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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The immunodepressive activity of widely employed steroid contraceptive agents (SCA's) was evaluated in mice and rats on various humoral and cell-mediated responses. Three different progestagens (lynestrenol, norethindrone or norethynodrel) were administered in combination with the estrogen mestrahese SCA's could significantly reduce the severity of allergic
encephalomyelitis
in rats, variations in their capacity to interfere with primary response to sheep erythrocytes in mice and anti-mouse erythrocyte autoantibody formation were found. Treatments employed with these SCA's did not reduce
tumor
allograft resistance in mice and the anti-sheep erythrocyte response in rats. In addition, otherwise immunosuppressive treatments with these SCA's did not modify the mouse response to a T-independent antigen. The possible clinical significance of these results is discussed.
...
PMID:Steroid contraceptive agents and immunological reactivity in experimental animals. 108 85
We studied 71 patients with "paraneoplastic"
encephalomyelitis
, sensory neuronopathy, or both associated with the presence of the anti-Hu antibody in their serum. Most (78%) had small-cell lung cancer. In 9 patients no
tumor
was detected. Fifty-two patients (73%) had signs and symptoms of multifocal involvement of the nervous system; in 28 (39%), 2 areas, and in 24 (34%), 3 or more areas were clinically affected. Sensory neuronopathy was present in 52 patients (74%), but in only 44 (62%) did it dominate the course of the disease. Other predominant findings were: motor neuron dysfunction (14 patients, 20%), limbic encephalopathy (14, 20%), cerebellar symptoms (11, 15%), brainstem encephalopathy (10, 14%), and autonomic nervous system dysfunction (7, 10%). The presence of the anti-Hu antibody prompted a search for the
tumor
in 60% of the patients; the
tumor
when found was usually small and remained localized until death, or was demonstrated only at autopsy. Treatment using steroids and plasmapheresis, immunosuppressants, or both, did not improve the paraneoplastic symptoms. Autonomic and respiratory failure, either of central origin or secondary to neuromuscular weakness, were the principal causes of death. Patients with rapidly developing sensory neuropathy or symptoms of
encephalomyelitis
should be studied for the presence of the anti-Hu antibody; if the antibody is found, the possibility of small-cell lung cancer should be investigated. If a
tumor
is not found in the initial search, one may become evident in several months.
...
PMID:Anti-Hu--associated paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis/sensory neuronopathy. A clinical study of 71 patients. 131 11
We retrospectively evaluated the effect of plasmapheresis (PE) in seven patients with paraneoplastic
encephalomyelitis
(PEM), small-cell lung carcinoma, and anti-Hu antibodies, and four patients with paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD), ovarian or breast cancer, and anti-Yo antibodies. In addition to PE, patients received prednisone (nine), cyclophosphamide (eight), or treatment of the
tumor
(five). All but one patient were severely disabled by the time PE began. The clinical outcome was compared with that of five patients (PEM, four; PCD, one) who only had treatment of the
tumor
. Only one of these five patients had a severe neurologic deficit at the onset of the antineoplastic treatment. No patient improved. Two patients treated with PE and antineoplastic therapy and three who only received treatment of the
tumor
remained stable for at least 6 months. Four of the five patients with a stable course started the treatment when the neurologic deficit was not severe. We conclude that the efficacy of PE with other immunosuppressive therapies in the stabilization of the neurologic deficit is uncertain.
...
PMID:Plasmapheresis and antineoplastic treatment in CNS paraneoplastic syndromes with antineuronal autoantibodies. 131 83
Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes are mostly associated with small cell lung cancer. Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome appears to be caused by anti-presynaptic calcium channel antibodies. Calcium channels are also present in the cell membrane of small cell lung cancer, which may trigger the formation of anti-calcium channel antibodies. It is the most convincing argument in support of the auto-immune paraneoplastic theory, which refers to cross-antigenicity. Serum of patients with small cell carcinoma and cancer-associated retinopathy contains immunoglobulins against several antigens in the retinal and
tumor
cells. Patients with chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction (gastrointestinal neuropathy) associated with small cell lung cancer displayed circulating IgG antibodies reactive with neurons of myenteric plexus (anti-enteric neuronal antibodies). On the other hand, high levels of anti-neuronal antibodies (anti-Hu) have been found in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid of patients suffering from subacute
encephalomyelitis
(limbic encephalitis, cerebellar degeneration, sensory neuronopathy) associated with small cell lung cancer. The pathogenic role of the anti-neuronal antibody is not well established. Nevertheless, the finding of high titer antineuronal antibody in patients with a suggestive clinical syndrome is of great interest since it confirms the paraneoplastic syndrome and suggests the location of the primary tumor when the cancer is unknown.
...
PMID:[Autoimmunity and cancer: paraneoplastic neurological syndromes associated with small cell cancer]. 133 87
We report a patient with severe paraneoplastic encephalomyeloneuritis, occult small-cell carcinoma of the lung, and high titers of circulating antineuronal antibody who died shortly after developing limbic encephalitis. The antibody was of IgG class and reacted specifically with nuclei and cytoplasm of all neurons in the pattern typical for
encephalomyelitis
and subacute sensory neuropathy associated with small-cell carcinoma (type II, anti-Hu). At autopsy, perivascular inflammatory infiltrates were prominent. All samples of serum, CSF, and postmortem peritoneal and pleural fluid contained high titers of antibody. Direct immunofluorescence of frozen tissue revealed IgG bound to most remaining neurons in multiple brain regions in a pattern similar to indirect immunofluorescence of normal brain tissue. IgG was also bound to
tumor
. Attempts to elute antibody from tissue decreased background staining but did not remove neuronal immunofluorescence. These results indicate that antibody can access and bind specifically to neuronal antigens in the brain during the course of paraneoplastic disease.
