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Query: UMLS:C0011633 (
dermatomyositis
)
4,181
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report six cases of
inclusion body myositis
(
IBM
), a distinct but infrequently recognized inflammatory disease of skeletal muscle. Clinically,
IBM
differs from
dermatomyositis
and polymyositis. It lacks features of collagen-vascular disease, has a relatively benign and protracted course, frequently involves distal muscles, is found mainly in males, and does not improve with corticosteroid treatment. Electronmicroscopic demonstration of abnormal filaments in muscle cells is necessary for definite diagnosis, but
IBM
may be suspected by the finding on cryostat sections of numerous hematoxylinophilic granules in "lined" vacuoles in muscle cells. These correspond to whorls of cytomembranes. Although in
dermatomyositis
the capillary network is partly destroyed, in
IBM
it is usually augmented. A viral etiology of
IBM
has been suggested but remains unproven.
...
PMID:Inclusion body myositis: a distinct variety of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy. 20 86
Clinical and electromyographic findings do not clearly distinguish
inclusion body myositis
(
IBM
) from chronic polymyositis (PM). The rimmed vacuoles and filamentous nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions that characterize
IBM
are often sparse and may be overlooked; conversely, these features may occasionally be seen in other diseases. Preliminary studies suggested that muscle fiber hypertrophy occurred more frequently in
IBM
than in PM. To investigate whether fiber hypertrophy can be used to improve the ability to separate
IBM
from PM, we report a morphometric analysis of 28
IBM
cases, 22 PM and 22
dermatomyositis
(DM) cases. The analysis, using a computer automated system, included proportion of hypertrophied fibers and also fiber type proportions, average fiber diameter, proportion of atrophic and angulated fibers, and the co-dispersion index (CDI). The proportion of hypertrophied fibers was greater in
IBM
than the other two conditions (
IBM
(mean +/- SEM) 31.0 +/- 4.7% and 12.2 +/- 2.4% for type 1 and type 2 fibers, respectively, compared to 9.8 +/- 3.0% and 3.3 +/- 1.7% in PM, and 7.7 +/- 2.7% and 3.9 +/- 1.9% in DM). These differences were statistically significant (P < 0.05) in both sexes for type 1 fibers and in women for type 2 fibers. Also, the average fiber size and hypertrophy factors for type 1 and type 2 fibers were increased in
IBM
compared to PM and DM. This study confirms that the presence of muscle fiber hypertrophy in biopsies from
IBM
patients may help differentiate them from other clinically similar inflammatory myopathies.
...
PMID:Quantitative morphometric study of muscle in inclusion body myositis. 133 36
Pathological diagnosis of
dermatomyositis
(DM), polymyositis (PM), and
inclusion body myositis
(
IBM
) should be possible in almost all cases when an appropriately involved muscle is biopsied. DM shows characteristic patterns of muscle fiber damage and capillary damage. Lymphocytes and macrophages are seen in PM and
IBM
partially invading non-necrotic fibers.
IBM
is also characterized by rimmed vacuoles with membranous whorls, characteristic masses of filaments in cytoplasm and sometimes in nuclei, and grouped atrophic fibers. Muscle fiber damage in PM is more variable. Inflammatory myopathy can be associated with HTLV-1 and HIV infection. In the latter a strong resemblance to PM is reported. Separate, still less well characterized forms of inflammatory myopathy occur in young children.
...
PMID:The pathological diagnosis of specific inflammatory myopathies. 134 42
During the course of a systematic study of T cell lines derived from muscle of patients with various inflammatory myopathies, we identified a new form of polymyositis that is mediated by gamma-delta T cells. In the affected patient's muscle CD3+CD4-CD8- gamma-delta T cells surrounded and invaded nonnecrotic muscle fibers in the same way as CD3+CD8+ alpha-beta T cells surround and invade nonnecrotic muscle fibers in
inclusion body myositis
and other forms of polymyositis. Gamma-delta T cells were extremely rare or absent in muscles and muscle-derived T cell lines in other patients with polymyositis, inclusion-body myositis,
dermatomyositis
or granulomatous myopathy. This new form of polymyositis has provided us with a unique opportunity to study cytotoxic gamma-delta T cells and their muscle-fiber targets in situ. All muscle fibers expressed HLA-class I antigen and the 65-kD heat-shock protein. The autoaggressive behavior of the gamma-delta T cells is consistent with the hypothesis that in some inflammatory myopathies autoinvasive T cells recognize muscle fiber associated antigen(s). Further studies are needed to define the type of gamma-delta T cell receptor used and the antigen(s) recognized by gamma-delta T cells in this rare type of autoimmune muscle disease.
...
