Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (rheumatoid arthritis)
53,068 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In summary, purified human ceruloplasmin inhibits several reactions mediated by superoxide anion in a fashion consistent with an ability to scavenge this free radical. It must be pointed out, however, that on a weight basis, the superoxide-scavenging activity of ceruloplasmin is substantially less than that of purified human erythrocyte superoxide dismutase. Nevertheless, since superoxide dismutase is almost exclusively an intracellular enzyme, ceruloplasmin probably represents the major circulating scavenger of superoxide anion radicals. The level of superoxide dismutase in human plasma has been reported to be 0.7 microgram/ml. It is not clear, however, how this was measured. We have found that concentrations of plasma exceeding 10% (v/v) interfere significantly with the assays routinely employed for detecting superoxide-scavenging activity. Consequently, we have not yet been able to quantify the superoxide-scavenging activity of either ceruloplasmin or superoxide dismutase in whole human plasma. Thus, we can only speculate that under conditions where levels of ceruloplasmin are markedly elevated, as during pregnancy, during acute infections, or in association with inflammatory diseases (such as rheumatoid arthritis), this acute-phase reactant may play a major role as a circulating scavenger of oxygen-derived free radicals.
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PMID:A new function for ceruloplasmin as an acute-phase reactant in inflammation: a scavenger of superoxide anion radicals. 23 45

Oxygen consumption was investigated during phagocytosis by leukocytes in patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, dermatomyositis, systemic lupus erythematosus and scleroderma. Compared with the situation in normal persons, the mean oxygen consumption in the total patient group was depressed.
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PMID:Oxygen consumption during phagocytosis by leukocytes in patients with rheumatic diseases. 30

Atmospheric and biological evolution progressed simultaneously and today certain cell types flourish only at oxygen tensions which were ambient 600 million years ago, i.e., at 5 to 10 mm Hg. In man, a continuous oxygen flow at these pressures is supplied in the skin where Treponema pallidum, Mycobacterium leprae and members of the genus Rickettsia grow best. In vitro studies support the microaerophilic status of these organisms and of certain other microbial and mammalian cells. Vigorous growth in pure culture will await the development of techniques which can maintain these low oxygen tensions at the cell walls of the microbes as they replicate and consume increasing amounts of oxygen. Continuing failure to consistently isolate microbes from active lesions in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or systemic lupus erythematosus may reflect the universal absence of suitable methods for isolation of microaerophilic microbes.
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PMID:Cultivation requirements for Treponema pallidum, Mycobacterium leprae and other microbial and mammalian microaerophilic cells. 39 68

A vasomotor (nitritoid) reaction occurred following an initial injection of gold sodium thiomalate (GST; Myochrysine) in a 69-year-old man with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). An acute anterior wall myocardial infarction, documented by serial electrocardiographic and serum enzyme changes, developed immediately thereafter. A second patient, a 49-year-old man with RA and a history of GST-associated vasomotor reactions, was monitored clinically and electrocardiographically after GST administration. Sinus tachycardia developed and peripheral blood pressure fell within 2 minutes of injection, simultaneous with the onset of vasomotor symptoms. Vasomotor reactions from GST may compromise myocardial perfusion by their action on arteriolar smooth muscle, and thus result in peripheral vasodilatation, or they may act by adrenergic discharge initiated by such a reaction, and thus increase myocardial work and oxygen demand. Aurothioglucose (Solganal), rarely produces vasomotor reactions, and may be preferred to GST in elderly RA patients with concomitant cardiovascular disease or atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction following gold sodium thiomalate induced vasomotor (nitritoid) reaction. 40 17

Compensatory mechanisms in children with iron-deficiency anemia were evaluated by measuring erythrocytic organic phosphates and, in some cases, shifts in the P50 of the oxygen dissociation curve. In 19 children with nutritional anemia (hemoglobin values of 3.2 to 8.2 gm/dl) there was a calculated improved oxygen delivery to tissues equivalent to a hemoglobin level of at least 7.5 gm/dl. Transient decompensation was observed during acidosis. In five children with iron-deficiency anemia due to blood loss and in one child with rheumatoid arthritis no such compensatory changes were observed.
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PMID:Iron-deficiency anemia: evaluation of compensatory changes. 111 81

