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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six congenic lines of chickens that differ from the parental inbred line RPRL-15I5 for genes in the major histocompatibility (B) complex were used to study the influence of the B haplotypes on the response of chickens to infection with virulent infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) at 1 day or 4 weeks of age, and on the antibody response to vaccination with live or inactivated oil-emulsion (OE) IBDV vaccines at 7 weeks of age. IBDV-induced immunodepression and lesions in the bursa, spleen, and thymus in chickens infected with virus at 1 day of age were of the same degree of severity, regardless of line of chickens used. The response of blood cells to the mitogens phytohemagglutinin-M and concanavalin A was elevated in chickens infected with IBDV at 1 day of age. In an experiment conducted to study the effect of the B haplotype on IBDV infection in 4-week-old chickens, B congenic line C-12 (B12B12) showed the highest susceptibility to clinical
IBD
, with mortality of 79%. No detectable difference in the serological response to vaccination with live or OE IBDV vaccines was noted among chickens of various congenic lines. We conclude that the B haplotypes may influence IBDV-induced mortality, but not immunodepression or severity of lesions in
lymphoid
organs, or the antibody response to live or OE IBDV vaccines.
...
PMID:Response of B congenic chickens to infection with infectious bursal disease virus. 133 60
The expression of the vascular adhesion molecules ELAM-1 (endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1) and VCAM-1 (vascular cell adhesion molecule 1) was evaluated in colonic mucosa of patients with inflammatory bowel disease and normal controls by immunocytochemistry. VCAM-1 was found to be constitutively expressed in
lymphoid
aggregates in normal colonic mucosa and was not significantly enhanced or altered in distribution in mucosa of patients with inflammatory bowel disease regardless of the activity of the inflammatory process. In contrast, ELAM-1 was not detected by these techniques in normal colonic mucosa (n = 11) or in colonic mucosa of patients with inflammatory bowel disease which was either uninvolved or quiescent (n = 30). However, high levels of ELAM-1 were consistently found on endothelial surfaces in association with active inflammation in affected areas of colonic mucosa in patients with either ulcerative colitis (n = 27) or Crohn's colitis (n = 9). In addition, ELAM-1 appeared to be present within neutrophils which had migrated into crypt abscesses in affected mucosa. Similar analysis was carried out in the cotton-top tamarin (CTT), a primate that experiences an idiopathic chronic diffuse colitis resembling human ulcerative colitis. Although anti-human VCAM-1 antibodies did not react with the CTT, anti-human ELAM-1 stained endothelial surfaces in mucosal biopsies from CTT with active colitis. No ELAM-1 was identified in mucosa of CTT in which colitis activity was quiescent. Thus ELAM-1 is expressed on colonic endothelial surfaces in association with inflammation and may play an important role in facilitating leukocyte migration into sites of active
IBD
involvement.
...
PMID:Expression of vascular adhesion molecules in inflammatory bowel disease. 137 55
The mucosal immune system consists of a number of compartments that are populated with a different assortment of cells and serve different functions. The cytokines produced by the cells in each of these compartments are currently being defined. This is best understood in relation to B cells, whose proliferation and maturation is guided by a sequence of cytokines. PP are inductive sites that preferentially stimulate IgA production. At least in part, this preference seems to be due to the T cells located in PP, which have been shown to stimulate switching to IgA production by cognate interactions and production of TGF-beta. Postswitch B cells expressing surface IgA respond to IL-5, a cytokine produced by T cells in GALT. Terminal differentiation to IgA-producing plasma cells in the lamina propria may be driven by IL-6, which can be produced by a variety of cells in the lamina propria and by epithelial cells. T cells in the lamina propria have an assortment of surface markers consistent with both activation and memory and appear to produce a variety of cytokines in the local environment that presumably act in normal host defense. IEL consist mainly of CD8+ T cells. They have been shown to produce IFN-gamma and, very likely, other cytokines that presumably act in a paracrine fashion on local enterocytes. How these cells and cytokines are perturbed during intestinal inflammation is currently being defined. A certain assortment of cytokines are greatly increased in
IBD
. This assortment, including IL-1, IL-6, and IL-8, is elevated in a wide variety of chronic inflammatory states in other tissues as well. A critical requirement for cytokines to exert their effects is the expression of specific receptors on target cells. Virtually nothing is known about this aspect of mucosal immunity, but receptor expression on mucosal cells must be defined before we will be able to understand the complex interactions among
lymphoid
cells, the cytokines they produce, and the local stromal and epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Cells and cytokines in mucosal immunity and inflammation. 151 47
In a patient with systemic and nervous system
IBS
, the CSF cells were investigated by light and electron microscopy. An
IBS
