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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0009319 (
colitis
)
19,384
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sera from 103 patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) were tested prospectively for antibodies against neutrophil cytoplasmic antigens (anti-neutrophil cytoplasm antibodies,
ANCA
) and endothelial cell surface antigens (anti-endothelial cell antibodies, AECA) by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) and assays based on whole fixed neutrophils, purified neutrophil enzyme substrates and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Using IIF,
ANCA
were found in 26 IBD sera (25%) and in none of 51 controls. Twenty-two positive sera (85%) were from patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). The pattern of distribution of immunofluorescence was always perinuclear (P-ANCA). A majority of UC patients positive for these autoantibodies (68%) had active
colitis
, but none had evidence of vasculitis. Using a whole neutrophil ELISA, binding was demonstrable in 73% of UC sera compared to 27% of Crohn's (CD) sera and only 4% of controls. Unlike vasculitis sera, UC sera with P-
ANCA
did not bind strongly to myeloperoxidase (MPO). Forty-five per cent of IBD sera tested positive for IgG AECA in an endothelial cell ELISA, compared to seven of 51 (14%) controls. Binding correlated with both active and extensive
colitis
. A type of P-
ANCA
, in most cases distinct from MPO-specific P-
ANCA
observed in vasculitis, is detected in a significant proportion of patients with UC, but rarely Crohn's colitis and therefore may be of differential diagnostic value. IgG AECA are also frequent in CIBD sera but are less disease specific than
ANCA
.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to neutrophil cytoplasmic (ANCA) and endothelial cell surface antigens (AECA) in chronic inflammatory bowel disease. 148 88
Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies have recently been demonstrated in sera of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. We are reporting here our experience among 94 patients with Crohn's disease and 25 with ulcerative colitis. The indirect immunofluorescence assay with alcohol fixed neutrophils has been used. The presence of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies was significantly associated to the ulcerative colitis 61% VS 17% (p < 0.001). The fluorescence had a perinuclear pattern among all but one suffering from ulcerative colitis. Among the patients suffering from ulcerative colitis there was no relationship between the presence of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies and the activity or the localisation of the disease. Among the 9 patients operated for their ulcerative colitis, 4 were
ANCA
positive and remained so after proctocolectomy. The existence of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies is useful for the diagnosis of some unclassifiable
colitis
. Their presence may be used as an argument in favour of some disturbances of the immunoregulation of the disease.
...
PMID:[Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) in inflammatory diseases of the digestive tract]. 805 3
To investigate the possibilities of differentiating between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and infectious colitis on clinical, microbiological, laboratory and histological grounds, a prospective study of 105 patients with a first attack of
colitis
was undertaken. Rectal biopsy was performed on four occasions during 1 year. In 56% of the patients who proved to have IBD, the mode of onset of diarrhoeal symptoms was insidious and in 44% it was more acute, while in 81% of those who proved to have infectious colitis the onset was acute. Most patients with infectious colitis presented within 1 week, had early fever, and did not show any histological features characteristic of IBD. In most IBD patients with a non-insidious onset there were clinical warning signs of IBD, such as slight previous bowel symptoms, a late presentation time (> 1 week) and absence of early fever, or histological features characteristic of IBD. Moreover, 62% of the IBD patients with a non-insidious onset fell ill in connection with travelling abroad, gastrointestinal infection or treatment with antibiotics. Travel abroad seemed to be associated with an increased risk of developing IBD. The strongest histological predictor of IBD was basal plasmocytosis, followed by more than two vertical crypt branches/MPF, crypt distortion, villous mucosa, mucosal atrophy, epithelioid granulomas and Paneth cell metaplasia. These signs were rarely or never found among patients with infectious colitis. Their frequency increased with the interval between the initial symptoms and the first biopsy. The presence of focal basal plasmocytosis seems to be the earliest sign of IBD. The frequency of histological signs indicating IBD was maximal (88%) at the 1-week biopsy. During treatment the basal plasmocytosis and villous mucosa decreased, while crypt distortion and mucosal atrophy remained unchanged. Early treatment did not prevent the appearance of any feature. Nor did it prevent relapse. In 21% of the IBD patients microbial findings were positive. The findings consisted in known
colitis
-causing agents in 14% and other agents, such as viruses, in another 7%. In 78% of the patients with non-relapsing
colitis
(NRC),
colitis
-causing agents were found. Haemolytic strains of E. coli were detected more often in IBD. Among the IBD patients, 65% showed positive immunofluorescence reactivity to neutrophil granulocytes, indicating the presence of antineutrophil antibodies (
ANCA
). The corresponding figure for NRC patients was 5%. Antibodies against beta-glucuronidase were found in 42% of the patients with granulocyte reactivity.
