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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2481873 | Herpes simplex virus and the rheumatic diseases. | 1989 | A viral aetiology for rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory connective tissue diseases has been sought in general terms first, by studying viral growth patterns in lymphocytes from the blood and lesions of patients affected second, by analysing lymphocyte concentrations of the interferon-induced enzyme 2-5 oligo-adenylate synthetase (2-5 A); and third, by probing Southern blots of lymphocyte DNA with viral probes. Indirect evidence consistent with a viral aetiology has been found in several such diseases, but direct proof has been difficult to adduce. There is some suggestion that herpes simplex viral (HSV) DNA is present in Behcet's blood lymphocytes, but the findings are inconsistent. It is also plausible that viruses such as HSV do not induce these diseases through classic immunopathological mechanisms, but as "promoters" of abnormal lymphoproliferation in individuals with predisposing defects, possibly related to selective DNA repair defects. | |
3132900 | Effect of two gold compounds on lysosomes. | 1988 Jun | The effect of two gold(I) compounds on stability of lysosomes in vitro was studied. Lysosomes from homogenates of rat kidney cortex were isolated by differential centrifugation. These lysosomes were incubated at 37 degrees C with widely varied concentrations of sodium aurothiomalate and sodium aurothiosulphate for 5, 35, and 65 minutes. Acid phosphatase activities were measured and used as an indication of lysosomal membrane stability in the presence and absence of drugs. The enhanced release of acid phosphatase from lysosomes by aurothiomalate and aurothiosulphate was related to dose, but the drugs differed substantially in their potencies. The disruptive effect on lysosomes was more marked for aurothiosulphate than for aurothiomalate. In addition, both drugs inhibited acid phosphatase activities at relatively high gold concentrations. Aurothiomalate had a moderate and aurothiosulphate a weaker inhibitory effect on the enzyme. Our results indicate that aurothiomalate and aurothiosulphate exert their beneficial effect in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis through mechanism(s) other than lysosomal membrane stabilisation. | |
3425973 | Raynaud's phenomenon in a female population: prevalence and association with other conditi | 1987 Dec | In a random sample of 3000 women of ages eighteen to fifty-nine years in the city of Västerås, Sweden, 19% of the 2705 responders to a questionnaire complained of cold and white fingers with or without numbness. On the basis of interview and examination, 79% of these women were diagnosed as having Raynaud's phenomenon (RP), giving a prevalence of 15.6%. A significantly higher rate of family members with cold, white fingers was found only in the group of women with pronounced RP (p less than 0.001). A significantly higher frequency of women with pronounced RP than of the control group had a history of recurrent muscle/joint pain (p less than 0.05). Laboratory tests that might indicate an active connective tissue disease did not, however, confirm a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. All three subgroups differed significantly from the control group in terms of recurrent chest pains; subgroups 2 and N differed significantly from controls in terms of recurrent headaches. | |
3434324 | Dysthymic states and depressive syndromes in physical conditions of presumably psychogenic | 1987 Nov | This paper reports studies of patients with the following disorders: peptic ulcer, hypertension, bronchial asthma, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), ulcerative colitis (UC), urticaria, psoriasis and alopecia. The investigations focused on dysthymic states, measured by Foulds' Scale of Anxiety and Depression (SAD) and--except for the first three disorders--the Present State Examination (PSE). On the SAD, all the above groups scored significantly higher than somatically ill controls in anxiety, and all except ulcer patients scored significantly higher in depression. The PSE designated more than half of these patients as cases, except in the psoriasis group. Most patients were assigned to the PSE syndromes of anxiety states or neurotic depression, with the former being more common in UC and urticaria, and the latter more common in IBS, alopecia and rheumatoid arthritis. The variation within skin diseases and within gastrointestinal diseases suggests that neurotic symptoms are typical of each disease rather than of the system involved in the disturbance. | |
2824268 | Oxidants and human disease: some new concepts. | 1987 Nov | Oxidant species such as superoxide radical (O.2-), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hydroxyl radical (HO.), and lipid peroxides (LOOH) are becoming increasingly implicated in human disease. However, the question of whether such oxidants are a major cause of tissue injury in human disease or are merely produced during such injury has been difficult to answer because of inadequate experimental techniques, and possibly because of an overemphasis on lipid peroxidation as a mechanism of oxidant injury. Recent developments in methodology, in our understanding of the primary mechanism of oxidant toxicity to cells, and in concepts of antioxidant protection are reviewed. Good evidence now exists for some role of oxidant damage to tissues in the pathology of several human diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, reperfusion injury, immune injury to lung and kidney, and cerebral trauma or ischemia. These have led to promising suggestions for new therapeutic approaches. | |
