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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2484314 | Susceptibility epitope on HLA-DR beta chain for rheumatoid arthritis and the effect of the | 1989 Dec | A highly significant association of an amino acid sequence, '70Q71R72R73A74A' located on the DR beta-1 chain, with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was confirmed in Japanese patients using polymerase chain reaction. The '70QRRA74A' is the most plausible candidate of susceptibility epitope in Japanese RA patients. The patients carrying the sequence showed slightly higher but not significant familial incidence. The positivity of the 'QRRAA' showed no effect on the positivity of the rheumatoid factor, rheumatoid nodules, and extra-articular signs. Also no significant differences in other clinical parameters (ESR, CRP, Hb, A/G) and age at onset were observed regarding the positivity. The risk that the 'QRRAA' positive subjects would suffer from RA was estimated to be about 1.3% which meant 7.2 times easier to get RA than those without 'QRRAA'. | |
2291071 | [Heel involvement in rheumatoid polyarthritis]. | 1990 Nov | Calcaneus involvement during the course of RA is poorly known. A clinical and radiological study of 408 consecutive rheumatoid feet are then reported. If talalgia was seldomly noted (3.7 p. cent), plantar calcaneitis was found in 29.7 p. cent as plantar spur. Similarly, posterior exostosis was displayed in 30.5 p. cent of patients. These radiological abnormalities are increased in RA but appeared more as a consequence of the statical modification of the foot secondary to RA process than as a direct involvement. Logical orthopedic therapeutics are then proposed. | |
2743580 | A multiwell lectin-binding assay using lotus tetragonolobus for measuring different glycos | 1989 Apr 14 | Using the fucose-specific lectin, Lotus tetragonolobus, we recently isolated abnormally-glycosylated forms of haptoglobin (FHp) that are useful for monitoring cancer patients and for detecting active disease in rheumatoid arthritis. FHp is detected by electrophoresis and silver staining. In order to use FHp clinically, a better assay is required. A lectin-binding assay (LBA) is described, in which FHp is captured by lotus bound to multi-well plates, and the amount captured is measured by an enzyme-labelled antibody system. The LBA results correlate with those obtained with electrophoresis. The method also gives good precision and low background values. In the presence of 1 mol/l fucose the bound-FHp was reduced by between 60-100%. This confirms that the method is detecting abnormally-fucosylated forms of haptoglobin. This approach opens up exciting possibilities for investigating large numbers of pathological sera and it suggests that other combinations of lectin and antibody may be worth investigating in the future. | |
3063005 | [D-penicillamine--a retrospective view]. | 1988 | D-penicillamine was discovered in 1943. At the beginning of the 1960s it was introduced into the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. Since then, its efficacy and adverse effects have become very well known. According to this experience, D-penicillamine, similarly to gold, is acknowledged as a disease-modifying drug in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. | |
3455547 | The heart in rheumatoid arthritis--a clinical and echocardiographic study. | 1987 Nov | A clinical and echocardiographic study was carried out in a randomly selected group of 101 patients with rheumatoid arthritis to determine the prevalence of cardiac abnormalities. Adequate two-dimensional assessments were obtained in 84 patients and 77 patients had adequate M mode recordings. Thirty-one patients (37 per cent) had 45 echocardiographic abnormalities. Five patients (6 per cent) had a pericardial effusion. Eleven abnormalities of the mitral valve were noted in 10 patients (13 per cent). Three patients had mitral valve prolapse, one patient with aortic incompetence had flutter on the mitral valve, five patients had mitral annular calcium and one patient had hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and mitral annular calcification. A reduction in the E-F slope was noted in 12 patients, seven of whom had associated cardiac disease, one patient had a sinus tachycardia and four patients (5 per cent) had a mild reduction without any other cardiac abnormality. Apart from the presence of pericardial effusion in 6 per cent and minor abnormalities of the E-F slope in 5 per cent of patients, all the other significant echocardiographic abnormalities could be related to the presence of associated cardiac disease. | |
3317811 | Methods of clinical and biological assessment of rheumatoid arthritis. | 1987 | Inflammation has long been recognised as notoriously difficult to measure both in clinical practice and in the laboratory. Of all the cardinal features of inflammation, pain relief is really what the patients want, and among disabled persons, rheumatic patients are the only ones who must cope with chronic pain. The rheumatologist, however, is also interested in other parameters that are thought to reflect improvement of the inflammatory process. The methods used to clinically assess rheumatoid arthritis (RA) should share the following four parameters: validity, sensitivity, reliability and simplicity. Unfortunately, at present, no single ideal method is capable of accurately reflecting disease activity in RA. The measurement of pain relief by the visual analogue scale, the determination