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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27452022 | Arthritis and Aerobic Exercise: A Review. | 1989 Feb | In brief: Despite increasing evidence that regular aerobic exercise yields many benefits for patients with arthritis, patients often are advised to curtail physical activity. Findings from studies of patients with either rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis who participated in an aerobic exercise program show that the subjects made significant gains in aerobic capacity, functional status, muscle strength, and other aspects of performance. In addition, they improved in subjective aspects that might have a positive impact on quality of life, including pain tolerance, joint pain, mood, and social activity. The authors discuss some questions that remain unanswered and present guidelines for physicians who wish to prescribe aerobic exercise for their arthritis patients. | |
3229082 | Anticollagen antibodies in patients with juvenile chronic arthritis. | 1988 Sep | Using ELISA antibodies, titres to collagen type I, II and III in sera of patients with juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) were assayed. Results were compared with titres of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Increased antibodies titres to all three collagen types were found in comparison with healthy individuals of the same age. Average titres in patients with RA were higher than those of the JCA group. When antibodies titres were correlated with erythrocyte sedimentation rate in 1 hour (ESR/1h) statistical significance was found only in RA group for collagen type II. | |
3364836 | Cricoarytenoiditis as a cause of acute airway obstruction in children. | 1988 May | A 4-1/2-year-old girl with a one-year history of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis was admitted with severe respiratory distress requiring endotracheal intubation. Arthritis of the cricoarytenoid joint was diagnosed and she responded well to intubation and high-dose steroids. Although well described in adults, this is only the third case report of a child afflicted with arthritis of the cricoarytenoid joint. | |
1752286 | Relationships between local inflammation, interleukin-6 concentration and the acute phase | 1991 Oct | Interleukin-6 (IL-6) concentrations in knee joint synovial fluids and paired plasma samples of arthritis patients were examined with respect to each other and parameters of the inflammatory response. Synovial fluid and plasma IL-6 concentrations were significantly higher in patients with inflammatory arthritis than those detected in patients with osteoarthritis (P less than 0.001). The IL-6 concentrations in synovial fluids were considerably higher than, but significantly correlated with (r = 0.65; P less than 0.001), those of plasma. Furthermore, synovial fluid IL-6 concentrations in bilaterally inflamed knees were significantly correlated (r = 0.79; P less than 0.001) and there was a significant correlation with the extent of inflammatory cell infiltrate (r = 0.75; P less than 0.001). In unselected rheumatoid arthritis patients there was only a weak correlation between IL-6 and plasma C-reactive protein (CRP) concentration, and no correlation between IL-6 and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). However, both ESR and CRP concentration were highly correlated with plasma IL-6 concentration in patients with other inflammatory arthritides, particularly psoriatic and HLA B27 positive spondyloarthritis (r = 0.72-0.94; P less than 0.005). These relationships suggest that IL-6 production in inflammed knee joints can be a significant determinant of acute phase protein responses in arthritis patients, although the situation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis is more complex and may be influenced by other disease-related factors. | |
3482736 | Methodological problems--juvenile chronic arthritis. | 1987 | This group of diseases comprises a heterogeneous syndrome with several characteristics different from adult rheumatoid arthritis. They are characterized by joint swelling, pain/tenderness, heat and limitation of motion with or without several extra-articular manifestations. The natural course is fluctuating. There is no uniform disease course. The prognosis is better for children than adults with rheumatic disorders. The etiology is partly known and the pathogenesis unclear. There are no uniformly accepted diagnostic criteria. Patient materials studied need therefore be described in detail. The methods used for evaluation of disease and functional activities are crucial. The statistical methods, ethical problems including consent/assent are highly relevant. The management including drug therapy, drug handling and compliance need also to be considered. Due to relative rareness of the syndrome, preferably a few investigators that think alike need to collaborate for more efficient and ethically sound investigations of such patients. | |
2047552 | [Acute pericarditis as the initial manifestation in Still's disease in an adult]. | 1991 Mar | Almost 90% of primary acute pericarditis are idiopathic. Between specifics forms, a very low percentage of cases are due to chronic rheumatic diseases. A case of adult Still's disease (juvenile chronic rheumatoid arthritis) with acute pericarditis being the first clinical manifestation (besides fever and general syndrome) is presented. Therapy with oral prednisone was rapidly effective, and pericardial effusion resolved after 3 weeks of treatment, as echocardiography showed. | |