of the B-cell type was identified in the CSF which proved, at both morphological levels, to be identical to that recorded in
IBS
in
lymphoid
tissue with regard to the malignant cell types and the absence of surface specialization. In contrast, unusual macrophages were observed in the CSF instead of the reticular elements associated with
IBS
in lymph nodes which present desmosomes. They demonstrated both phagocytosis and emperipolesis and also displayed autodesmosomes. The CSF phagocytes are discussed in relationship with the phagocytes described in the brain with malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:Immunoblastic sarcoma of the B-cell type in the CSF. Light- and electronmicroscopic study of the malignant cells and unusual macrophages. 697 56
Flexible endoscopy, performed after oral bowel preparation and under moderate intravenous sedation, proves to be well tolerated, safe and highly effective in the diagnosis and management of children with
IBD
. At St Bartholomew's Hospital it is performed as the investigation of first choice, on the basis that it supplies colour documentation, histopathological and (where relevant) bacteriological evidence, which achieves certain confirmation or exclusion in almost every case and in the shortest possible time. Biopsies must always be taken, as mucosa of normal appearance can show either microscopic ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. When there are the characteristic 'aphthoid' ulcers, visual diagnosis of Crohn's disease is reasonably certain, particularly in early-stage disease, although amoebic and other infective causes of colitis can give misleadingly similar appearances. The endoscopist can usually inspect (and almost always biopsy) the terminal ileum, and can expect many children to show the prominent 'nodular
lymphoid
hyperplasia' which is essentially a normal finding-though sometimes misdiagnosed radiologically as being Crohn's deformity. However, it is important that radiological assessment by barium follow-through complements colonoscopy in view of the not infrequent cases of intestinal Crohn's disease in children where the proximal small intestine is involved, even if the colon and terminal ileum are spared.
...
PMID:Endoscopic features of chronic inflammatory bowel disease in childhood. 800 39
Recent antigliadin antibody (AGA) determination has become an important diagnostic tool in coeliac disease (CD). Although this test has high sensibility for the disease, it is less specific, especially for IgG class, because of its having been found in some acute and chronic common intestinal childhood diseases. We studied the behaviour of AGA, IgA and IgG, in 234 children affected by various gastrointestinal diseases, comparing the results with those obtained in 125 coeliac children and 788 normal children. The intestinal diseases were as follows:
irritable bowel syndrome
, cow's milk protein intolerance, acute infectious diarrhoea, parasitosis, lactase deficiency, recurrent abdominal pain, cystic fibrosis, chronic constipation, gastroesophageal reflux, intestinal lymphangiectasia, chronic intractable diarrhoea and nodular
lymphoid
hyperplasia. Our results showed that while AGA-IgA were absent in all children studied, with the exception of 3 cases of acute diarrhoea, a moderate percentage of AGA-IgG was observed in subjects with cow's milk protein intolerance, acute diarrhoea,
irritable bowel syndrome
, lactase deficiency, chronic intractable diarrhoea and in a low percentage of children with parasitosis, intestinal lymphangiectasia and nodular
lymphoid
hyperplasia. There was no antibody movement in subjects with cystic fibrosis, gastroesophageal reflux, recurrent abdominal pains and chronic constipation. The different behaviour of the two antibody classes could be explained by the fact that AGA-IgG were detected in diseases where scattered areas of mucosal damage could allow the permeability of the macromolecules inducing passage of gliadin through the mucosal barrier and immune system-induced antibody stimulation.
...
PMID:[The predictive value of antigliadin antibodies (AGA) in the diagnosis of non-celiac gastrointestinal disease in children]. 834 Dec 33
T cell hypersensitivity has been implicated in the tissue damage in Crohn's disease (CD). All studies to date have examined mucosal T cells, although much of the tissue damage occurs in the submucosa and muscle layers. The aim of this work was to study T cell proliferation throughout the intestinal wall in children with
IBD
. Surgical resection material from 19 children with CD (10 ileal, 10 colonic), seven with ulcerative colitis (UC), and 12 normal controls was studied. The distribution of dividing T cells was investigated by double-immunohistochemistry using Ki67 to identify proliferating cells, and CD3 to identify T cells. In ileal and colonic lamina propria virtually no Ki67+, CD3+ cells were seen in control, UC or CD tissue. In contrast, there were significantly more Ki67+, CD3+ cells within the
lymphoid
follicles of ileal and colonic CD than in the follicles in UC and controls. Increased numbers of Ki67+, CD3+ cells were present in the submucosa, muscle layers (M) and serosa in Crohn's ileitis and colitis compared with the lamina propria (LP), although only in the muscle of the colon was the difference statistically significant (LP, 0.4% (0-1%); M, 1.6% (0-5.2%); P = 0.03). Pooling data from ileal and colonic CD, however, did show significantly increased Ki67+, CD3+ cells in both serosa and muscle layers compared with the LP. Dividing T cells have been identified in the deeper layers of the gut wall in CD. These may contribute to the fibrosis and muscle hyperplasia characteristic of the condition.
