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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Numerous experiments have demonstrated that physical stress can alter immunological parameters. However, little attention has been paid to the interrelationship between stress and autoimmune processes. The present study was designed to determine the influence of electric shock and sound stress on the development of experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE). Ten-week-old male DA rats highly susceptible to EAE were used. Rats were subjected to the stress procedure during 19 days either before or after immunization with intradermal injection of 0.1 ml of an emulsion containing guinea pig spinal cord (20 mg/rat) in an equal volume of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA). In addition, rats received subcutaneous injection of Bordetella
pertussis
in the dorsum of the same foot. Electric stress procedure consisted of 80 inescapable, unpredictable tail shocks (5 s, 1 mA) delivered at the same time each day. Sound stress procedure consisted of exposure of rats to a 90 dB fire alarm bell which rings 60 times for 5 s during one hour, at the same time of the day. Rats were observed daily for clinical signs of EAE and survived animals were sacrificed on day 20 after immunization. The brain and spinal cord sections were examined histologically for mononuclear cell infiltrates characteristics for EAE. The results clearly indicate that inescapable tail shocks suppressed the appearance and development of EAE when rats were subjected to stress procedure during 19 days after immunization, but not when rats were stressed during 19 day before the induction of EAE. On the other hand, in rats exposed to sound stress there was only delay in the onset of the disease.
...
PMID:Stress-induced suppression of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the rat. 177 36
Experimental allergic orchitis (EAO) and experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) are animal models of organ-specific autoimmune disease. In this study, BALB/cByJ and BALB/cAnNCr mice were susceptible to both autoimmune diseases whereas BALB/cJ subline mice were resistant. Disease resistance in BALB/cJ mice did not appear to be a reflection of either (i) a nonspecific generalized impairment of cellular immunity or (ii) an alteration in the phenotypic expression of Bordetella
pertussis
-induced histamine sensitization, a phenotype which has been shown to be associated with susceptibility to both diseases. Susceptibility to both EAE and EAO was inherited as a dominant trait in F1 hybrid animals. Segregation analysis in a (BALB/cByJ X BALB/cJ) X BALB/cJ backcross population suggested that disease resistance may be associated with a single genotypic difference in a common regulatory gene affecting susceptibility to both diseases. Linkage analysis of the backcross population failed to demonstrate an association of disease resistance with the mutant raf-1b allele carried by BALB/cJ mice. The results of these studies support previous observations that multiple genotypic differences may in fact exist in mice of the BALB/cJ subline and that such differences play a significant role in the genetic control of susceptibility to EAE and EAO.
...
PMID:Differential susceptibility to actively induced experimental allergic encephalomyelitis and experimental allergic orchitis among BALB/c substrains. 244 78
The susceptibility to the induction of experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
has been investigated in the previously little known Wistar/Furth rat stain. These rats have a low sensitivity, similar to that of the Fischer and PVG strains previously studied at our laboratory. However, some differences appear in the histological response of the three strains when a treatment with
pertussis
or cyclophosphamide is performed prior to the immunization, suggesting that different temporal patterns exist in the development of histological signs, according to the genetic background. The infiltrating cells may have different functions in rats of different genotypes.
...
PMID:Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in a low-susceptible rat strain. 248 87
To investigate the sequence of immunopathologic events during lesion formation in acute experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), SJL/J mice were inoculated with isogeneic spinal cord in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) and with Bordetella
pertussis
on Days 1 and 3 postinoculation (PI). Mice were sampled at different time points PI and T cells, T-cell subsets. Ia+ cells, Ig+ cells, albumin, and Ig deposits were localized in frozen sections by the avidin-biotin complex (ABC) method and direct fluorescence. Furthermore, samples were stained for Ia antigen, myelin basic protein (MBP), and galactocerebroside (GC) localization on endothelial cells by the ABC technique. Clinical and pathologic observations were correlated with the immunopathologic results. It was found that early in the disease process myelin and Ia-antigens were demonstrable on endothelial cells within the central nervous system (CNS). Simultaneously, damage to the blood-brain barrier was apparent, as indicated by albumin deposits, and small numbers of infiltrating T cells, T-cell subsets, and Ia+ cells were found. With time PI, the density of infiltrating total T cells (Thy-1.2+), helper/inducer (Lyt-1+), and suppressor/cytotoxic (Lyt-2+) T cells increased; Lyt-1+ and Lyt-2+ cells were detectable in meningeal as well as parenchymal infiltrates, while later on, Lyt-1+ cells showed some predilection for the CNS parenchyma and Lyt-2+ cells for meninges. Ia+ cells (B cells, macrophages, activated T cells) were present in small numbers only. Ig+ cells (B cells and macrophages) appeared shortly before onset of signs and persisted in moderate numbers. These results reconfirm the importance of early T-cell involvement for the development of EAE; they might also indicate a secondary role for Ig+ cells and are consistent with the concept that presentation of myelin antigens to T cells might occur locally on Ia-bearing endothelial cells within the CNS.