3304794 | Poor correlation between the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and clinical activity in juven | 1987 Jun | Despite questions regarding its validity as an estimator of inflammatory disease activity, monitoring of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) continues to be routine practice among pediatric rheumatologists caring for children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). We studied a large group of patients with JRA in order to determine the degree of correlation between clinically apparent inflammation and the ESR. regression and correlation analyses and descriptive statistical techniques were used to establish the relationship between 1) the ESR and the amount of clinically apparent inflammation at a point in time, and 2) changes in the ESR and the corresponding changes in apparent inflammation. One hundred fifty-nine children with JRA who were participants in a double-blind, controlled trial of two antirheumatic drugs were assessed for clinical and laboratory evidence of inflammatory disease activity at an initial visit, and then periodically for the duration of the one year study. Results showed that, at the initial assessment, neither the total number of joints with active arthritis nor the severity score correlated well with the ESR (r = .196 and .245 respectively). These findings were independent of the course type of JRA and age of the child. Changes from baseline in inflammation showed little correlation (r less than .25) with changes in the ESR. These findings suggest that the ESR is a relatively poor indicator of the amount of articular inflammation present, and that changes of disease activity are not reflected closely by changes in the ESR among children with JRA. | |
3435566 | Undiagnosed chronic monarthritis. Clinical and evolutionary profile. | 1987 Dec | The features and clinical course in 38 patients (25 women, 13 men) who had chronic monarthritis of undetermined origin (UCM) were surveyed over a mean followup period of 24.6 months. At the end of the study, the cause was still unknown in 26 patients (65.7%). In 10 patients, symptoms resolved spontaneously. In the remaining 12 patients, a diagnosis became apparent after a mean period of 17.2 months; diagnoses included spondylarthritis (6 patients), rheumatoid arthritis (3 patients), osteoarthritis (1 patient), erosive arthropathy (1 patient), and glomus tumor (1 patient). Patients in whom a diagnosis emerged were more likely to have positive findings on the following studies: rheumatoid factor (2 of 12); HLA-B27 typing (6 of 11); bone scan, positive over the sacroiliac joint or non-index joint(s) (4 of 6); and roentgenograms of the sacroiliac joint (3 of 8). Findings of these same studies were notably negative in the subgroup of patients with UCM that spontaneously resolved. | |
3178907 | Temporal patterns of response to D-penicillamine, hydroxychloroquine, and placebo in juven | 1988 Oct | We calculated the time required for therapeutic benefit to become apparent following initiation of treatment with D-penicillamine (DP), hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), or placebo (each administered concomitantly with a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug) using data from a double-blind, randomized 12-month trial in 162 patients with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Using previously published criteria to classify the outcome, we found that 60% of the HCQ group, 46% of the DP group, and 39% of the placebo group responded favorably after 12 months of therapy. Data from examinations between the initial and final assessments were used to determine when the response first occurred. Approximately 50% of all patients who showed improvement at 12 months had already done so by 2 months. After 6 months, 96% of the DP group, 88% of the HCQ group, and 85% of the placebo group responders had met the criteria for response. The average time until response was attained was 105 days for the DP group, 129 days for the HCQ group, and 140 days for the placebo group. Our results indicate that a favorable response to these slow-acting antirheumatic drugs is unlikely if improvement has not occurred within the first 6 months of therapy. | |
2041891 | Human immunodeficiency virus-related connective tissue diseases: a Zimbabwean perspective. | 1991 Feb | Our clinical experience with patients in Zimbabwe suggests that an arthropathy may be a feature of HIV disease. This takes two forms: the first is a reactive arthropathy usually affecting the large, lower limb joints with no other clinical features of a connective tissue disease. The second form is seen in association with features of complete or incomplete Reiter's syndrome with involvement of large and small peripheral joints (having an asymmetric distribution). Although this arthropathy may been seen in association with HIV positive asymptomatic disease and often is the reason for first presentation at hospital, the majority of our patients have clinical features of persistent generalized lymphadenopathy, plus or minus features of constitutional illness (such as fever, weight loss, and diarrhea). A small percentage of our patients have arthropathy in association with secondary systemic infection. Other locomotor conditions have been observed, although their numbers are too small to determine whether or not they truly are related to HIV disease. In Zimbabwe there is no association between the development of HIV-associated arthropathy and the presence of HLA-B27. | |