...
PMID:Localization of antibody in the central nervous system of a patient with paraneoplastic encephalomyeloneuritis. 165 26
We studied the nervous systems and tumors of five patients with anti-Hu-positive paraneoplastic
encephalomyelitis
/sensory neuronopathy (PEM/PSN) to determine if the autoantibody found in the serum and CSF was also present in those tissues. Immunohistochemical studies of the nervous system revealed the presence of IgG bound predominantly to the nuclei of most of the neurons and the cytoplasm of some glial cells. IgG was also present to a lesser degree in the neuropil. In brains of patients who died of cancer without the paraneoplastic syndrome, IgG was present in the immediate perivascular areas and to a very limited degree in the neuropil. There was no IgG in neurons, and in only some of the controls a few glial cells showed IgG immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm. The amount of anti-Hu IgG relative to total IgG in various brain regions and
tumor
was determined by quantitative Western blot analysis. The proportion of anti-Hu IgG was greater in some areas of the brain and
tumor
than in serum and CSF. Control brains did not contain anti-Hu IgG. There was a limited correlation among (1) the principal clinical symptoms, (2) regions of major tissue injury, and (3) the quantitative anti-Hu IgG distribution. We conclude that although the role of the antibody in the pathogenesis of the disease is still uncertain, its specific localization in the nervous system and
tumor
suggests an immunologic etiology of this paraneoplastic syndrome.
...
PMID:Detection of the anti-Hu antibody in specific regions of the nervous system and tumor from patients with paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis/sensory neuronopathy. 194 5
Paraneoplastic syndromes affecting the nervous system are rare and their diagnosis is often difficult when the original cancer is unknown. Recently, high levels of antineuronal antibodies (AB) have been found in serum and CSF of some patients with paraneoplastic syndromes. The anti-Yo AB recognizes 2 proteins of 34 and 62 kd in the cytoplasm of Purkinje cells and in malignant cells of patients suffering from paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration associated with ovarian and breast cancer. The anti-Hu AB recognizes a 37-40 kd protein in nuclei of neurons and in
tumor
cells of patients suffering from subacute sensory neuronopathy and
encephalomyelitis
associated with small cell lung cancer. Other antineuronal AB have been more rarely identified. The presence of high titer of one of these AB in a patient with suspected paraneoplastic syndrome is of great practical interest since it confirms the neurological diagnosis and strongly suggests the location of the primary tumor when the malignancy is unknown. The pathogenetic role of the antineuronal AB is unknown but it is likely that some paraneoplastic syndromes affecting the nervous system are due to an immune reaction against antigens shared by the
tumor
and the nervous system. To date, no efficient treatment has been found.
...
PMID:[Autoimmunity and paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes]. 196 63
A single micro-injection of
Tumour
Necrosis Factor alpha (TNF) or gamma Interferon (IFN-gamma) into the lumbosacral spinal cord of the rat produced meningitis and mononuclear cuffs within the cord, an inflammatory response remarkably similar in pattern to that observed during experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), a research analog of multiple sclerosis. Rats injected with saline or heat-inactivated cytokine exhibited no such inflammatory response. In other experiments, the accumulation of radiolabeled spleen cells into spinal cord was measured after the injection of various doses of TNF and IFN-gamma, results indicated that both cytokines elicited accumulation of spleen cells in an additive but not synergistic manner. Potentially, the direct injection model offers a new and simplified way of examining mechanisms of early inflammation in the central nervous system, without the need for immunisation with neuroantigen or passive transfer of sensitised cells.
...
PMID:Direct injection of cytokines into the spinal cord causes autoimmune encephalomyelitis-like inflammation. 191 95
Rats of the Lewis strain were immunized with bovine basic myelin protein to develop experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
. Neither human nor rat fetal sources of purified alpha-fetoprotein were able to significantly ameliorate the development of this dyscrasia. The plasma of pregnant rats at term was without effect. Immunization of pregnant rats was also accompanied by the usual course of development of typical
encephalomyelitis
.
Tumour
Biol 1988
PMID:Attempts to suppress experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in rats with alpha fetoprotein. 245 1
An antineuronal autoantibody has been identified in serum from 14 patients, 8 women and 6 men, with small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) and a neurologic disorder. Neurologic symptoms began prior to diagnosis of the SCLC in 12 patients. The dominant neurologic disorder was a subacute sensory neuronopathy (SSN) in eight patients, SSN plus lower motor neuron weakness (2 patients), SSN plus autonomic neuropathy (1 patient), cerebellar ataxia (1 patient), myelopathy (1 patient), and multifocal nervous system disease (
encephalomyelitis
) in one patient. The presence of the same autoantibody in patients with SSN,
encephalomyelitis
, and autonomic neuropathy suggests that these diseases are different manifestations of the same nosologic process. With one exception, treatment of the
tumor
, immunosuppressive drugs, and plasmapheresis did not influence the course of the neurologic illness. The autoantibody was not identified in sera from more than 400 controls subjects, including patients with SSN associated with other tumors, SSN without malignancy, other paraneoplastic syndromes, and SCLC without neurologic symptoms. The autoantibody is a highly specific marker of the paraneoplastic syndromes associated with SCLC and its detection in a patient not known to have cancer should prompt a careful search for SCLC.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies in paraneoplastic syndromes associated with small-cell lung cancer. 284 2
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