of the Ritchie index and the duration of morning stiffness, plus patient assessment of global response should be enough to detect clinical activity of the drug in RA. If we are working with slow-acting drugs or so-called disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), it should be appropriate to include X-ray analysis and laboratory tests in the evaluation. A reduction in the number of fresh erosions and/or the healing of present erosions can give reliable information on the capacity of the drug to really modify the course of the disease. At present, measurement of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and of acute phase serum proteins seems to offer the best available assessment during early weeks of therapy. The other biological tests are of limited value in reflecting or predicting a beneficial clinical response to DMARDs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | |
2347958 | Pharmacokinetics of rimexolone after intra-articular administration. | 1990 May | The pharmacokinetics of rimexolone were investigated after intra-articular injection into the knee joints of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. After a single dose of 40 mg rimexolone the drug could be detected in plasma over 3 months. The suspension dissolves in the synovia very slowly and provides a sustained release of the steroid in the joint. Pharmacokinetic analysis was performed on the assumption that the disposition of rimexolone after intra-articular administration is absorption limited ("flip-flop-case"). Dose linearity was studied in a range from 40 to 200 mg. Total body clearance averaged 106 L/h and was independent of dose. The mean residence time of rimexolone in the knee joint is very long and averaged 25 days. It could be shown that the mean residence time of different glucocorticoids correlates well with the duration of their clinical effectiveness. | |
1647912 | Association of enhanced superoxide generation by neutrophils with low superoxide scavengin | 1991 Mar | To study the role of the superoxide radical (O2-) in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), both the O2- generation of peripheral blood (PB) polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) and the superoxide scavenging activity (SSA) of PB-PMN, plasma, joint fluid (JF) and PB- or JF-mononuclear cells (MNC) were measured in forty-five patients with RA using the highly sensitive and specific 2-methyl-6-methoxyphenyl-3,7-dihydroimidazo[1,2-alpha] pyrazin-3-one dependent chemiluminescence and the electron paramagnetic resonance/spin trapping methods, respectively. Since many drugs, particularly the slow-acting anti-rheumatic drugs (SARDs) used in RA, may alter O2- metabolism, the effects of SARDs on SSA were also studied. The basal O2- release and opsonized zymosan- or phorbol myristate acetate-stimulated O2- generation by PB-PMN from RA patients were significantly increased, while the SSA of PMN was decreased as compared to those from healthy controls. In addition, the SSA of PMN showed a negative correlation with their O2- generation rates. The JF-PMN showed lower SSA levels than PB-PMN. A negative correlation was also found between the SSA of the plasma and the erythrocyte sedimentation rates. The SSA of the plasma, PB-PMN, JF and JF-PMN were significantly higher in patients treated with SARDs than those without. In cell-free systems, sulfasalazine (SAP) and its metabolite, 5-amino-salicylic acid, had a direct SSA within a millimolar range. The other metabolites of SASP and D-penicillamine had an indirect SSA, since they affected the O2- generating system. Auranofin and bucillamine had no SSA. However, none of the SARDs examined could scavenge O2- at concentrations reported in patients' plasma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | |
3180540 | Temporal arteritis in seropositive rheumatoid arthritis with rheumatoid nodule. | 1988 Apr | A 61-year-old woman, suffering from classic seropositive rheumatoid arthritis with rheumatoid nodule histologically documented, developed temporal arteritis. HLA-DR typing revealed the presence of DR3 and DR4 antigens. The findings from previous studies support the association of HLA-DR antigens, giant cell arteritis-polymyalgia rheumatica and rheumatoid arthritis, and suggest the participation of a common immunogenetic mechanism in their pathogenesis. | |
1991743 | Ten-year results of operations for rheumatoid cervical spine disorders. | 1991 Jan | The outcome of operations performed on 38 patients for rheumatoid disorders of the cervical spine were analysed 10 or more years later. The mean age of the patients at the time of operation was 56 years (35 to 77); 32 had seropositive disease. The mean duration of the disease was 17 years (four to 36). Twenty-seven patients had painful anterior atlanto-axial subluxation (AAS), nine had subaxial subluxation alone and two had severe cranial subluxation of the odontoid, one also with subaxial subluxation. One patient died from postoperative staphylococcal septicaemia and another 18 died during the follow-up period. Patients with coincident cardiac or other diseases, and those with cranial subluxation of the odontoid of more than 3 mm had an increased mortality. Neither the patients' age nor the magnitude of AAS correlated with mortality. Of the 37 patients with occipitocervical pain, 30 were relieved and all the six patients with tetraparesis were improved. Of the 24 Gallie fusions only 12 were solidly united; patients with long-term cortisone treatment were more likely to develop pseudarthrosis. There was no correlation between clinical outcome and radiological result. Four patients had further operations to treat subluxation which developed below the fused segments. | |
