Search for: rheumatoid arthritis methotrexate autoimmune disease biomarker gene expression GWAS HLA genes non-HLA genes
| ID | PMID | Title | PublicationDate | abstract |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3501467 | Hypogammaglobulinemia associated with gold therapy: evidence for a partial maturation bloc | 1987 Oct | Extensive immunological investigations were performed in a patient with definite seronegative rheumatoid arthritis who developed hypogammaglobulinemia in the course of gold therapy. The data obtained suggest the presence of acquired maturation abnormalities in the B cell compartment. | |
| 2892809 | Radiation therapy of spontaneous autoimmunity: a review of mouse models. | 1988 Jan | The classical types of generalized autoimmune disease in man are systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Several murine strains which develop SLE and sometimes RA-like diseases are now available. They should help in the understanding of the etiopathology of SLE and RA. Basically two main therapeutic strategies which use solely irradiation have been tried; one being sublethal whole-body irradiation (WBI) and the other fractionated total lymphoid irradiation (TLI). Other protocols which combine lethal WBI and stem cell transplantation have often been attempted. It was regularly found that the bone marrow transplant (BMT) dictates the immune status of the recipient. This paper reviews the data published about NZB, NZB/W, BXSB and MRL mice in this context. | |
| 2937741 | Binding of IgM rheumatoid factor to group A, C and G streptococci with IgG Fc receptors. | 1986 | The possibility that IgM rheumatoid factors bind to streptococci was studied. Using a sequence of Sephadex G200 gel filtration, protein A-Sepharose CL-4B chromatography and preparatory electrophoresis, IgM was isolated from the sera of 2 patients with rheumatoid arthritis and then radiolabelled with 125I. There was significant binding of radiolabelled IgM to group-A streptococci types M1, M15 and M22, and to a group-C and a group-G strain, all expressing IgG Fc receptors, but none to Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli or to 11 other strains of streptococci without IgG Fc receptors. The radiolabelled IgM was separated by affinity chromatography on a column containing human IgG. Types M1 and M15 bound the fraction retained on the column, whereas M22 bound both this fraction and the non-retained fraction. Commercial human IgG, even at high concentrations, did not inhibit binding. The binding reaction, which is perhaps triggered either by the IgM rheumatoid factor or by IgG complexed with rheumatoid factor, could be a useful tool for removal of anti-immunoglobulin from the blood of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. | |
| 3063003 | [D-penicillamine--side effects, pathogenesis and decreasing the risks]. | 1988 | D-penicillamine (DPA) leads to side effects in different ways: collagen and elastin crosslinking are inhibited, which results in thin and vulnerable skin, cutis laxa, elastosis perforans serpiginosa, wound healing defects and embryopathy. Toxic influences effect thrombo- and leukocytopenia (incidence 5-15%), gastrointestinal disturbances (10-30%), changes or loss of taste (5-30%), loss of hair (1-2%), and partly proteinuria (5-20%). Acute hypersensitive reactions include DPA-allergy (2-10%). Severe adverse effects are autoimmune phenomena such as pemphigus, DPA-induced lupus erythematosus, polymyositis/dermatomyositis, membranous glomerulopathy and hypersensitivity pneumonitis (like Good-pasture's syndrome) and myasthenia (all less than 1%). In addition there are a number of rare side effects, often single observations. Risk factors include a genetic disposition (especially HLA-B8 and -DR3), poor sulphoxidizers and, to a certain degree, higher age. During pregnancy and in clinically relevant disturbances of bone marrow, liver and renal function DPA is contraindicated. The total incidence of side effects amounts to 30-60%, the withdrawal rate is 20-30%; therefore clear indications and a regular survey of DPA therapy are necessary. | |
| 2735558 | Probable azathioprine hepatotoxicity: a case report. | 1989 Jun | A patient with polymyositis was treated initially with corticosteroids. Subsequently, azathioprine was added but was associated with transient hepatotoxicity on two separate occasions, 6 months apart. Both episodes occurred 3 weeks after starting the latter drug. This is the first case of azathioprine toxicity documented by both histopathology and drug challenge. | |
| 2060895 | [Tolerance of ibuprofen. Controlled drug monitoring for the detection of rare side effects | 1991 Mar 30 | In an observational study, 6,299 patients suffering from arthrosis and other rheumatic diseases were treated by 1,258 physicians with coated tablets containing 400 mg or 600 mg ibuprofen (Ibuprofen Klinge 400/600) with a view to establish tolerance and the incidence of rare side effects. The data of a random sample of 500 patients revealed, depending upon the nature of the disease presenting, good to very good improvement of pain, swelling and impaired mobility. Only 3% of the patients reported side effects, 0.3% of which were allergic in nature. Only 0.8% of the patients terminated treatment. The care-providing physicians assessed the results as very good or good in 93.3% for efficacy, and 96.8% for tolerance. | |
