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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3874124 | Evaluation of euglobulin methods for the study of blood fibrinolytic activity: results for | 1985 | Euglobulin fractionation is a frequently employed pretreatment of plasma for the determination of fibrinolytic activity. The fractionation procedure suffers from possible in vitro artifacts, e.g., variable precipitation of C1-inactivator. This is illustrated by the following two situations. It is shown that increased amounts of C1-inactivator not related to an increased plasma concentration are present in euglobulin fractions in cases of classic rheumatoid arthritis. Similarly, postoperatively, a disproportional increase in C1-inactivator in euglobulin fractions occurs. In both cases, an artificially reduced fibrinolytic activity is recorded due to increased inhibition by C1-inactivator. This is circumvented and recognized by adding sodium flufenamate or C1s-esterase to euglobulin fractions to uniformly eliminate C1-inactivator. Two specific assays for tissue-type plasminogen activator activity in euglobulin fractions (as C1-inactivator-resistant activator activity and a parabolic rate assay on a synthetic substrate) correlate excellently (r = 0.8728; p less than 0.001; n = 108). The first mentioned is corrected for variable endogenous C1-inactivator; the latter assay is found to be insensitive to inhibition by C1-inactivator. It is concluded that with euglobulin methods a misinterpretation of blood fibrinolytic activity is possible in rheumatoid arthritis patients. In the postoperative period, the fibrinolytic shutdown concerns tissue-type plasminogen activator activity; the pattern of the shutdown can be misjudged in using traditional euglobulin methods. | |
7181054 | Quantitative determination of 1,4-methyl-imidazoleacetic acid in urine by high performance | 1982 Nov | A reversed phase ion-pair high performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method for quantitative determination of the major histamine metabolite 1,4-methyl-imidazoleacetic acid (1,4-MIAA) in urine is described. The sample handling is minimal as the sample only has to be centrifuged and diluted before analysis, in contrast to earlier gas chromatographic and thin-layer chromatographic methods. The method correlates well with a thin-layer chromatographic determination (r = 0.79, n = 15), and results from analysis of urine from different patients suffering from mastocytosis, chronic urticaria, atopic dermatitis and asthma are presented together with samples from normal individuals. Most of the patients analysed showed increased excretion of 1,4-MIAA compared with the controls. Future applications of the method, including analysis on patients with food allergy and patients with abnormalities in their histamine metabolism, are discussed. | |
1248888 | Immunosuppressive activity of concanavalin A. | 1976 | Daily intraperitoneal doses of concanavalin A (Con A) produced a dose-related inhibition of adjuvant-induced arthritis in rats. Con A was also effective on established arthritis, markedly relieving the disease after only three doses. The inhibitory effect of Con A was neutralised by pre-incubation with ovalbumin, although this treatment did not modify the delayed phlogistic action of Con A in rat paws. | |
7462652 | Measurement of circulating immune complexes by radioimmunoassay of immunoglobulin in high | 1980 | A method for detecting circulating immune complexes is described based on radioimmunoassay of IgG following the rapid separation of immune complexes from monomeric IgG on short columns of Sephacryl S-300. Values obtained using sera from patients with immune complex associated diseases were distinctly higher than those obtained with sera from healthy control subjects. The same serum samples were assayed by 3 other methods for detecting immune complexes; significant correlation was obtained. | |
1257463 | Palmar arteriography in acronecrosis. | 1976 Apr | Palmar arteriography in patients with acronecrosis complicating collagen vascular disease demonstrated multiple occlusions and stenoses which were most severe in the proper digital arteries. Involvement was prevalent at points of manual stress, i.e., adjacent to metacarpal-phalangeal and interphalangeal joints. An additional observation was the presence of incomplete superficial and deep palmar arches in all instances, a finding which diametrically contrasts with anatomical studies purporting to demonstrate complete palmar arches in 80% of the normal population. | |
1097332 | Passive transfer of unresponsiveness by lymph node cells. Studies on adjuvant disease. | 1975 Apr | Pretreatment of rats with subarthritogenic doses of mycobacterial adjuvant suppresses the arthritogenic reaction induced by this adjuvant. This unresponsiveness can betransferred to normal syngeneic recipients by viable lymph node cells from unresponsivedonors. Serum from the same donors did not prevent the arthritis. Abrogation ofunresponsiveness was obtained by injecting normal lymph node cells together with the challeging inoculation and also with sensitized lymphoid cells. In agreement with the concept of tolerance as an active immune reaction, the data suggest that in this experimental model lymphoid cells actively suppress the immune response induced by microbacterial adjuvant. Thus, arthritis or unresponsiveness may result from the predominance of either sensitized or suppressor cells. | |