2036757 | MRI and sonography of the shoulder. | 1991 May | We prospectively evaluated the diagnostic value of sonography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 24 shoulders in 23 patients with suspected rotator cuff tears using arthrography as gold standard. Sonography demonstrated 14 of 15, MRI 10 of 15 rotator cuff tears, respectively. Sonography diagnosed seven of nine intact rotator cuffs correctly, MRI eight of nine. In a retrospective study we reviewed the diagnostic value of sonography and MRI in other pathologies of the shoulder including intra-articular pathology, humeral head and acromioclavicular joint pathology, and calcification. We conclude that with regard to cost and patient compliance, sonography should be the first radiologic examination in suspected rotator cuff tears if performed by an experienced sonographer. MRI is superior in depicting additional pathology and is less operator dependent. It may thus become the method of choice for the evaluation of the rotator cuff and related pathology in the future. | |
3705775 | [Familial Mediterranean fever. Immunogenetic and rheumatologic aspects of the disease in a | 1986 Jan | A family study was performed in 24 members of a Turkish sibship with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) with 5 patients affected in 3 generations. The well-known autosomal-recessive inheritance of the disease was masked by a pseudodominant appearance, reflecting the striking frequency of congenial marriages. The immunogenetic investigation excluded a linkage between the expression of the disease and the HLA system. The arthritis of FMF was characterized typically by monarticular attacks in large joints of the lower limb. Frequently this manifestation led to diagnostic problems, particularly at the onset of the disease. No patient presented the clinical or radiological signs of sacroileitis. An observation of the disease process up to 3 years showed a benign prognosis of FMF-arthritis in 3 of 4 patients. Neither long-lasting functional impairment nor radiological signs of erosion had to be recognized. One patient suffered from a necrosis of the femoral head, possibly caused by the recurrent inflammation of the hip joint. Laboratory findings reflected the clinical picture of relapsing acute inflammation in an uncharacteristic manner. Their diagnostic significance exists mainly for the exclusion of other diseases. | |
2772483 | Possible role of free radical altered IgG in the etiopathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. | 1989 | Alteration of IgG by oxygen-derived free radicals has been implicated in an in vivo process which renders IgG autoantigenic and leads to the production of rheumatoid factor (RF) and the perpetuation of inflammation, as in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). In this study the impact of UV irradiation on IgG was investigated as well as the ability of RF to bind to UV-altered gamma globulin. Inhibition studies of the binding of 125I aggregated human gamma globulin (AHG) to RF-coated sepharose beads show that UV-irradiated IgG is able to bind RF to the same extent as AHG. Binding studies to 125I-C1q proved that UV-irradiated IgG could bind the first complement component, but also that the complement system could be activated as illustrated by the C3a generation. These results support the hypothesis that free radical damage to gamma globulins plays a role in the chronicity of the inflammatory reaction in RA. | |
2571873 | Efficacy of tests used to monitor rheumatoid arthritis. | 1989 Oct 21 | The relative efficacy of clinical and laboratory tests used to monitor disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis was determined by consensus analysis in a study of 21 patients treated for 6 months. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), which is influenced by the anaemia of chronic disease and by variation in the blood concentration of acute-phase proteins, was the most effective single test. ESR was a better guide to disease severity than measurement of plasma viscosity, serum C-reactive protein, and serum orosomucoid--tests that reflect the blood concentration of acute-phase proteins only. Clinical tests performed poorly unless combined with laboratory data in a numerical index. Consensus analysis can be used to assess the efficacy of clinical and laboratory tests and to identify redundant tests. | |
3318725 | Gold colitis induced by auranofin treatment of rheumatoid arthritis: case report and revie | 1987 Oct | A case of ulcerative colitis occurred during treatment of rheumatoid arthritis with the new oral gold preparation auranofin after a cumulative dose of 2160 mg. A barium enema showed loss of mucosal pattern and a rectal biopsy disclosed deep erosions, mucosal inflammation, and crypt abscesses. Precipitates of gold were seen in the periglandular stroma. On electron microscopy the gold deposits seemed to be identical to granules described in gold nephropathy. As the extrapolated serum gold level was within the normal range at the onset of the complication, the morphological findings suggested a local toxicity of the drug. The patient recovered within 14 days of withdrawal of auranofin and the start of therapy with sulphasalazine and steroids. A review of the published work shows that the previously reported mortality in gold colitis of 40% has decreased in recent years. The causes of this decrease may be both the earlier diagnosis of gold colitis and the improved intensive care of its severe complications. | |