| 2469949 | Distinctive expression of neoantigenic C3(D) epitopes on bound C3 following activation and | 1989 Apr | Binding of C3 to sheep erythrocytes in a serum-free milieu (EAC14oxy2, EAC142) has previously been shown to mimic the antigenic change that occurs upon denaturation of C3 in sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), whereby neoantigenic C3(D) epitopes are exposed. The present paper deals with C3 bound to various target surfaces which are known to modulate the functional properties of C3 in different ways. Bound C3 fragments on serum-treated human aggregated gammaglobulin, zymosan, rabbit and sheep erythrocytes, and on circulating immune complexes isolated from sera of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, were shown to be mainly in the iC3b form. By RIAs, employing polyclonal antibodies, the range of C3(D) antigenic epitopes of 125I-labelled SDS denatured C3 expressed by the particle-bound iC3b was monitored. The physiologically bound iC3b on all tested particles expressed wide range of C3(D) epitopes and each type of particle-bound C3 exposed its individual range. By competition ELISA specific C3(D) alpha epitopes were monitored, employing monoclonal antibodies. A distinct difference in the expression of these epitopes was observed in iC3b bound to various test particles in the presence of normal serum and in iC3b present on circulating immune complexes from pathological sera. Considering that the neoantigenic C3(D) epitopes have been shown to be associated with different functions of C3, the distinctive antigenic expression of each type of serum-treated particle might reflect different functional forms of the protein. | |
| 1742422 | Analysis of the IgG subclass production from rheumatoid arthritis synovial cell cultures. | 1991 | In man there are four subclasses of IgG which differ from each other with respect to their biological properties. Some evidence suggests that the production of IgG3 is unusually high in rheumatoid synovia. In this study secretion of IgG subclasses by synovial lymphocytes in vitro was measured using sensitive subclass-specific ELISAs. It was found that, in both synovial membrane- and synovial fluid-derived cell cultures, the general pattern of IgG subclass secretion was IgG1 greater than 2 greater than 3 greater than or equal to 4, and that, in most cultures, IgG3 was a minor subclass accounting, on average, for only 8% of the total IgG. This was similar to the percentage of this subclass in normal human serum and in culture supernatants from the patients' peripheral blood lymphocytes. | |
| 2113147 | [Case report and literature analysis of the clinical factors relating to the development o | 1990 Feb | A 26-year-old female with gold lung induced by Shiosol (gold thiomalate) administered for her rheumatoid arthritis is presented. Chest X-ray films after treatment with prednisolone hardly improved and showed diffuse fibrotic shadow. We reviewed previously reported cases of gold lung and tried to determine the clinical factors which might affect the development of pulmonary fibrotic changes in gold lung. The cases reported in Japan were classified into two groups according to the improvement of X-ray films after steroid therapy: group A in which the chest X-ray film returned to almost normal, group B these with diffuse fibrotic shadow. No significant difference was observed in the values of %VC and PaO2 admission between the two groups. The total dose of gold received was greater (p less than 0.05) and the duration of gold received was longer (p less than 0.01) in group B than in group A. These findings suggest that the development of pulmonary fibrosis does not depend on the severity of the injury indicated by pulmonary function, but in part on the amount of gold which has been stored in pulmonary macrophages. No statistical difference was shown in the initial dose of steroids between these groups. The duration between the onset of gold lung and the start of steroid therapy were longer in group B than than group A (p less than 0.05). Thus, early diagnosis and treatment with steroids are highly recommended in the clinical management of patients with gold lung. | |
| 3356715 | A comparison of primary and revision total knee arthroplasty using the kinematic stabilize | 1988 Apr | The first 121 arthroplasties (in 105 patients) in which the cemented kinematic-stabilizer total knee prosthesis was used for primary arthroplasty or surgical revision at the Mayo Clinic were reviewed. Sixty-six patients (seventy-nine arthroplasties) were followed for a mean of thirty-seven months. There were fifty-three revision and twenty-six primary arthroplasties. The average range of motion in both groups increased from 95 to 101 degrees. Although none of these patients could ascend stairs without support before the operation, thirty-two (51 per cent) could do so at the time of the final follow-up. The incidence of moderate or severe pain was reduced from 86 to 6 per cent. Moderate or severe ligamentous instability had been present in thirty-three knees (42 per cent) preoperatively, but only five knees had significant medial, lateral, anterior, or posterior instability at final follow-up. The Hospital for Special Surgery knee score increased from an average of 56 points to 83 points in all of the knees. At follow-up, the patients who had had primary arthroplasty had 92 per cent good or excellent results and the patients who had had surgical revision had 81 per cent good or excellent results (p less than 0.05). There was no significant difference in the results between the patients who had osteoarthritis and those who had rheumatoid arthritis. Over-all, 85 per cent of the results were good or excellent at final follow-up. Tibial radiolucent lines of one to two millimeters were observed in 29 per cent of the knees at follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | |
| 2041217 | [Clinical relevance of sialic acids determination in serum and synovial fluid in orthopaed | 1991 Feb | Sialic acids, derivatives of neuraminic acid, are present as structural components of mucoprotein mainly in the alpha 1 and alpha 2-globulin regions, and they are known to change in diseases associated with acute inflammation or tissue necrosis. The present study was performed to clarify the significance of measurements of sialic acids in the serum and synovial fluid of patients with diseases in the field of orthopaedic surgery. 1. Serum sialic acids were markedly high in cases of acute pyogenic diseases and showed moderately high values in stage 2 or 3 of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). There was a close correlation with ESR in RA cases and with CRP in cases of acute pyogenic diseases. Differences in the correlation with ESR and CRP were seen in proportion to the severity of the inflammation. 2. Synovial fluid sialic acids were high in cases of RA, and within the normal range in cases of osteoarthritis. The values changed within this range in accordance with treatment. In RA cases, there was a significant correlation with monocytes in the synovial fluid. 3. Serum sialic acids appeared to be sufficiently useful as a parameter of inflammation independent of ESR and CRP, and synovial fluid sialic acids were also considered to be useful for differentiation between RA and OA. | |
| 3462303 | HLA-DO polymorphism associated with resistance to type I diabetes detected with monoclonal | 1986 Sep 1 | A new HLA-DQ-related genetic system with two alleles, 2B3 and TA10, defined serologically by MAbs and alloantisera, showed an almost perfect correlation with charge differences on DQ beta molecules, as well as with two polymorphic DNA fragments hybridizing with a DQ beta probe and various restriction enzymes on a panel of 14 DR4+ homozygous typing cells. It was therefore concluded that the serologically defined alleles 2B3 and TA10 are coded by the DQ beta gene and situated on the HLA-DQ beta chain. This 2B3/TA10 polymorphism is independent of HLA-D and segregates with HLA in families. The TA10 allele appears to be a new marker for resistance to type I diabetes, which is independent from the known resistance marker DR2, whereas no association was observed between this DQ beta polymorphism and rheumatoid arthritis. | |
| 2644322 | Rheumatoid papules: lesions showing features of vasculitis and palisading granuloma. | 1989 Feb | Whether palisading granuloma formation occurs with leukocytoclastic vasculitis in rheumatoid nodules and in histopathologically similar conditions is debatable. Patients with high titers for rheumatoid factor and severe erosive rheumatoid arthritis are at risk for both rheumatoid vasculitis and rheumatoid nodules. A patient with all of these features developed a papular eruption. These papules showed clinicopathologic features both of leukocytoclastic vasculitis and of early palisading granuloma. Lesions resolved slowly with low-dose oral corticosteroid therapy. It is proposed that these lesions be called rheumatoid papules and that they may represent a link between vasculitis and the palisaded granulomatous reaction seen in rheumatoid nodules. | |
| 2392638 | IgG and IgM anti-endothelial cell antibodies in patients with collagen-vascular disorders. | 1990 | A cellular enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to detect circulating anti-endothelial cell antibodies (AECA) in sera of patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Felty's syndrome (FS), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS) and those with a "lupus anticoagulant" (LA). IgG AECA were detected in RA, FS, SLE and LA sera, while IgM AECA were only detected in RA and FS. AECA were not specific for endothelial cells. However, IgG binding to endothelial cells and dermal fibroblasts was F(ab) mediated while in all other cell types tested, nonspecific binding most likely via the Fc region occurred. In RA and FS rheumatoid factor was shown to augment immunoglobulin binding to endothelial cells. Additional studies revealed that some of these pathological sera also contained cytotoxic IgG autoantibodies which fixed complement and damaged human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro. These studies suggest that a group of autoantibodies, present in a variety of collagen vascular disorders, react with endothelial cells and thus may be important aetiopathogenic factors in the vasculopathies associated with these disorders. | |
| 3501876 | Interleukin-1 beta and interleukin-1 alpha stimulate the N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase act | 1987 | The properties of synovial cells are altered in vitro by monocyte-macrophage polypeptides (monokines), and these changes could explain some of the properties of the inflamed synovium in rheumatoid disease. Purified monokines have become available only recently for testing on the target synovial cells. We report here that purified human interleukin (IL)-1 beta and recombinant human IL-1 alpha stimulate the extracellular activity of the lysosomal hydrolase, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (NAG), of human synovial fibroblast-like cells. In contrast, another monokine, synovial activator, does not increase the NAG activity. Thus NAG is another cellular activity which can be modulated by interleukin-1. | |