2087091 | Fatty degeneration of osteocytes of the fourth metatarsus in patients with idiopathic necr | 1990 Dec | (1) Bone biopsies from the femoral heads and the fourth metatarsal head were obtained in the patients with idiopathic necrosis of the femoral head and with rheumatoid arthritis. (2) 71.4% of the patient with idiopathic necrosis of the femoral head revealed fatty degeneration of osteocytes in either the femur and/or metatarsus. (3) 57% of those patients demonstrated hyperlipidemia. (4) Metatarsal biopsies obtained from the patients with rheumatoid arthritis disclosed no fatty degeneration of osteocytes except in one patient treated with steroids. | |
20144105 | Reversible acute renal failure complicating rheumatoid arthritis. | 1987 | Although morphological and functional kidney lesions are well known to occur in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), there appear to be no previous reports on reversible acute renal failure. That interstitial nephritis plays a part in acute renal failure is clinically documented but the pathophysiology is obscure. The role of raised interstitial pressure has often been discussed but convincing evidence is still lacking. Two patients with classical RA complicated by reversible oliguria and impaired kidney function are presented. Renal biopsies revealed no glomerular, tubular or amyloid lesions. The only light microscopic finding was greatly increased interstitial edema, which stained metachromatically with toluidine blue and was hyaluronidase-sensitive. It is supposed that the abnormal concentration of interstitial hyaluronic acid and its high water-binding capacity leads to an increase of interstitial pressure, which is followed by renal insufficiency. The mucinous edema of the kidneys is assumed to be an acute reaction of the pathological connective tissue in general. | |
3109020 | Lymphoma in Sjögren's syndrome: urinary monoclonal free light chains as a diagnostic aid | 1986 | Non Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) is reported to be at least 40 times more common in Sjögren's syndrome (SS). Diagnosis may be difficult as blood and bone marrow haematology can remain normal, with no evidence of a serum paraprotein band or Bence-Jones proteinuria by routine electrophoresis. Using the technique of isoelectric focusing in agarose, followed by immunofixation, monoclonal free light chains can be found in the urine of 44% and 74% respectively of patients with NHL and B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, but not in normal individuals. Three patients, two with typical severe primary SS and the third with several features of SS including abnormal sialography and reduced tear secretion, developed B cell NHL of parotid and/or lung. Using the above method on concentrated urine specimens, monoclonal free light chains of the same class as that demonstrated on the tumour cells were found to be present in each patient's urine. In one patient the level of urinary free light chains was monitored and found to correlate with disease activity. Using similar techniques no monoclonal light chains could be found in the urine from a further 10 cases of primary SS and 18 cases of SS secondary to rheumatoid arthritis, all of whom had no clinical evidence of lymphoma. Screening of SS patients' urine by the method described for monoclonal urinary free light chains may provide an early diagnostic clue to the development of lymphoma and be a means of tumour monitoring. | |
3252728 | Effects of Tripterygium hypoglaucum (Lévl.) Hutch on male fertility. | 1988 Dec | Tripterygium hypoglaucum (Lévl.) Hutch (TH) is a perennial used in Chinese traditional medicine for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and various skin disorders. One study showed that daily oral doses of TH significantly reduced the fertility of male rats without apparent toxicity. The effects of daily oral doses of TH on the fertility of men taking it for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis were evaluated. Sperm concentration, motility and motility grade all were significantly reduced in the 13 men taking TH compared to 11 untreated controls. TH therapy did not affect testosterone, FSH, LH levels, and its antifertility effects appeared to be reversible. | |
3425981 | Immune complexes in food-induced arthralgia. | 1987 Dec | Ten patients are described who, in addition to other allergic symptoms, suffered from arthralgia. Dietary exclusion relieved the symptoms and specific food challenge reproduced them. IgG anti-IgE autoantibodies were high in patients with arthralgia in the serum and in the synovial fluid as compared with normals and the majority of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, traumatic arthralgia, and osteoarthritis used as controls. In three food-allergic patients IgG anti-IgE was detectable in a complexed form in the serum samples examined before and after food challenge. The finding of IgG anti-IgE autoantibody in a group of patients with allergic arthralgia is quite exciting. It raises the possibility of distinguishing a subgroup of arthralgic patients not having a classical rheumatoid arthritis, who may have a definable external exacerbating cause for their symptoms. A larger detailed survey is now in progress. | |
