters can be verified only by further prospective study performed with a larger sample of patients. |