4050141 | [Demonstration and differentiation of circulating immune complexes in chronic inflammatory | 1985 Mar | Circulating immune complexes were determined in rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus using a semiautomated PEG-precipitation laser-nephelometer technique. Immunoglobulins IgA, IgG and IgM as well as complement proteins C3c and C4 were quantitatively determined in 2.75% PEG-precipitates. The PEG-precipitates obtained from the sera of healthy controls, SLE patients, and RA subjects displayed different protein patterns. In RA sera a significant elevation of all investigated proteins was found. In SLE sera, a significant increase of IgG, IgA, IgM, and C3 was found, whereas C4 was significantly reduced as compared to the controls. Typical values for a calculated IgG/C4 ratio in circulating immune complexes were obtained for RA and SLE. In RA this ratio remained unchanged in different activity stages and was found in seropositive as well as in seronegative sera. Thus circulating immune complexes from SLE and RA sera differ with respect to the degree of complement-dependent solubilization. | |
6225520 | Etodolac, aspirin, and placebo in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a 12-week study. | 1983 | Etodolac, aspirin, and placebo were evaluated for efficacy and safety in 18 patients with adult-onset, active rheumatoid arthritis. This was a 12-week, double-blind, parallel-group study divided into drug titration and maintenance periods and preceded by a washout period of up to two weeks. The mean daily maintenance doses of etodolac and aspirin were 394 mg and 4,414 mg, respectively. Etodolac was significantly (P less than or equal to 0.05) more effective than placebo in five of ten clinical variables of efficacy: number of painful joints, number of swollen joints, pain intensity, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and patients' overall assessments. Aspirin was significantly more effective than placebo in only two assessments: number of painful joints and pain intensity. One patient on etodolac, two patients on aspirin, and four patients on placebo had to be withdrawn from the trial because of insufficient therapeutic response. One patient in the placebo group was withdrawn from the study because of a pruritic rash. Mild to moderate gastrointestinal complaints occurred in all three treatment groups: in three patients taking etodolac, three taking aspirin, and two taking placebo. | |
4612043 | Spontaneous septic arthritis complicating rheumatoid arthritis. | 1974 Sep | Thirteen cases (in twelve patients) of septic arthritis complicating rheumatoid arthritis are reported. One ankle, one metacarpopophalangeal joint, one shoulder, and ten knees were involved. Staphylococcus aureus was cultured from twelve joints and Escherichia coli, from one. Treatment consisted of repeated needle aspirations in two patients, arthrotomy with Penrose drainage in six, and arthrotomy with through-and-through irrigation in four. Needle aspiration was the least effective therapy. The authors recommend as the treatment of choice: systemic antibiotic therapy and immediate arthrotomy followed by through-and-through irrigation with fluid containing the appropriate antibiotics. | |
535293 | Anametric total knee arthroplasty. | 1979 Nov | The early experience with the anametric knee prosthesis shows it to be effective in achieving the aims desired in total knee arthroplasty. Decreased pain and improved function have been noted in most patients, with relatively few complications. In osteoarthritics, patellar replacement increases the level of improvement. This prosthetic system has been improved by the addition of further sizes and additional tibial fixation options. Detailed long-term follow-up evaluation of these patients will be necessary to judge the effectiveness of the newly introduced design modifications. | |
680459 | Differentiation between patients with malignant diseases and non-malignant diseases or hea | 1978 Apr | Changes in the degree of fluorescence polarization in the fluorescent cytoplasm of lymphocytes from patients with malignant diseases, patients with nonmalignant diseases, and normal donors were investigated by the fluorescence polarization technique. In order to confirm Cercek's cancer test, two kinds of parameters, the degree of fluorescence polarization of lymphocytes stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and cancer basic protein, were obtained for each person. Patients with malignant diseases were easily differentiated from the others without exception by an index, the response ratio of the degree of fluorescence polarization. Usefulness of this technique was confirmed for the detection of cancer-bearing patients. | |
