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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2724252 | Characterization of lymph node histology in adult onset Still's disease. | 1989 Mar | Adult onset Still's disease is an acknowledged cause of fever of unknown origin. Eight patients with adult onset Still's disease each had a lymph node biopsy as part of their initial evaluation. Seven of 8 biopsies exhibited intense, somewhat atypical, paracortical immunoblastic hyperplasia. This nodal histology, while not specific for the disorder, appears distinct from that associated with rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and systemic lupus erythematosus. This paracortical cellular proliferation with apparent nodal effacement, along with atypical immunoblasts, can simulate lymphoma. Adult onset Still's disease should be added to the differential consideration of benign lymph node histology simulating lymphoma. | |
3690988 | Five year follow-up of a prospective cohort of juvenile chronic arthritis with recent onse | 1987 Sep | One hundred and fifty children with unsuspected juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) and a disease duration of 3-6 months entered a prospective study. Diagnosis of JCA could be verified in 107 patients according to the WHO-EULAR criteria. After 5.0 +/- 0.9 years 66 of the 107 patients showed no disease activity, 24 of them for more than 2 years, 23 for less than 2 years without any drug therapy. Nineteen patients were still on NSAIDs and/or long acting drugs, 14 patients with unfavourable morphologic outcome (greater than stage II) and 17 patients with severe functional impairment (greater than or equal to stage III) all belonged to the 41 children with still active disease after 5 years follow-up. The disease course was polyarticular in 10 of the 14 patients with severe radiologic changes and in 14 of the 17 with unfavourable functional results. The wrist joint proved especially vulnerable since 46% of the severe radiologic changes concerned this joint. All 4 children with positive rheumatoid factor followed a polyarticular course with severe radiologic changes (stage greater than II), 3 of them together with unfavourable functional outcome. Risk factors for morphologically and functionally unfavourable course are therefore seen in a still active disease after 5 years, a polyarticular joint involvement and a positive rheumatoid factor. Extra-articular complications concerned chronic iridocyclitis in 7 patients, acute iridocyclitis in 2, amyloidosis in 1 and growth retardation in 2 children. -The prospective study is to be continued. | |
2559478 | Retroviruses and chronic arthritis. Possible significance of some recent observations. | 1989 | Retroviruses have been proposed as etiologic agents for the development of chronic arthritis in humans. The arthritis seen in goats infected by caprine arthritis encephalitis virus and the spontaneous arthritis of inbred MRL/l mice illustrate how retroviruses may cause the development of a disorder closely resembling human rheumatoid arthritis. Several investigators have searched for evidence of retrovirus infection in patients with chronic arthritis, but in most cases the results have been disappointing. However, in 1983, Iversen isolated a virus-like particle from a patient with psoriasis. The particle had a buoyant density in sucrose and a protein composition that closely resembled murine and primate retroviruses. Particle proteins participate in immune complex formation in psoriasis, in psoriatic arthritis, and in ankylosing spondylitis. Particle proteins are also present in deposits in psoriatic lesions and in affected synovial tissue resembling immune complex deposits. The possible role for retrovirus-like antigens in the inflammatory process in psoriasis and seronegative arthritis is discussed. | |
2328030 | C3 activation products correlate with antibodies to lipid A in pauciarticular juvenile art | 1990 Apr | IgM antibodies to monophosphoryl-lipid A were found to be elevated in sera from children with all forms of juvenile arthritis (JA) and systemic lupus erythematosus. Of more interest, in patients with pauciarticular JA, IgG antibody titers to monophosphoryl-lipid A were found to be correlated with the C3a concentration and the C3d:C3 ratio. Although the full specificity of these antibodies is unknown, they are the first that have been found to be correlated with complement activation products in any form of JA. | |
1953813 | The relative toxicity of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. | 1991 Nov | Toxicity Index scores were computed from symptoms, laboratory abnormalities, and hospitalizations attributed to nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) therapy in 2,747 patients with rheumatoid arthritis receiving 5,642 courses of 11 NSAIDs over 8,481 patient-years. Substantial differences in overall toxicity were found, the differences between drugs often being clinically significant (2-3 times as toxic) and highly statistically significant. The results strengthened after adjustment for differing patient characteristics, held generally across multiple ARAMIS (Arthritis, Rheumatism, and Aging Medical Information System) data bank centers, and persisted after use of different techniques for the weighting of side effects. The most toxic side effects were experienced by patients taking indomethacin (mean +/- SEM score 3.99 +/- 0.58), tolmetin sodium (3.96 +/- 0.74), and meclofenamate sodium (3.86 +/- 0.66). Least toxic were coated or buffered aspirin (1.19 +/- 0.10), salsalate (1.28 +/- 0.34), and ibuprofen (1.94 +/- 0.43). The most toxic drugs were generally taken in the lowest relative doses. There are statistical differences in overall toxicity between different NSAIDs as used in rheumatoid arthritis, and these differences are both clinically and statistically significant. | |