...
PMID:First attack of inflammatory bowel disease and infectious colitis. A clinical, histological and microbiological study with special reference to early diagnosis. 811 39
Microscopic forms of
colitis
, including lymphocytic and collagenous
colitis
, have been observed in both those with and without celiac disease. Although perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (p-ANCA) occur in most patients with ulcerative colitis, investigations in microscopic, particularly lymphocytic,
colitis
are still needed. In this study atypical p-
ANCA
was evaluated in 55 patients, including 27 with celiac disease alone, 13 with celiac disease and concomitant lymphocytic
colitis
, and 15 with microscopic forms of
colitis
, including lymphocytic and collagenous
colitis
. Nine patients (16.3%) had atypical p-
ANCA
, including six with celiac disease and three with a microscopic form of
colitis
alone. Although five of the six positive celiac disease patients had lymphocytic
colitis
, all three celiac disease patients with associated primary sclerosing cholangitis--a separate risk factor for a positive assay result--were serologically positive for atypical p-
ANCA
. These results indicate for the first time that this serological marker may occur in histologically defined celiac disease with or without concomitant lymphocytic
colitis
. Furthermore, these results suggest that the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis differs from that of lymphocytic
colitis
and further emphasizes the heterogeneous nature of these newly recognized types of colonic inflammatory mucosal disorders.
...
PMID:Perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies in collagenous or lymphocytic colitis with or without celiac disease. 928 75
Serologic testing in inflammatory bowel disease provides a unique tool to classify these diseases into more homogeneous groups. Serum markers can also be used to identify common antigenic triggers and specific defects in mucosal immune regulation and cytokine imbalance in different parts of the gastrointestinal tract.
ANCA
(antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies) and ASCA (anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies), the most extensively studied serologic markers, have been used to classify ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease into such groups with certain phenotypic characteristics and responses to treatment. Similar studies have been initiated in indeterminate
colitis
, and these results will help in the future to define the immunopathogenesis, prognosis, and response to certain treatments in patients with this type of disease.
...
PMID:Serologic testing in inflammatory bowel disease: its value in indeterminate colitis. 1098 Sep 90
Digestive involvement is frequent during the course of systemic small and medium-sized vessel vasculitides. Clinical manifestations range from rapidly regressive abdominal pain to surgical manifestations associated with poor prognosis. These are usually associated with extra-abdominal signs, reflecting vasculitis activity. Isolated gastrointestinal involvement is observed in only 16% of these patients. The main clinical manifestations are common to all vasculitides (ischemia, bowel infarction and perforations, gastrointestinal hemorrhage due to mucosal ulcerations or aneurysmal ruptures), but some are more specific to one type (granulomatous ileo-
colitis
during Wegener's granulomatosis, eosinophilic
colitis
during Churg-Strauss syndrome). Gastrointestinal arteriography can be helpful for diagnosis, but has no prognostic value, likewise for the presence of
ANCA
. As there are no identified factors predictive of a surgical abdomen, therapy must be adapted individually, using steroids and immunosuppressive agents, generally cyclophosphamide. Prompt surgical and medical care of these seriously ill patients has lowered mortality from nearly 100% twenty years ago to approximately 23 to 56% currently.
...
PMID:[Abdominal and digestive manifestations in systemic vasculitides]. 1473 37
The term indeterminate
colitis
(IC) is an interim, or preliminary, descriptive term used by pathologists for cases of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in which a definite diagnosis of ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn's disease (CD) cannot be established based on the information available at the time of surgical sign-out. Most cases are due to fulminant ulcerative colitis, a condition in which the classic pathologic features of UC are often obscured and may overlap with CD. For instance, fulminant UC may show early superficial fissuring ulceration, transmural lymphoid aggregates and relative rectal sparing, simulating CD. Other common causes for establishing a diagnosis of IC include confusion of backwash ileitis in UC for terminal ileal involvement in CD, failure to accept hard criteria, such as granulomas, or segmental disease, as representative of CD, and failure to recognize unusual variants of UC that can cause CD-like patchiness of disease. Also, a diagnosis of IC should be avoided on biopsy studies and should not be established until all available clinical, endoscopic, radiologic and pathologic information are available for review. Some cases of IC may represent other forms of
colitis
as well, such as chronic ischemic or infectious colitis. The natural history of IC more closely resembles that of UC than CD. In fact, most cases of IC represent UC upon long-term clinical follow-up. Although, in some instances, serologic testing for
ANCA
or ASCA may be helpful in separating UC from CD in patients with IC, there is much overlap in the results of these assays for cases in which CD involves the colon in a UC-like pattern. Approximately 20% of IC patients develop severe pouch complications, which is intermediate in frequency between that seen in UC or CD. The risk of pouch complications, such as perianal fistulas or abscesses, and the risk of pouch breakdown is, overall, quite similar between IC and UC patients, supporting the notion that most patients with IC probably have UC and can safely undergo an ileal pouch-anal anastomosis procedure and have a reasonably good chance of having a good outcome.