3652582 | Limited posterolateral surgical approach to the knee for excision of osteoid osteoma. | 1987 Oct | An 18-year-old man suffered four years of undiagnosed knee pain until a CAT scan revealed an epiphyseal osteoid osteoma of the tibia located subchondrally, just medial to the proximal tibiofibular joint. A nidus in this location is not easily accessible, and its proximity to the joint surface raised concerns about damage to the tibial plateau. To facilitate excision of the tumor, cadaveric dissections were performed to develop a limited posterior approach to the proximal, lateral portion of the tibia. The CAT scan was used to calculate the precise dimensions of the tumor and its relation to the posterior tibial cortex and the proximal tibiofibular joint. With the use of the exposure developed in the laboratory and the calculations derived from the CAT scan, the tumor could be excised by removing a single block of bone 15 mm3. Intraoperative radiographs confirmed the presence of the nidus within the excised block of bone. This case report reaffirms the frequent difficulties and tardiness in diagnosing osteoid osteomas and the need to include these tumors in the differential diagnosis of knee pain and epiphyseal lesions. Before CAT scans were used, the working diagnoses were torn meniscus, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and bone hemangiomatosis. | |
2946496 | Detection of complement activation in immune complex diseases: six methods compared. | 1986 Dec | We compared the performance of six complement tests: electrophoresis, immunofixation, immunoelectrophoresis, and nephelometric quantifications of C3, C4, and C3d. We used 123 blood samples from 60 control subjects and 63 patients with immune complex diseases: systemic lupus erythematosus, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, rheumatoid arthritis, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, renal diseases, vasculitis, cryoglobulinemia, Gram-negative bacteremia, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, rheumatic heart disease, malaria, and chronic active hepatitis. Immunofixation and quantification of C3d were better for detecting complement activation, their sensitivity rates (90.5% and 89.3%, respectively) being higher than those of the other tests studied. Immunofixation is a relatively simple and inexpensive test, provides good resolution of protein bands, and yields results that are easily quantified with a densitometer. Nephelometry of C3d provides more rapid and accurate quantitative results than immunofixation, but commercial reagents are not yet available. The causes of false-positive results in complement tests and the mechanisms of complement activation in AIDS are also discussed. | |
2309509 | Severe reversible thrombocytopenia resulting from butoconazole cream. | 1990 Feb | A 54-year-old woman with a 19-year history of rheumatoid arthritis developed life-threatening thrombocytopenia one week after beginning butoconazole therapy for a vaginal yeast infection. This was complicated by upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage that probably resulted from ibuprofen and methotrexate therapy. Sepsis, myelophthisic anemias, and other potential etiologies were ruled out. Once stabilized, the patient was rechallenged with other medications without incident. These findings indicate that a potentially serious thrombocytopenia may result from the administration of butoconazole vaginal cream or in combination with methotrexate and/or ibuprofen. | |
3540811 | Psychological aspects of painful medical conditions in children. II. Personality factors, | 1986 Nov | In part II of a two-part series, the psychological aspects of painful medical conditions and their treatment are reviewed. While considerable attention has been devoted to the study of personality, family characteristics, treatment of recurrent abdominal pain, growing pains and headaches, with few exceptions these studies have significant methodological problems. Studies of the psychological aspects of pain associated with such pediatric disorders as cancer, sickle cell anemia, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and burns are generally only beginning to emerge, but at least a few of the single-case studies show appropriate attention to methodology. Areas needing further research are discussed. | |
1795316 | The effect of flexion-extension movement on vertical atlantoaxial subluxation measurements | 1991 Dec | Flexion-extension movement and atlantoaxial subluxation (AAS) serve to alter the relations between the anatomical landmarks used in the diagnosis of vertical subluxations. The effects of such alterations are examined here. Lateral view radiographs of the cervical spine taken during flexion and extension were studied in 86 female patients with rheumatoid arthritis, 56 of whom also had AAS. All the methods used (McRae, McGregor, Redlund and Sakaguchi-Kauppi) showed a shift of the mean values in a pathological direction during flexion (p less than 0.001, Sakaguchi-Kauppi: p less than 0.003). The difference between the flexion and extension values (McRae, Redlund, Sakaguchi-Kauppi) correlated with the severity of AAS in flexion (correlation coefficients and p values: 0.403, 0.303 and 0.441, p less than 0.001, p = 0.005, p less than 0.001 respectively). Thus, some vertical movement is connected with AAS during flexion and this should be taken into consideration when weighing treatment options. | |