...
PMID:Acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the mouse: immunopathology of the developing lesion. 257 95
In the present report we provide the strain distribution patterns of susceptibility to acute mouse hepatitis virus type-4 (MHV-4)
encephalomyelitis
, acute experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) and vasoactive amine sensitivity (VAAS) for 9 (CXJ) recombinant-inbred strains between BALB/cKe (C) and SJL/J(J) mice. We confirm that susceptibility to MHV-4 is not linked to the H-2 complex, and that all strains susceptible to acute EAE have both a responder H-2 haplotype (H-2s or H-2d) and induced (B.
pertussis
) VAAS. In addition, we provide evidence that susceptibility to acute EAE induction is controlled by an additional presently unmapped locus and that an EAE-like histopathological disease does not usually follow MHV-4 infection intracerebrally in animals susceptible to MHV-4, acute EAE and induced VAAS.
...
PMID:Host genetic regulation of acute MHV-4 viral encephalomyelitis and acute experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in (BALB/cKe x SJL/J) recombinant-inbred mice. 257 95
Lines of thymus-derived lymphocytes reactive against bovine myelin basic protein (BP) were established in vitro from SJL/J mice. These lines are stable in long-term culture and mediate inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) lesions and a low incidence of clinical experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) when injected into recipient SJL/J mice. The line cells proliferate in response to BP of bovine, rat, or mouse origin. Clones were derived from these lines, and the characteristics of these clones were analyzed. The clones express Thy-1, Ly-1, and L3T4 antigens and are negative for Ly-T2. The clones all proliferate in response to bovine BP, with different clones showing varying degrees of cross-reactivity between bovine, rat, and mouse BP. The proliferative response is MHC-restricted; antigen-presenting cells from I-As strains are required. Compatible with their phenotype as helper cells, some of the clones will provide help to primed B cells stimulating antibody production in an in vitro assay. When injected into recipients pretreated with
pertussis
and irradiation, clones that showed proliferation to mouse BP induced the development of inflammatory lesions in the CNS, with mortality of 28% of the recipients. T cell lines were also established in (BALB/c x SJL/J)F1 mice. In contrast to the homozygous SJL/J lines, these lines were highly encephalitogenic, inducing a high incidence of clinical and histologic EAE when injected in vivo.
...
PMID:Characterization of T cell lines and clones from SJL/J and (BALB/c x SJL/J)F1 mice specific for myelin basic protein. 257 39
Myelin basic protein (BP)-specific T-cell lines and clones have been derived from SJL/J mice which had been sensitized with BP in complete Freund's adjuvant. Cell lines which were initiated and maintained in the presence of BP were specific for this antigen. Cell lines specific for tuberculin-purified protein derivative (PPD) were also established. BP-reactive cell lines maintained for 1 month in culture produced experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) when transferred to recipient mice. The number of cells required was only slightly less than that necessary for transfer of disease after 3-day culture of sensitized lymph node cells. In contrast, proliferative responses to BP were significantly enhanced after 1 month in culture. Cell lines lost the capacity to transfer EAE after 4 months in culture, but retained a vigorous proliferative response to BP. Similarly, cloned BP-reactive T cells failed to transfer disease, even when recipient mice were treated with IL-2,
pertussis
vaccine, or low-dose irradiation. Serial FACS analyses demonstrated alterations in cell surface antigen expression, particularly loss of reactivity with anti-Ia antibody, which correlated temporally with loss of ability to transfer disease. Persistence of antigen-induced proliferation by both cloned and uncloned T-cell lines should render these populations suitable for detailed study of the T-cell BP receptor.