6428222 | HLA-DR genotype risks in seropositive rheumatoid arthritis. | 1984 May | We studied the distribution of HLA-A, B, C, and -DR antigens in 77 Caucasian patients with sero-positive rheumatoid arthritis. Forty-four patients were genotyped and compared with the control panel of 110 unrelated Caucasian genotyped donors. The data obtained confirm the association of DR4 with RA, and reveal an increased risk of disease for patients carrying DR1, DR2, and DR3, compared to the risk for those carrying other antigens, such as DR5, DRw6, and DR7. There is a higher risk for DR4/4 homozygotes than for DR4/1, DR4/2, or DR4/3 heterozygotes. DR4/5, DR4/6, and DR4/7 have a lower risk than the previously mentioned genotypes. The genotype risks are compatible with the inheritance of a single, linked genetic determinant of disease susceptibility, but we are unable to distinguish between recessive and dominant inheritance of susceptibility using the "antigen-frequencies-amongst-diseases" method. DR4 seems to be more frequent in patients in whom onset occurs before the age of 35 (79% vs. 54% DR4 positive). A significant excess of DR3 + is observed in patients with toxic complications following treatment with gold salts (X2(1) = 8.96). | |
6156953 | Inhibition of polymorphonuclear leukocyte chemiluminescence for detection of immune comple | 1980 Sep | An assay for the detection and quantitation of immune complexes is described. Experimental immune complexes or aggregated human gamma globulin (AHG) were incubated with polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). After challenge of the PMN with opsonized zymosan, chemiluminescence was recorded in a scintillation spectrometer. A quantitative inhibition of chemiluminescence could be demonstrated by the interaction of PMN with immune complexes or AHG. Experimental immune complexes of bovine serum albumin-anti-bovine serum albumin were formed and tested by this assay, and immune complexes formed near antigen excess were best described by this technique. The technique was used to demonstrate immune complexes in the sera from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and vasculitis. Immune complexes were quantitated by reference to a standard curve using AHG. By this technique, normal human sera had < 10 micrograms of AHG per milliliter of serum. Immune complexes at levels above this were detected in 9/15 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, 18/30 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, and 2/5 patients with vasculitis. Therefore, this assay is a sensitive, simple method for measurement of circulating immune complexes in the sera of patients with certain connective tissue diseases. | |
7100868 | [Use of drugs in a medical polyclinic]. | 1982 May 15 | The medical prescriptions of 18 house officers working at the Policlinique Universitaire de Médecine in Geneva were analyzed for a period of 17 working days and provide insight into drug therapy chosen for 2194 outpatients at 2694 consultations. These patients were prescribed an average of 1.39 drugs each or 1.13 per call. Of the 298 different drugs thus prescribed, the following were chosen most frequently (in decreasing order): Digoxin, Hygroton, Lexotanil, Metamucil, Voltaren, Aspirin, different insulins and Aldomet. Antimicrobial agents accounted for only 2.5% of all prescriptions, while vitamins and "fortifiers" represent an even lower percentage. It would be possible to limit the number of drugs, since half of the prescriptions cover 23 drugs and 90% of all prescriptions cover 119 drugs. Prescription patterns vary markedly from one subspecialty of internal medicine to another, but also between physicians working in the same field. House officers in charge of given sectors of the city (internists not working in a subspecialty) may thus prescribe between 1,83 and 2.9 drugs per patient, whereas the number of drugs chosen may vary between 81 and 134. Some quaint individual preferences for drugs were also noted and the trend is analyzed. The data is compared with results of the few existing similar studies and offers food for thought on prescription habits, directed ultimately towards a more rational approach to drug therapy for outpatients. | |
6332162 | The chronic disease data bank: first principles to future directions. | 1984 May | Chronic diseases represent the major illness burden of developed nations. A chronic disease databank system consists of parallel longitudinal data sets from diverse locations describing the courses of thousands of patients with chronic illness over many years. Illustrated by ARAMIS (The American Rheumatism Association Medical Information System), such data resources facilitate analysis of long term health outcomes and the factors associated with particular outcomes. A model for clinical investigation of contemporary disease is presented, based on the overwhelming prevalence of chronic illness, the variability, complexity, and uniqueness of the individual patient course, the difficulties of traditional univariate reductionist approaches, and the time span required for study. In this model, data are systematically accrued and continually analyzed, and the data collected are gradually modified based upon evolving anticipation of future needs. The strategies underlying the development of ARAMIS are described, investigational results summarized, and future directions outlined. | |