PMID:The role of gamma-delta T lymphocytes in inflammatory muscle disease. 153 37
The IIM are a heterogeneous group of systemic rheumatic diseases which share the common features of chronic muscle weakness and mononuclear cell infiltrates in muscle. A number of classification schemes have been proposed for them, but none takes into consideration the marked immunologic, clinical, and genetic heterogeneity of the various clinical groups. We compared the usefulness of myositis-specific autoantibodies (anti-aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, anti-SRP, anti-Mi-2 and anti-MAS) to the standard clinical categories (polymyositis,
dermatomyositis
, overlap myositis, cancer-associated myositis, and
inclusion body myositis
) in predicting clinical signs and symptoms, HLA types, and prognosis in 212 adult IIM patients. Although patients with
inclusion body myositis
(n = 26) differed in having significantly more asymmetric and distal weakness, falling, and atrophy than other patients, there were few other significant differences among the other clinical groups. In contrast, autoantibody status defined distinct sets of patients and each patient had only 1 myositis-specific autoantibody. Patients with anti-amino-acyl-tRNA synthetase autoantibodies (n = 47), compared to those without these antibodies, had significantly more frequent arthritis, fever, interstitial lung disease, and "mechanic's hands"; HLA-DRw52; higher mean prednisone dose at survey, higher proportion of patients receiving cytotoxic drugs, and higher death rates. Those with anti-signal recognition particle antibodies (n = 7) had increased palpitations; myalgias; DR5, DRw52; severe, refractory disease; and higher death rates. Patients with anti-Mi-2 antibodies (n = 10) had increased "V-sign" and "shawl-sign" rashes, and cuticular overgrowth; DR7 and DRw53; and a good response to therapy. The 2 patients with anti-MAS antibodies were the only ones with alcoholic rhabdomyolysis preceding myositis; both had insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and both had HLA-B60, -C3, -DR4, and -DRw53. These findings suggest that myositis-specific autoantibody status is a more useful guide than clinical group in assessing patients with myositis, and that specific associations of immunogenetics, immune responses, and clinical manifestations occur in IIM. Thus the myositis-specific autoantibodies aid in interpreting the diverse symptoms and signs of myositis patients and in predicting their clinical course and prognosis. We propose, therefore, that an adjunct classification of the IIM, based on the myositis-specific autoantibody status, be incorporated into future studies of their epidemiology, etiology, and therapy.
...
PMID:A new approach to the classification of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy: myositis-specific autoantibodies define useful homogeneous patient groups. 165 47
Inclusion body myositis
(
IBM
) represents a serious debilitating disease of muscle without identifiable cause or treatment. Muscle biopsy specimens have characteristic rimmed vacuoles, varying degrees of inflammation, and, most importantly, cytoplasmic and intranuclear filamentous inclusions of unknown composition. Fresh-frozen sections of muscle biopsy specimens from 24
IBM
cases were stained with Congo red dye (pH, 10.5 to 11.0). Control biopsy specimens included polymyositis,
dermatomyositis
, hereditary vacuolar myopathies of unknown cause, acid maltase deficiency, distal myopathy, oculopharyngeal dystrophy, and chloroquine myopathy. Sections were also immunostained with antibody to transthyretin, human P component, and immunoglobulin light chains. In the vacuolated fibers in
IBM
, amyloidogenic green-birefringent deposits were seen. Some deposits were delicate and wispy appearing, and others were plaque-like. The size of deposits varied, measuring 1 x 2 to 8 microns, and rarely up to 20 microns in length. The number of amyloid-positive fibers correlated with the number of vacuolated fibers. Similar deposits were seen in one case of distal myopathy and one hereditary vacuolar myopathy. Other control cases were negative for amyloid deposits. Antibody staining for known amyloidogenic proteins was negative. This study demonstrates that the filaments in
IBM
share properties with amyloid proteins. The location implies that this amyloid material is formed intracellularly, rather than having a systemic derivation. The association of amyloid deposits with autophagic vacuoles in
IBM
raises the likely possibility that the filaments represent a modification of a normal protein within an acidic degradative vacuolar compartment. An alternative possibility, considering the shared properties of
IBM
filaments and prions (which include size and amyloidogenic properties), is that
IBM
represents a human prion disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Amyloid filaments in inclusion body myositis. Novel findings provide insight into nature of filaments. 166 77
T-cell lines were expanded from muscle of 10 patients with polymyositis, 5 with
inclusion body myositis
, 5 with
dermatomyositis
, and 5 with other muscle diseases. All cell lines uniformly expressed T-cell antigens, but not natural killer cell or B-cell antigens. The proportion of helper (CD4+) and cytotoxic (CD8+) T cells in the expanded lines was variable and showed no correlation with the diagnosis. Sixteen cell lines (6 polymyositis, 4
inclusion body myositis
, 5
dermatomyositis
, 1 other muscle disease) consisted predominantly of CD8+ T cells. None of these lines displayed natural killer-like cytotoxicity but all were capable of lectin-dependent cytotoxicity. Three of 6 polymyositis, 1 of 4
inclusion body myositis
, and 1 of 5
dermatomyositis
lines showed low but statistically significant cytotoxicity against autologous myotubes (6 to 27% specific 51Cr release; effector-target ratio, 20:1). The results demonstrate that functionally competent cytotoxic T cells can be expanded from muscle affected by inflammatory myopathies and are consistent with the hypothesis that some cytotoxic T cells recognize an autoantigen on myotubes. Further studies of this experimental system may define the molecular mechanism of T cell-mediated muscle fiber injury and may help to identify the relevant antigens.