1793050 | Cytokine production in whole blood ex vivo. | 1991 Sep | Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) have been reported to contribute to the pathogenesis of many inflammatory diseases, e.g., rheumatoid arthritis. As monocytes are believed to be the primary source of these cytokines in peripheral blood, the present study was conducted to establish ranges and patterns of IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha secretion. Using heparinized unseparated whole blood obtained from normal human volunteers, peripheral blood monocytes were stimulated with Sal. minnesota LPS or BSA/anti-BSA immune complex-coated beads (BSA-beads). ELISAs for IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha were employed to quantitate cytokine levels in blood plasma without performing arduous and time-consuming extraction procedures. Over the course of a 6 hr incubation, LPS elicited a dose-dependent increase in TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta production. Preincubation of whole blood with interferon-gamma prior to the addition of a suboptimal dose of LPS or BSA-beads resulted in a synergistic potentiation of IL-1 beta/TNF-alpha production. Dexamethasone, utilized in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, proved to be a potent inhibitor of cytokine biosynthesis in whole blood ex vivo. The measurement of cytokine biosynthesis in a relevant physiologic environment not only avoids non-specific monocyte activation, but also may increase our ability to predict clinical outcomes in rheumatoid arthritis and/or other inflammatory diseases. | |
3566576 | Autoimmunity in gastrointestinal diseases. | 1986 Apr | This article is an update on the importance of some gastrointestinal diseases such ulcerative colitis, coeliac disease and some types of diarrhoea, in preceding an autoimmune response. A correlation with autoimmune disease without digestive symptoms, is made (rheumatoid arthritis, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, ankylosing spondylitis, and so on). Recognising such interrelations should be followed by search of extradigestive symptoms of autoimmune gastrointestinal diseases, allowing a better understanding of the immunologic phenomena involved. | |
1920831 | [Drug-induced hematologic disorders in Shikoku district]. | 1991 Jul | The case survey of drug-induced hematologic disorders in Shikoku District (Ehime Prefecture) disclosed 21 patients. Cases were 12 rheumatoid arthritis patients, 2 brain tumor, one epilepsy, 2 liver cirrhosis, one neuralgia, one arthralgia, one hyperthyroidism, and one IBL-like T-lymphoma. Causative drugs for aplastic anemia were Metalcaptase, Shiosol, Voltaren and Emeside. Drug-induced aplastic anemia was so severe that 4 out of 5 patients had died of bone marrow dysfunction. Neutropenia was caused by drugs as Rimatil, Cefobit, Sepatren, Mercazole, Sulpyrin, Aleviatin, Cefamedin and Metalcaptase. The real causes of these drug-induced hematologic disorders have not been clear. Remarkably high incidence among rheumatoid arthritis patients is suggestive several reasons as unique reactivity associated with HLA, suppression on hematologic stem cells by abnormal metabolites, and immunologic dysfunction commonly seen in collagen diseases. Further studies of more accurate incidence of drug-induced hematologic disorders are needed in investigating real causes of unhappy side-effects. | |
20144120 | The prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis in different geographical areas in sweden. | 1987 | In the general population of 39,418 persons within areas in the counties of Norrbotten (BD), Jämtland (Z), Skaraborg (R), Kristianstad west coast (LV), and Kristianstad east coast (L) in Sweden all the inhabitants over the age of seven (in Norrbotten over the age of 14) were investigated for the total number of cases of rheumatoid arthritis. Re-investigations of non-response (10-20 %) were made. The southernmost and northernmost areas were about 1,500 km apart. Every person was examined naked or seminaked. The diagnostic criteria prepared by the American Rheumatism Association (ARA) were used. In the mathematical calculations it was possible to determine indices for correct comparisons of the prevalences in the different areas. The prevalence for RA (classical, definite probable, possible) in the populations examined was 3.1 per cent. The highest figures were observed in the southern part of the country (L, LV). The prevalences were higher in the coastal areas (in L, LV and BD) than in the inland areas (Z, R). The prevalence was higher in the non-response group than in the primarily investigated group. | |
3626435 | Combined steroid-cyclosporin treatment of chronic autoimmune diseases. Clinical results an | 1987 Aug 3 | Twenty-one patients suffering from different autoimmune diseases (14 from systemic lupus erythematosus, 4 from rheumatoid arthritis, one from Sjögren's syndrome, one from systemic hypersensitivity vasculitis, and one from diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis) were treated with a combined immuno-suppressive regimen. Cyclosporin was given at a dose of 5 mg/kg/day together with steroids. In addition, the rheumatoid arthritis patients also received methotrexate. In all patients a kidney biopsy was performed after a treatment period of 17 to 42 months (mean duration 21.7 months). The cumulative cyclosporin dose at the time of biopsy varied from 1.071 to 4.587 mg/kg. Patients suffering from systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis were assessed according to a scoring system set up for this purpose. The combined therapy proved useful in these patients as reflected in the diminution of the respective activity scores, improvement of kidney function, and diminution of proteinuria. Histological examination of the kidney biopsy specimens showed only minimal activity in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. No unequivocal signs of renal toxicity could be detected. In the last group, the condition of the patient with Sjögren's syndrome was stabilized and the patient with systemic vasculitis improved clinically. Neither patient had signs of kidney lesions. The patient with diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis, in whom kidney biopsy was performed before and after treatment, showed improvement of kidney function, diminution of proteinuria, and diminution of inflammatory activity within the kidney, and no signs of cyclosporin toxicity. |