...
PMID:Myelin basic protein-specific T cell lines and clones derived from SJL/J mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. 258 93
Severe hypothermia and an ascending impairment of shivering are previously undescribed clinical signs in hyperacute experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) in the Lewis rat. These occurred in hyperacute EAE induced by inoculation with guinea pig spinal cord homogenate and heat-killed Bordetella
pertussis
. Hypothermia was first detected on day 6-7 post-inoculation, within 12-24 h of the onset of neurological signs, and became more severe as the disease progressed. Rectal temperatures less than or equal to 30 degrees C were common at ambient temperatures of 19-22 degrees C. Shivering was assessed by palpation and by cold tremor electromyography. Shivering was absent in the tail by day 6-7 post-inoculation. The impairment then progressed to affect the hindlimbs, thorax and occasionally the forelimbs. Shivering was absent in hindlimbs with only mild or moderate weakness. Histological studies revealed perivascular inflammation with polymorphonuclear and mononuclear cells, oedema, fibrin deposition, haemorrhage, primary demyelination and axonal degeneration in the spinal cord, dorsal root ganglia and spinal roots. The brainstem was also involved but the cerebral hemispheres, including the hypothalamus, were spared. The close relationship between the severity of hypothermia and the extent of shivering impairment indicates that reduced shivering is an important cause of hypothermia in hyperacute EAE. It is concluded that this impairment of shivering is due not to hypothalamic damage but to lesions elsewhere in the central and peripheral nervous systems.
...
PMID:Hypothermia due to an ascending impairment of shivering in hyperacute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat. 261 69
The hyperacute form of experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), characterized by a short incubation period, severe paralysis, high mortality, and abundant polymorphonuclear leukocytes and fibrin in the lesions, was produced in rats without the use of
pertussis
vaccine (previously considered an essential requirement) or Freund's adjuvant. Carbonyl iron or mineral oil without mycobacteria were effective adjuvants and whole rat spinal cord was the best antigen. Hyperacute EAE was produced in this manner in some Lewis rats, most dark agouti (DA) rats and most F1 hybrids of these two strains. Clinical signs were earlier in onset and more severe in the DA strain than in the Lewis strain in all adjuvant-antigen combinations that were tested. Dark agouti rats developed clinical signs in six days, histological lesions in five days, and localized EAE lesions could be induced in four days. The data support the hypothesis that hyperacute type lesions (neutrophils and fibrin) can be caused by an exceptionally strong immune response to neural antigen, whether that response is engendered by a particular adjuvant (
pertussis
vaccine) or by an unusual degree of genetic susceptibility (DA rats).
...
PMID:The hyperacute form of allergic encephalomyelitis produced in rats without the aid of pertussis vaccine. 278 30
Acute experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) was induced in C57BL/6J and SJL/J mice by injection of isologous spinal cord homogenate given in conjunction with Bordetella
pertussis
and Freund's adjuvant. SJL/J mice showed a highly aggressive and 100% lethal form of the disease; C57BL/6J mice were much less susceptible as they had low morbidity rates (20 to 40%), low disease scores, and mostly no mortality. Treatment of these low susceptibility mice with neutralizing mAb against IFN-gamma caused an increase in morbidity rates as well as significant mortality (up to 80%). Similar antibody treatment did not affect the course of the disease in the high susceptibility SJL/J mice. However, treatment of these mice with IFN-gamma resulted in reduced morbidity and mortality. A similar but less pronounced inhibition of the disease in SJL/J mice could be obtained by administration of IFN-alpha/beta or by acute infection with lactate dehydrogenase virus. The results indicate that endogenous as well as exogenous IFN can exert a down-regulating effect on the development of EAE. They also indicate that endogenous IFN-gamma is produced during the development of EAE and plays a disease-limiting role.
...
PMID:Enhancement of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in mice by antibodies against IFN-gamma. 312 27
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