2242068 | Spontaneous rheumatoid-like arthritis in a line of mice sensitive to collagen-induced arth | 1990 Nov | Twenty-eight percent of 13-month-old male mice of the high antibody responder line of Biozzi's selection I (HI) spontaneously developed a long-lasting inflammatory arthritis. This disease was clinically and histologically similar to human rheumatoid arthritis. The synovium of joints and some tendons was hypertrophied, with thickening of the synovial cell layer and infiltration by polymorphonuclear and mononuclear leukocytes. In some cases, synovial pannus formation led to destructive damage of articular cartilage and bone. Rheumatoid factor and antinuclear, anti-DNA, and anti-type II collagen (CII) antibodies were often found in the sera of both arthritic mice and clinically normal littermates. The presence of CII autoantibodies in this line of mice suggests that a potentially harmful anti-CII T cell autoimmunity can also develop spontaneously and lead to joint damage. Moreover, HI mice are also susceptible to collagen-induced arthritis, while a closely related mouse line (HII) is resistant to both diseases. These data support the hypothesis that collagen-induced arthritis is pathogenetically related both to this spontaneous arthritis and to rheumatoid arthritis. | |
1948172 | Social support as a double-edged sword: the relation of positive and problematic support t | 1991 | This study considers social network interactions as a potential source of both stress and support for individuals coping with a chronic illness. The sample consisted of 101 recently-diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis patients. Symptoms of depression were assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses examined the conjoint effects of social support and problematic interactions on symptoms of depression. Receipt of positive or helpful support from close friends and family was related to lower depression; receipt of problematic support was related to increased depression. A positive x problematic support interaction suggested that the costs of problematic support do not cancel out the benefits of positive support. Patients who reported both little support and a greater degree of problematic interactions experienced the highest level of symptoms. The findings emphasize the need to consider positive and negative aspects of support transactions conjointly in assessing their stress-reducing and health-protective potential. | |
3092399 | The influence of HLA phenotypes on the response to parenteral gold in rheumatoid arthritis | 1986 Jul | One hundred and ten patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were studied for a possible influence of HLA phenotypes on the reaction to parenteral gold in the first 6 months of treatment, in terms of both clinical response and toxicity. Frequencies of HLA-B8 and -DR3 were significantly increased in patients who responded excellently to gold treatment as compared with non-responders (p = 0.04 for both antigens). On the other hand, for HLA-DR7 there was a tendency for increased frequency in non-responders versus excellent and moderate responders (p less than 0.03; Pc = n.s.). Drug toxicity was higher in excellent than in non-responders (p less than 0.04), being exceptionally high in male excellent responders (85% versus 33% in females, p less than 0.01), probably due to the increased frequency in B8 and DR3 in the excellent responder group as a whole and in the excellent responder males in particular. We conclude that HLA antigens B8 and DR3 co-determine both toxicity and excellent clinical response to parenteral gold, whereas the presence of DR7 is possibly associated with non-response. In addition, we found sex differences in reaction to parenteral gold, which may be related to an increased frequency of HLA-B8 and -DR3 in male RA patients. | |
3449304 | Deformation of the adult rheumatoid rearfoot. A radiographic study. | 1987 Dec | Three hundred ninety-seven adult rheumatoid feet were examined. Those in whom pain had been present since the onset of the disease were compared radiographically with the painless feet in standing position: examination of the talar angle and of the internal arch showed flattening on the affected feet. The calcaneal angle, on the other hand, showed no difference between the two groups, but this latter parameter is little affected by the valgus pronation deformity of the hindfoot most often seen in patients who had experienced foot pain. | |
1689939 | Fibroblasts in synovitis in rheumatoid arthritis but not in noninflammatory synovial tissu | 1990 Mar | Synovial tissue (ST) sections from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and meniscus lesions were stained using monoclonal antibodies against the carboxyterminal domain of human type I procollagen (alpha-pC) in avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) staining. This gave a good signal-noise ratio and identified some synovial B-type lining cells and stromal fibroblasts in inflammatory RA ST but not in noninflammatory ST from patients with meniscus lesions. The authors' findings provide immunohistochemical evidence that the local fibroblasts in inflammatory ST in RA are activated, probably as a result of various humoral mediators produced in situ (by inflammatory mononuclear cells) in RA but not in normal noninflammatory ST. |