...
PMID:Pathology of indeterminate colitis. 1511 30
Glomerulonephritis is a rare complication in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. We report a case of membranous nephropathy (MN) in a 12.6-year-old girl with chronic ulcerative colitis. The girl was referred to the hospital with bloody diarrhea and arthralgia. Routine urinalysis showed 1 g/m(2) protein excretion in 24 h. Serum
ANCA
titers were positive. The diagnoses were confirmed by coloscopy and kidney biopsy. The patient's mother had also suffered from ulcerative colitis in adolescence. Proteinuria normalized under treatment with prednisone (60 mg/m(2)/day) and azathioprine, which was initiated to treat the
colitis
. Chronic ulcerative colitis can be associated with glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:Membranous nephropathy associated with familial chronic ulcerative colitis in a 12-year-old girl. 1597 Oct 70
The development of clinical and histopathological criteria for the diagnosis of Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), pushed the scientists to identify a new category: the indeterminate
colitis
(CI). This term is used when definitive diagnosis of UC or CD has not been made by colonoscopy, colonic biopsy or colectomy. The distinction between these forms has major implications including the choice of medical treatment, timing of surgery, prognosis and disease course. The role of surgery in inflammatory bowel disease differs between the three main forms: in CD is primarily to treat complications of the disease process; in UC surgery is curative for intestinal manifestations and nearly eliminates the risk of future malignancy; in IC is actually discussed: the current guidelines identify in surgery the best treatment for fulminate disease, intractability of disease symptoms or failure of medical therapy. Although there is a few number of studies in the literature, selective criteria for the diagnosis and successful treatment must be revisited. The term CI should be used as a pending tray diagnosis, representing diagnostic inadequacy and not as specific nosological entity. Evidence emerging from the studies of serological markers (ASCA and P-
ANCA
) suggests that a subgroup of patients initially diagnosed as IC maybe identified as a separate group, and so they need a specific treatment for their disease.
...
PMID:[Inflammatory colitis: classification and surgical treatment]. 1713 60
The panel of serologic markers for inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) is rapidly expanding. Although anti- Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies (ASCA) and atypical perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (atypical P-
ANCA
) remain the most widely investigated, an increasing amount of experimental data is available on newly discovered antibodies directed against various microbial antigens. Such antibodies include anti-OmpC (outer membrane porin C), anti- Pseudomonas fluorescens (anti-I2) and antiglycan antibodies (anti-laminaribioside carbohydrate antibody [ALCA]), anti-chitobioside carbohydrate antibody [ACCA]), anti-mannobioside carbohydrate antibody [AMCA]) and anti-CBir1; this latter is the first bacterial antigen to induce
colitis
in animal models of IBD and also leads to a pathological immune response in IBD patients (anti-flagellin antibody). The role of assessment of various antibodies in the current diagnostic algorithm of IBD is rather questionable due to their limited sensitivity. In contrast, the association of serologic markers with disease behavior and phenotype is getting more into the focus of interest. An increasing number of observations confirm that patients with Crohn's disease expressing multiple serologic markers at high titers are more likely to have complicated small bowel disease (e.g. stricture and/or perforation) and are at higher risk for surgery than those without, or with low titer of antibodies. Creating homogenous disease sub-groups based on serologic response may help develop more standardized therapeutic approaches and may help in a better understanding of the pathomechanism of IBD. Further prospective clinical studies are needed to establish the clinical role of serologic tests in IBD.
...
PMID:[Relevance of serologic studies in inflammatory bowel diseases]. 1747 4
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