2827245 | Parvoviruses: infections and arthropathies. | 1987 Aug | Parvoviruses (PVs) are unique in that they are the only single-stranded DNA viruses of vertebrates. Two human PVs have now been described and characterized, and genomes sequenced: B19 and RA-1. The B19 PV is known to be associated with arthritis in humans, and RA-1 was recovered from the synovial cells of a patient with rheumatoid arthritis. This article will discuss the nature of these two viruses, their possible relationships to chronic joint disease of humans, and the clinical illnesses of B19 infection. | |
3702888 | [Prospective observation study on the clinical course of chronic juvenile arthritis (JCA)] | 1986 Mar | A non-randomized follow-up study of 106 children with juvenile chronic arthritis was conducted for two years starting from the onset of the disease. All subgroups - with the exception of seropositive polyarthritis - showed a decrease in the number of joints affected, and activity of the disease in a number of patients. Instant remission and therapeutic effects cannot distinctly be differentiated. Radiological changes are proper criteria for early diagnosis in children with intense progressive joint-findings. X-ray examinations of the joints affected are therefore indicated at regular intervals especially, in the seropositive, occasionally in the seronegative polyarthritic subgroup. | |
1698307 | Histological and immunohistochemical characterization of joint inflammation and flare-up r | 1990 Sep | This report describes the histological and immunohistochemical characterization of joint inflammations and flare-up reactions in mice induced by cloned MT4+,Lyt-2-T cells. The T-cell clone used was specific for the antigen methylated bovine serum albumin (mBSA) and was inoculated locally into a joint together with the antigen. The histological examination was performed in methylmethacrylate sections, and the various cell types were quantified in distinct regions of the knee joint. The infiltrates consisted predominantly of granulocytes admixed with small numbers of histiocytes. Few lymphocytes were present, while plasma cells were not found. Fibrosis was prominent in the later stages of the inflammation. Immunohistochemical analysis of total unfixed, non-decalcified sections using monoclonal antibodies revealed the presence of T cells which were predominantly of the helper phenotype, sporadic B cells, and a considerable number of Ia-positive cells. Macrophages were scattered throughout the infiltrate. The synovial lining was shown to express Ia antigens and to contain cells that stained with macrophage markers. Cell clusters were found including helper T (Th) cells, some B cells, and Ia-positive cells. These results are in line with immunohistological examinations in other arthritis models and resemble the early events in human rheumatoid arthritis. The data indicate that activated helper T cells are required and sufficient to give rise to the inflammatory infiltrates that are characteristic of the inflammations and exacerbations in human rheumatoid arthritis. | |
1665296 | Collagenase production in the exudate of a novel adjuvant-induced air pouch inflammation m | 1991 Sep | To elucidate the role of collagenase in tissue destruction in chronic inflammation (e.g., in rheumatoid arthritis), we established a novel air pouch model in rats. Ten ml of air was injected subcutaneously on the dorsa of F344 rats, and 24 hours thereafter, Freund's complete adjuvant was injected into the air pouch. A remarkably high activity of trypsin-activated collagenase was detected dose-dependently in the pouch fluid at 8 days after the challenge injection. Concomitantly with the increase of collagenase activity, the weight of granuloma formed in the pouch decreased, suggesting that collagenase participates in the resorption of granuloma tissues. | |
2076440 | [Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: the role of the TMJ and stomatognathic system]. | 1990 Oct | Juvenile chronic arthritis (j.c.a) often affects the maxillo-facial complex over all in relation to jaw and temporo-mandibular joint (TMJ). In this work 35 j.c.a. patients (aged 6 to 16 years) have been selected and studied in order to detect functional and morphostructural involvement of stomatognathic apparatus and TMJ. The involvement of these structures is appeared significantly increased during j.c.a. also in patients without clinic symptoms referable to a stomatognathic apparatus pathology. Therefore an early diagnosis as well as a preventive orthognatodontic treatment are necessary to reduce long term effects on the stomatognathic apparatus multifunctions. | |