1913000 | Patients with ankylosing spondylitis show individual patterns of variation in disease acti | 1991 Oct | Disease activity was monitored sequentially over 1 year in 22 patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) attending regularly the local NASS group. Assessments, using standard methods, were made at monthly intervals by the same observer. There was marked heterogeneity such that each patient's profile of disease activity was virtually unique. All patients experienced at least one exacerbation and most underwent exacerbations and remissions, reminiscent of the experience of many patients with rheumatoid arthritis. In most instances no reason for changes in disease activity could be discerned clinically. These observations raise the possibility that the natural history of disease in AS may be different for each individual patient, which, if true, would have important implications for the design of studies to test the efficacy of therapy and for approaches to investigating pathogenic mechanisms in patients with AS. | |
1832808 | [Changes in collagen biosynthesis in patients with hip joint replacement surgery and reope | 1991 May | The authors investigated the intensity of collagen synthesis in patients subjected to operation or re-operation of a total endoprosthesis of the hip joint. The patients suffered from osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis. The authors assessed the activity of collagen glucosyl transferase (S-GGT) and the concentration of the N-terminal propeptide procollagen type III by two methods (S-Pro III-N-P and S-Fab) in serum before and after operation. A significant rise of S-GGT and S-Fab, as compared with controls, occurred only after operation while S-Pro III-N-P was elevated already before operation. S-GGT did not differ before and after operation, while N-propeptide concentration rose when either method was used. | |
2006718 | Juxta-articular osteoid osteoma. | 1991 Apr | Osteoid osteomas that arise at the end of a long bone, within the insertion of the joint capsule (juxta-articular, intra-articular), may cause misleading clinical, radiographic, and histologic findings, resulting in unnecessary diagnostic tests and a delay in definitive treatment. To clarify optimum diagnostic procedures, we reviewed 20 cases of juxta-articular osteoid osteomas and found a mean delay from presentation to correct diagnosis of 24 months. Plain radiographs were either negative or showed only secondary changes. A periosteal reaction and proliferative synovitis with chronic inflammation was common, which could be misinterpreted as rheumatoid arthritis. Optimum diagnostic procedures were a bone scan followed by plain tomograms and an excisional biopsy of the nidus. | |
1985796 | An antibody reacting with splenic red pulp macrophages in the sera of patients with rheuma | 1991 Feb | An antibody was detected in the sera of patients with certain rheumatic diseases that reacted with the cytoplasm of the splenic red pulp (SRP) cells of adult mice. This antibody was detected in the sera of all patients with mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD), 53% of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 42% with Sjögren's syndrome (SS), and 10% with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, this antibody was found neither in the sera from patients with other types of rheumatic diseases nor in healthy volunteers. The screening of this antibody may be useful in diagnoses of MCTD, SLE, and SS. In the present study, we also performed the characterization of the cells reacting with this antibody. The cells proved to be acid phosphatase positive phagocytes in the SRP, that is, red pulp macrophages. Moreover, a histochemical analysis of the reacting antigen in these cells has demonstrated that its antigenic activity is NaIO4 and RNase sensitive, suggesting that the antigen may be associated with RNA. | |
1958563 | Sex steroid regulation of autoimmunity. | 1991 | The immune response of males and females is not identical but instead has been shown to be dimorphic in its nature, with females generally demonstrating a greater overall response than males. This dimorphism extends to both the humoral and cell mediated systems and appears to be mechanistically based on the differences in type and concentration of sex steroids in males vs females. Furthermore, growth hormone and prolactin secretions which are different in males and females may also be partly responsible for the observed dimorphism. Because autoimmune disease results from a pathological perturbation of normal immune function, it follows that expression of these diseases will also demonstrate a dimorphic pattern. Examples of this autoimmune dimorphism include (but are not limited to) lupus, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis with the two former more prevalent in females than males and the latter more severe during pregnancy. To explain autoimmune dimorphism it therefore becomes necessary firstly to describe the cellular and hormonal interactions found in normal immune regulation and thereafter extrapolate these to autoimmune phenomena. | |
2395762 | Four-year average follow up of cemented PCA total knees: clinical and roentgenographic ana | 1990 Aug | Twenty patients with 25 consecutive primary-cemented Howmedica PCA total knee prostheses were clinically and roentgenographically reviewed. Twenty implants were placed in 16 women and five in four men. The average patient age at surgery was 68.0 years (range, 53 to 82), and average follow up was 51 months. Total knee replacement indication was degenerative joint disease in 21 knees and rheumatoid arthritis in four. Excellent or good results were seen in 22 of 25 knees (88%) at the early follow up examination and 18 of 25 knees (72%) at the most recent follow up examination. | |