...
PMID:Coculture with autologous myotubes of cytotoxic T cells isolated from muscle in inflammatory myopathies. 183 Apr 66
In ten patients with
inclusion body myositis
(
IBM
) five muscular biopsies showed profuse inflammatory exudates and three showed a few scattered inflammatory cells with partial invasion in some muscle fibers. No inflammatory cells were seen in two cases. In all patients, histopathological, histomorphometric and immunocytochemical studies were performed. Immunocytochemistry for the class I and class II major histocompatibility complex gene product (MHC) was performed in all cases and in ten control muscles including: normal muscles [3],
dermatomyositis
[3], polymyositis [3], scleroderma [1]. In the five cases of
IBM
with inflammatory exudates, subsets of lymphocytes were analyzed with a panel of monoclonal antibodies against B cells, T4 cells, T8 cells, K and natural killer cells and macrophages. Some muscle fibers expressed class I MHC antigens in the inflammatory cases of
IBM
. These fibers were near the inflammatory exudates and occasionally showed a partial invasion. No expression of class I MHC was found in normal muscles and in non-inflammatory cases of
IBM
. The antigen which triggers the mononuclear cells in the inflammatory forms of
IBM
is probably not the filamentous inclusions in rimmed vacuoles. In other inflammatory myopathies, expression of class I MHC was present on all fibers in polymyositis, only in the perifascicular area in
dermatomyositis
and in scleroderma. It could be suggested that the term "inclusion body muscle disease" be applied to cases with rimmed vacuoles and "IBM-like" filaments without inflammatory cells.
...
PMID:Inflammatory and non-inflammatory inclusion body myositis. Characterization of the mononuclear cells and expression of the immunoreactive class I major histocompatibility complex product. 215 2
We studied the immunologic correlates of disease activity and differences among subgroups of patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathy by analysing phenotypic and activation marker expression on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Compared with controls, myositis patients with clinically active disease (n = 51) had significantly lower proportions of CD8+ cells and higher proportions of PBMC that expressed DR, CD3- DR, CD14- DR, interleukin-2 receptors, and the late T cell activation markers CD26 and TLiSA1. TLiSA1 expression, a marker for cytotoxic differentiation, correlated significantly with both clinical activity indices and serum levels of muscle-associated enzymes. In serial studies of seven patients, the proportion of PBMC expressing MHC class II antigen and late T cell activation markers decreased as myositis disease activity decreased, independent of type of therapy. Among the clinical subgroups, polymyositis (n = 21) and
inclusion body myositis
(n = 11) were virtually indistinguishable;
dermatomyositis
patients (n = 19) showed decreased proportions of CD3+DR+ and TLiSA1+ cells, and increased proportions of CD20+ and CD20+DR+ cells compared with the other two groups. Patients with autoantibodies to histidyl-tRNA synthetase (Jo-1 antigen, n = 11) had significantly lower proportions of CD3+ and CD4+ cells, lower CD4/CD8 ratios, and higher proportions of CD+ cells expressing CD20, compared with patients without anti-Jo-1 antibodies. These findings support the concept that activated lymphocytes, especially cells undergoing anamnestic responses and cytotoxic differentiation, are important in the pathogenesis of idiopathic myositis. Moreover, taken together with other studies, these data suggest that groups of patients segregated by clinical or autoantibody status have different mechanisms of systemic immune activation and immunopathology.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte activation markers in idiopathic myositis: changes with disease activity and differences among clinical and autoantibody subgroups. 216 21
In adult
dermatomyositis
10 muscle specimens with no or minimal histological alterations were compared with 7 that showed typical alterations. Five specimens from patients with
inclusion body myositis
, 5 from patients with polymyositis, and 8 from normal subjects served as controls. Vascular endothelium, visualized with the lectin Ulex europaeus agglutinin I, and complement membrane attack complex were demonstrated in the same cryostat sections by paired immunofluorescence. Large randomly selected fields were analyzed to determine the number of capillaries per square millimeter of fiber area (capillary density), per 1,000-microns 2 area of each muscle fiber (capillary index), and in 100 x 100-microns grid squares. In
dermatomyositis
specimens with minimal structural alterations there was focal capillary depletion, the capillary density was significantly reduced, and the frequency distributions of the capillary index and grid count were shifted to the left. In advanced
dermatomyositis
specimens, the findings were similar but more severe. In both kinds of specimens, clusters of capillaries reacted for complement membrane attack complex. The 2 patients with the highest proportion of vessels positive for membrane attack complex had a fulminant and fatal course. In polymyositis and
inclusion body myositis
specimens, the capillaries had a normal overall density and none reacted for membrane attack complex. The findings imply that the capillaries are an early and specific target of the disease process in
dermatomyositis
.
...
PMID:Microvascular changes in early and advanced dermatomyositis: a quantitative study. 235 92
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