2719732 | Changes in the metaphysis and diaphysis of the femur proximal to the knee in rabbits with | 1989 May | We quantified the cross-sectional cortical bone area and remodeling rates in the ipsilateral femoral diaphysis and metaphysis of rabbits with carrageenan-induced inflammatory monarthritis of the knee. Although osteogenesis rates were significantly elevated (approximately threefold in diaphyses and sixfold in metaphyses), the cross-sectional bone area of the diaphysis was significantly diminished. Fivefold and sixfold increases in bone resorption rates were calculated in diaphyses and metaphyses, respectively. Other morphologic changes observed were porosity and net resorption of the anterior cortex and net accretion on the posteromedial cortex ("drift" of bone). These findings may have clinical significance with regard to the mechanisms and consequences of bone changes in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. | |
3956016 | Microcirculation of the juvenile knee in chronic arthritis. | 1986 Mar | In order to investigate pathogenetic factors in growth abnormalities of the knee in hemophilic arthropathy and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, the hemodynamic changes of the knee following chronic synovial inflammation and elevated joint pressure were studied in puppies. Unilateral arthritis was induced by intraarticular injections of carrageenan solution. Regional blood flow (RBF) was measured by tracer microsphere technique. Microvascular volume (VV) was estimated from the distribution volumes of Cr51-labelled erythrocytes and I125 fibrinogen. Mean transit times (TT) of blood components were calculated from volume/flow ratios. The arthritic joint capsules were characterized by high RBF rates, increased VV, low tissue hematocrit (HCT) and short TT of blood. In the juxtaarticular epiphyses and the patella, RBF was largely unchanged, whereas VV was significantly elevated and TT of blood prolonged. The growth plates formed borders for the extension of these changes. The increased permeability and surface area between blood and bone in arthritis may accelerate the resorption and subsequent destruction of subchondral bone in chronic arthropathies of the juvenile knee. | |
3048913 | Subcorneal pustular dermatosis with seronegative polyarthritis. | 1988 Sep | A 55-year-old woman presented with acute onset of subcorneal pustular dermatosis and a seronegative polyarthritis. There have been a few reports of subcorneal pustular dermatosis associated with arthritis. | |
2453422 | [Effects of ulinastatin on experimental arthritis]. | 1988 Jan | Effects of the urinary enzyme inhibitor ulinastatin on experimental arthritis were investigated. Ulinastatin at the dose of 30,000 units/kg/day, i.v., significantly restored the swelling of hind paw, inflammatory score and bone damage in adjuvant arthritic rats. Intraarticular administration of ulinastatin at 3000 units/site x 3, significantly suppressed the articular swelling and the elevated inflammatory parameters in the synovial fluid of carrageenin-induced arthritic rabbits. Moreover, ulinastatin at the dose of 50000 units/kg/day, i.v., significantly prevented the elevation of serum rheumatoid factor and articular lesions in MRL/l mice. In addition, ulinastatin significantly inhibited human granulocyte elastase and cathepsin G. These findings indicate that ulinastatin may be a useful therapeutic agent for arthritis. | |
1872525 | [Reactive arthritis caused by Yersinia in children. Report of 4 cases]. | 1991 May | Among a group of children hospitalized for "joint pain", four of the cases of reactive arthritis were due to Yersinia infection. These four cases are described. Some patients had suggestive clinical symptoms but serologic studies were needed to establish the diagnosis. Tissue group studies showed that two children were HLA B27 and one was HLA B7. Reactive arthritis due to Yersinia in a form of "enteral arthritis". The prevalence of Yersinia arthritis has not been documented. Serologic tests are essential to outrule the main differential diagnosis, i.e. chronic juvenile arthritis (juvenile rheumatoid arthritis). Short-term resolution of symptoms is seen in every case. The long-term outcome is less well documented, especially with regard to the risk of recurrence and to relationships with peripheral joint disease and spondylarthropathies of early adulthood. HLA B27 positivity may be a risk factor. The pathogenesis of Yersinia-induced reactive arthritis is unclear; current studies are focusing on immunologic factors. The uncertainties concerning long-term outcome justifies renewed interest in childhood reactive arthritis. | |
2349438 | Diagnostic relevance of fibronectin in cryoprecipitates. | 1990 | Fibronectin is a known component of plasma cryoprecipitates. It is seen in cryoglobulins from patients with monoclonal gammopathies and also from rheumatoid arthritis, and patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and other connective tissue diseases. We evaluated the clinical relevance of measures of cryoprecipitable fibronectin from the sera of 88 patients with rheumatic diseases and 27 healthy controls. There were 28 patients with rheumatoid arthritis, 19 with systemic vasculitis, 5 with cutaneous vasculitis, and 36 with a systemic connective tissue disorder. We measured total and cryoprecipitable fibronectin and for comparison immunoglobulins G, A, and M and complement C3 and C4. Cryoprecipitable fibronectin was detected in 33% control sera and 42% patient sera. The mean levels were higher in the sera of patients in all diagnostic groups. The highest levels were seen in rheumatoid patients with systemic disease, systemic vasculitis, and connective tissue diseases. The presence of cryoprecipitable fibronectin was related to the clinical activity of systemic vasculitis; none of the 6 patients with clinically inactive vasculitis had detectable fibronectin in their cryoprecipitates; but it was seen in 7 to 13 cases with active vasculitis. There were only weak relationships between cryoprecipitable fibronectin and immunoglobulin and complement levels in cryoprecipitates. We conclude that routinely measuring fibronectin levels in cryoprecipitates is generally of doubtful diagnostic value. However, it appears to be a useful marker of the clinical activity of systemic vasculitis and we recommend its use in the laboratory assessment of vasculitis. | |