Blood loss during total hip replacement has been reported as ranging from 500 to more than 4000 ml. To find reasons for this large variation, 167 case reports were studied. Blood loss was higher with nitrous oxide-oxygen-curare-morphine aneasthesia than with halothane-nitrous oxide-oxygen. Blood loss was also higher in patients with cups, prostheses, and neoplasms of the femoral head and neck than in patients with degenerative and rheumatoid arthritis. In patients undergoing bilateral total hip replacement, operative blood loss was significantly (p=0.05) higher during the second operation. However, the most striking correlation of blood loss was with intraoperative systolic blood pressure (r=0.84), a finding confirmed by a prospective study in 58 patients. Blood loss, operative time, the number of blood transfusions, and the hypotensive and hypoxic response to acrylic bone-cement application decreased when intraoperative systolic blood pressure was lowered by 20 to 30 percent of the preoperative value by the use of trimethaphan or sodium nitroprusside. This moderate reduction of blood pressure resulted in a saving of 2 to 3 units of blood in an average case and a considerably clearer surgical field. The authors consider moderate lowering of blood pressure to be a useful adjuvant in anesthesia for total hip replacement.
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PMID:Relation of anesthesia to total hip replacement and control of operative blood loss. 123 52

Iron, apart a for long time well-known function connected with: transportation (hemoglobin), storage (myoglobin), and utilize (cytochromes, cytochrome oxidase) oxygen for respiration, has a critical role in host-pathogen interactions. Iron is essential for microbial growth, but also for immune function. The role of iron in infection, thermoregulation, acute lymphocytic leukemia, neoplasia, rheumatoid arthritis, stimulation of free radical reactions, and studies with iron chelation therapy are discussed.
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PMID:[The role of iron in immunologic processes]. 129 87

We report here that human plasma alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT) inhibited human neutrophil O2.- release elicited by a variety of stimulants. In comparison, the inhibitory capacities of two serine protease inhibitors, L-1-tosylamide 2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK) and soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI), and the human recombinant alpha 1-AT mutant, alpha 1-AT-Arg358 were in the order: alpha 1-AT = TPCK much greater than alpha 1-AT-Arg358 greater than SBTI when cells were stimulated with concanavalin A plus cytochalasin E. These data suggest that, in human inflammatory fluids containing relatively high concentrations of alpha 1-AT (such as rheumatoid arthritis synovial fluid), (i) alpha 1-AT may down-regulate the inflammatory process by inhibiting the neutrophil respiratory burst and (ii) serpin oxidation by neutrophil-released reactive oxygen species is unlikely to occur.
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PMID:Inhibition of neutrophil superoxide production by human plasma alpha 1-antitrypsin. 131 85

Rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis are age-related diseases, in which degenerative changes (arthrosis) and superimposed inflammatory reactions (arthritis) lead to progressive destruction of the joints. Active oxygen species derived from various sources play a role in this process, which may be influenced by appropriate treatment with antioxidants and free radical scavengers.
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PMID:Active oxygen species, articular inflammation and cartilage damage. 133 10

Salicylates, at the high therapeutic doses used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, produce an increase in ventilation and augment the carotid body reactivity to hypoxic stimulus, leading to an exaggerated hyperventilation during hypoxia. These effects had been related to the action of salicylates as uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation. In the present study, carried out in an in vitro preparation of the rabbit carotid body, we show that acetylsalicylic acid and indomethacin, two anti-inflammatory drugs that are also powerful inhibitors of cyclooxygenase, the prostaglandin-synthetizing enzyme, produce an increase in the [3H]catecholamine release evoked by low oxygen stimulation. The drugs did not affect basal normoxic release, a finding that suggests that at the concentration used these anti-inflammatory agents do not have uncoupling actions, and that their effects on hypoxic-induced release of [3H]catecholamines is mediated by their specific action as cyclooxygenase inhibitors. In agreement with this suggestion we found that prostaglandin E2 completely prevented the effects of both anti-inflammatory agents. In addition, our data indicate that endogenously synthetized prostaglandins are powerful modulators of chemoreceptor cell function.
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PMID:Potentiation by cyclooxygenase inhibitors of the release of catecholamines from the rabbit carotid body and its reversal by prostaglandin E2. 140 87


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