999740 | Hyaluronic acid produced by human synovial fibroblasts. Effect of polyinosinic-polycytidyl | 1976 Nov | Poly I:C (polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid) stimulated hyaluronic acid production by rheumatoid and non-rheumatoid human synovial fibroblasts. Stimulation was dose dependent and was inhibited by acetylsalicyclic acid and indomethacin. Poly I and Poly C, when separately added, had no stimulatory effect on hyaluronic acid production, and Poly A:U had only a slight effect on this parameter. Cells grown with Poly I:C were virus resistant and interferon was detected in their medium. Human interferon had also a dose-dependent stimulatory effect on hyaluronic acid production by synovial cells. A possible interferon-mediated relationship between virus infection and pathologic accumulation of joint fluid is suggested. | |
113476 | Determination of C1q in human sera. | 1979 Oct | All detectable C1q in serum is precipitated with the euglobulin fraction, and all other detectable hydroxyproline-containing protein in serum is excluded from this fraction. Since C1q contains 4.3% hydroxyproline, an estimate of its content in serum can be calculated by multiplying the hydroxyproline content of the euglobulin fraction by 23.3. The mean value of C1q in five normal male subjects determined by this method was found to be 63 microgram/ml as compared with 144 microgram/ml when determined by RID, indicating that the latter procedure seriously overestimates C1q in serum. C1q content of serum from patients with RA was found to be elevated by both procedures. | |
152271 | [Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis as a cause of an erosive, destructive arthropathy (aut | 1978 Nov | Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis is a special form of an erosive, destructive arthropathy. It can be distinguished from other forms of erosive polyarthropathies by the characteristic x-ray appearances, although the final proof of the diagnosis is histological in association with the clinical features and the presence of nodular skin lesions. A case of multicentric reticulohistiocytosis is described. The typical radiological appearances are discussed and the differential diagnosis from other forms of chronic polyarthritis, such as gout, psoariatic arthropathy, Reiter's disease and erosive osteoarthritis is considered. | |
6373059 | Enzyme-linked immunoassay of monoclonal and serum microsomal autoantibodies. | 1984 Apr 27 | An automated enzyme-linked immunoassay for the detection of antibodies to human thyroid microsomes has been assessed. This assay correlated closely with the established commercial passive haemagglutination method. Variations in the purity of crude microsome preparations and the degree of thyroglobulin contamination make careful comparison of different preparations essential for meaningful interpretation of results, and attempts to circumvent these problems by further purification of microsome preparations using gel filtration are discussed. The application of this method for routine screening of serum samples is demonstrated using populations of normal subjects and patients with rheumatoid arthritis and anti-glomerular basement membrane disease. This assay has also permitted the establishment of murine hybrid myelomas secreting monoclonal antibodies to human thyroid microsomes. | |
6619913 | Effect of articular disease and total knee arthroplasty on knee joint-position sense. | 1983 Sep | Joint proprioception in the human knee has been studied using two previously described tests. Threshold of detection of slow, constant, passive motion and ability to reproduce angles to which the knee was passively placed were accurately measured. A group of postoperative total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients were examined. All patients also had documented articular disease in the unoperated knee. Results were compared to age-matched controls. In addition, a young control group was studied for comparison to both groups. A significant difference was seen between the young control group and the older control group in both tests performed. Age-matched controls and the postoperative patients demonstrated an even greater difference. There was, however, no difference between the operated and unoperated knee among the TKA patients. It is concluded that joint proprioception declines to some degree with normal aging. A more marked decline is associated with degenerative joint disease. Total joint replacement, however, did not lead to a further decrease in sensation. |