2945686 | Deleterious interactions of immune complexes with tibial cartilage of antigen-induced arth | 1986 Nov | The observations of immune complex (IC) deposition in the surface of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) cartilage, in conjunction with degradative changes in superficial and midzone chondrocytes, raised the question of causal relationships. In antigen-induced arthritis in rabbits, cartilage degradation occurred in association with IC deposition and is accompanied by chondrocyte damage. Superficial and midzone chondrocytes in rabbit tibial cartilage of arthritic joints, induced by bovine serum albumin (BSA) or ferritin (Fn), were examined by electron microscopy during the evolution of the arthus response. The first cell changes were noted at six hours, by which time superficially formed IC had begun to extend into the matrix. Elongated cytoplasmic footlets, numerous lysosomes, and lipid droplets occurred initially. By 24 hours, concomitant with the deeper extension of surface IC, prominent changes in chondrocytes of both superficial, and midzones progressed to ultrastructural evidence of cell death. The pinocytosis of electron-dense amorphous materials, which included IC, preceded degradation. These data suggest that the observed cytopathology is a manifestation of locally deposited IC. | |
2940038 | The distribution of dendritic cells in the synovial fluids of patients with arthritis. | 1986 Mar | We have investigated the cellular composition of 108 consecutive samples of synovial fluid from patients with Juvenile Chronic Arthritis (JCA), Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) and Osteoarthritis (OA). Particular emphasis was placed upon the enumeration of cells with dendritic morphology and the study of their in vitro function. Whilst the cellularity of the synovial fluids varied by a factor of greater than 100 within patient groups, the fluids obtained from patients with inflammatory arthritis (JCA & RA) were more cellular than those from patients with non-inflammatory arthritis (OA). This was also noted with respect to both the number and proportion of dendritic cells. The dendritic cells stimulated allogeneic mixed leucocyte reactions, and enhanced mitogenic responses of peripheral blood lymphocytes when present in numbers as low as 1% of the total mononuclear cells. Syngeneic stimulation of blood lymphocytes by similar numbers of dendritic cells was usually negative. However, occasionally there was a marked syngeneic stimulation, which may be evidence for the presentation of antigen by dendritic cells within the arthritic joint. | |
2844457 | CD4 and CD8 cell responses to herpes simplex virus in Behçet's disease. | 1988 Jul | The finding of part of the Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) genome in peripheral blood leucocytes of some patients with Behcet's disease (BD) led to investigations of T cell responses to HSV1 in this disease. A significantly impaired uptake of 3H-thymidine by CD4 cells was found in BD, as compared with healthy HSV1 sero-positive subjects. The impaired cellular response appeared to be specific to HSV1, as neither cytomegalovirus nor varicella-zoster virus showed depressed CD4 cell responses in BD. A similar impairment of CD4 cell responses to HSV1 was found in patients with recurrent herpetic infections, known to be caused by latent HSV1 infections. However, in rheumatoid arthritis which was selected as an unrelated autoimmune disease. 3H-thymidine uptake by CD4 cells stimulated with HSV1 was enhanced. CD8 cells showed generally rather a low uptake of 3H-thymidine, nevertheless, the values in BD and recurrent herpetic infection were again lower than those in sero-positive controls or rheumatoid arthritis. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that HSV1 might be involved in the immunopathogenesis of BD. | |
3963022 | European experience with flurbiprofen. A new analgesic/anti-inflammatory agent. | 1986 Mar 24 | Numerous European clinical trials begun more than 12 years ago have clearly demonstrated flurbiprofen's safety and efficacy as an analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and antipyretic agent. In preclinical studies, flurbiprofen was at least as potent as indomethacin, and approximately 200 times more potent than aspirin. For patients with rheumatoid arthritis, a review of several trials found flurbiprofen often superior to aspirin and naproxen, and equivalent to indomethacin and ibuprofen in efficacy. Acetaminophen appeared no more effective than placebo for patients with rheumatoid arthritis. For patients with ankylosing spondylitis, flurbiprofen was also shown to be equivalent or superior to indomethacin and phenylbutazone. For patients with osteoarthritis of the peripheral joints, spine, hip, and knee, flurbiprofen was again found equal to ibuprofen, diclofenac, indomethacin, and naproxen. Side effects with flurbiprofen were few and predominantly related to the gastrointestinal tract. |