| 2514402 | [Peri-articular ossification in total hip prostheses]. | 1989 Nov | The frequency and predisposing factors of ectopic bone formation (EBF) after total hip arthroplasty (THA) are analyzed in 6026 primary THA documented at the M.E. Mueller Foundation in Berne. Series from two clinics [the Lindenhof Clinic in Berne (n = 816) and the Wilhelm Schulthess Clinic in Zürich (n = 612)] are analyzed separately and the results compared with those in the literature. Overall EBF was found in 38.3% of the patients; in 8.6%, it was clinically obvious (grades III and IV according to the classification of Brooker et al.) and is analyzed in this study. EBF was found in 13.4% of the men compared with 4.2% of the women. The frequency of EBF was found to be particularly low in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (4.4%), and EBF was found in 11.4% of patients with post-traumatic osteoarthritis and in 11.1% with idiopathic necrosis of the femoral head. Severe preoperatively limited hip movement did not significantly increase the risk of EBF (11.9%), nor did previous hip surgery, such as intertrochanteric osteotomy (11.3%). Postoperative hematoma that led to puncture or even evacuation was responsible in 14.4%. The therapeutic and prophylactic possibilities are compared with those in the literature, and our personal observations are discussed. | |
| 3275709 | A new decalcifying technique for immunohistochemical studies of calcified tissue, especial | 1988 Jan | We have developed a new decalcifying technique for use in light and electron microscopy studies utilizing immunohistochemical staining of calcified tissues. Specimens containing calcified tissues can be adequately decalcified at a pH of 7.1-7.4 and temperature of -5 degrees C, without freezing, by use of a solution containing EDTA, sodium hydroxide, and glycerol. In this study, Leu-2a, Leu-3a, Leu-4, Leu-7, Leu-12, Leu-14, Leu-M1, Leu-M2, Leu-M3, and HLA-DR-positive cells in destructive lesions of bone tissues from patients with rheumatoid arthritis and osteomyelitis were successfully detected immunohistochemically. Furthermore, the presence of HLA-DR antigen on the surface of the infiltrating cells in the same lesions could be demonstrated using the immunoelectron microscopic technique. The results reported here have not previously been obtainable using conventional decalcifying techniques. | |
| 3442962 | An analysis of the levels of complement components in the synovial fluid in rheumatic dise | 1987 Sep | A linear relationship between the synovial fluid to serum concentration ratios and log molecular weight was found for six plasma proteins, which are largely synthesized by the liver. Production or utilization of a given protein in the joint can, therefore, be determined by its deviation from the calculated diffusion line. Based on this diffusion model the role of the complement system was investigated in the joint effusions of 48 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 6 patients with osteoarthritis (OA) and 7 patients with meniscus lesions (ML). Among these three groups quantitative differences were found in the metabolism or utilization of several complement components, based on the fact that the ratios were lower than expected for diffusion of proteins of similar molecular weight. The ratios for the RA group were the lowest. In the three patient groups, results showed increased consumption mainly of C3 and C4 locally in the joint. The existence of a real complement activation in the joints of the three different patient groups was further proved by the elevated levels of C3 breakdown products (C3d). Overall this kind of calculation provides us with a method for studying the role of other proteins which may be important in the inflammatory process of the joint. | |
| 2686801 | Osteoporosis screening--radiogrammetry revisited. | 1989 Dec | Radiogrammetry remains a convenient method of bone mass measurement. It is the only objective means of quantifying metacarpal osteoporosis (OP) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). An automated technique using a digitizer (interfaced with an IBM PC) for measurement of combined cortical width (CCW) at the mid-shaft of six metacarpals was evaluated in three groups of individuals under 50 years of age (98 normal controls, 96 RA, 63 SLE). Intra-observer, inter-observer, and inter-institution reproducibility was assessed with a 'phantom' embedded in a rectangular mould of wax. Intra-patient variation was also assessed in RA patients seen on two occasions less than a month apart. Two hundred and fifty-seven subjects were studied. The method was found to be reproducible for a single observer, among five different observers and in two separate institutions. The RA subjects seen on two occasions showed no significant differences in CCW. The technique showed significant differences of CCW in the three groups of premenopausal subjects (controls; RA; SLE) studied (p less than 0.001). The six metacarpal bone mass was calculated in less than 5 min. The technique of digitized radiogrammetry is an improvement on the Vernier caliper technique. The method is useful for epidemiological cross-sectional studies and for evaluation of long-term radiological changes in RA. | |
| 3754224 | Cannflavin A and B, prenylated flavones from Cannabis sativa L. | 1986 Apr 15 | Two novel prenylated flavones, termed Cannflavin A and B, were isolated from the cannabinoid free ethanolic extract of Cannabis sativa L. Both compounds inhibited prostaglandin E2 production by human rheumatoid synovial cells in culture. |