2309070 | [Headache of cervical origin]. | 1990 Feb 11 | Neck disorders implicated as causes of headache fall into two groups: a) those in which the cervical lesions are unequivocally demonstrable, and in which treatment of those lesions helps the headache; these are widely accepted as causes of headache, and include: congenital and acquired craniovertebral junction disorders, rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis of the upper cervical spine, and dissection or trauma to the carotid or vertebral arteries; b) those in which the neck disorder is either banal or not objectively demonstrable, and which seldom improve following treatment of the neck; these are not widely accepted as causes of headache; they include whiplash syndrome, segmental hypomobility-hypermobility syndrome, the posterior cervical sympathetic syndrome, cervical migraine, third occipital nerve headache, and cervicogenic headache. Features of a headache suggesting its cervical origin are: 1) abrupt onset following sudden excessive movement of the head; 2) persistent unilateral suboccipital or occipital pain; 3) consistent reproduction by neck movements and by nothing else; 4) abnormal postures of head and neck; 5) significant painful limitation of movement of upper cervical spine; 6) abnormal mobility at craniovertebral junction; 7) C2 sensory abnormalities or lower medulla or upper cervical cord signs. | |
2183579 | Inflammation as a diagnostic keystone and its clinical implications, exemplified by the in | 1990 Jan | Inflammation is a complex process following sublethal injury to tissue and ends with permanent destruction of tissue or with healing. Inflammation has long, long roots in the evolutionary process and as a concept reaches far back in the history of medicine. Inflammation can not be viewed solely in a teleological perspective. Refined by phylogenesis it serves the integrity and survival of groups (species etc.) and not primarily individuals. Inflammation has, in the history of science, been studied on the macroscopic, the microscopic, the dynamic cellular, the immunological, the biochemical/physiological, and the molecular level. Clinicians have for centuries relied on inflammatory signs and symptoms in their diagnostics, even to the extent of being seriously confused, when a subject's inflammatory preparedness is disturbed, as in agranulocytosis, alcoholism, HIV-infection etc. Chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease) have been studied intensively by inflammologists. The results are partly exchangeable with studies in, for instance, chronic rheumatoid arthritis. They try to answer the over-all question in these diseases: Are we dealing with a normal inflammatory preparedness confronted with a special (unknown) agent, or an abnormal inflammatory preparedness confronted with an ubiquitous agent? The answer will form the basis for the future treatment of these patients, whose diseases remind us of inflammation as man's fellow traveller on "the long phylogenetic march". | |
2146714 | [Madelung's disease and lesions of the extensor tendons. A case report]. | 1990 | A case of incomplete rupture of the extensor tendon to the little finger is reported in a 64-year-old woman with an idiopathic Madelung's deformity which had been present since adolescence but had given rise to no problems. Surgical treatment by resection of the head of the ulna with fixation of the ulna to the radius gave a satisfactory result. Only two similar case reports of rupture of extensor tendons associated with Madelung's deformity have been published. In spite of its rarity, this complication deserves to be known and possibly prevented by resection of the head of the ulna when it is very prominent. It should be recognized before any loss of extension of the little finger, however slight, develops. Lesions of extensor tendons in contact with an excessive prominence of the head of the ulna are among the best known complications of rheumatoid arthritis. Occasionally, the same type of lesion can be seen in Madelung's deformity. | |
2662374 | [Value of x-ray computed tomography in muscular pathology. Personal cases and review of th | 1989 May | The authors have studied the advantage of CT scans in muscular pathology. The scan, in addition to the diagnosis of tumors and muscular abscesses, permits to differentiate primary myopathies from neurogenic atrophies: in the course of myopathies, the muscle volume is preserved and they appear as a hypodensity; in neurogenic atrophies, the muscle volume is reduced with preserved density. The CT scan permits to determine the extension of these lesions. In the course of polymyositis, certain forms of rheumatoid arthritis, the scan discloses a trabecular and "worm-eaten" aspect of the muscles. This is also observed after long-term steroid therapy and other endocrine diseases (hyperthyroidism, osteomalacia) indicating an infra-clinical myopathy. In vertebral osteoporosis with fractures and patients with chronic lumbalgia, very often, an atrophy of the spinal muscle is observed. Finally, in the course of acquired kyphosis of the adult patient (camptocormia), the CT scan suggest an isolated myopathy, with late manifestations, of the paravertebral muscles. |