...
PMID:The distribution of dividing T cells throughout the intestinal wall in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). 862 21
Recent studies strongly support the concept that gut and joint inflammation are closely related. Progress also has been made in identifying individual mechanisms that contribute to the pathogenesis of joint disease in
IBD
and in undifferentiated SpAs. However, the interrelationship of these mechanisms that result in chronic disease manifestations at a site distant from the initiating event remain to be elucidated. The local absence of homing molecule receptors in the gut wall combined with an expression of these receptors in target organs can be responsible for the transformation of the synovial membrane and/or the enthesis into an aberrant tertiary
lymphoid
organ of the gut.
...
PMID:Spondylarthropathies: from gut to target organs. 867 44
Inflammation of the bile ducts was studied in liver biopsies from patients with chronic hepatitis C to determine whether the frequency of inflamed bile ducts changes with therapy and correlates with other histological variables and expression of class I and II MHC antigens on ductal epithelium. Twenty patients treated at UMMC between 1991 and 1994 underwent needle biopsies of the liver before and after therapy with interferon alpha 2B (IFN). A complete response to therapy was defined as a return to normal serum alanine aminotransferase levels occurring and persisting during therapy. The number of inflamed bile ducts/total ducts (%IBDs), presence of piecemeal necrosis and
lymphoid
aggregates, and grade of inflammation were assessed in each high-power field in all areas with bile ducts. The frequencies of these variables were compared in cirrhotics and non-cirrhotics and in patients with complete or incomplete responses to IFN. Frozen sections of biopsies from 5 patients were immunostained using antibodies to HLA-DR and B-2 microglobulin, and positive staining was noted on bile ducts. Before therapy, the %IBD was slightly greater in patients with cirrhosis. After IFN, both %IBD and serum alkaline phosphatase levels decreased in non-cirrhotics who responded to IFN. The change in frequency of
IBD
with IFN paralleled the changes in the other histological features. No correlation was noted between bile duct inflammation and expression of class I and II antigens. The conclusion is that inflammation of the bile ducts occurs frequently in chronic hepatitis C, correlates with other features of inflammation in the triads, and decreases in response to IFN therapy.
...
PMID:Effect of interferon therapy on bile duct inflammation in hepatitis C. 876 34
The concept of spondylarthropathy (SpA) gathers together a group of chronic diseases with common clinical, biological, genetic and therapeutic characteristics. The concept forms a distinct entity, different from other rheumatic diseases. The target organs are not only the joint, but also the axial skeleton, the enthesis, the eye, the gut, the urogenital tract, the skin and sometimes the heart. The prevalence of this entity in the general population is estimated 1%, equal to the prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis. Genetical predisposition (HLA-B27) is one of the clues to the pathogenesis of the disease. Since reactive arthritis is induced by specific urogenital or enterogenic bacteria, and since the gut is implied in different forms of spondylarthropathies, especially in
IBD
, it was clear that the gut could play an important role by permitting exogenous factors to enter the body. This hypothesis was the rationale for investigating the gut in the spondylarthropathies by performing ileo-colonoscopies. In the first ileo-colonoscopic studies of SpA patients, histological signs of gut inflammation were found in a relatively great number of patients, mostly not presenting any clinical intestinal manifestations. These lesions were not seen in other inflammatory joint diseases. Further ileo-colonoscopic studies confirmed the strong relationship between gut and joint inflammation. In patients in whom a second ileo-colonoscopy was performed, remission of the joint inflammation was always connected with a disappearance of the gut inflammation, whereas persistence of locomotor inflammation was mostly associated to the persistence of gut inflammation. The hypothesis was proposed that some patients with a spondylarthropathy had a form of subclinical Crohn's disease in which the locomotor inflammation was the only clinical expression. This hypothesis was confirmed in prospective long-term studies in which the ileo-colonoscopied patients were reviewed 2 to 9 years later:about 6% of SpA patients not presenting any sign of Crohn's disease at first investigation but demonstrating gut inflammation on biopsy, developed full-blown Crohn's disease. By performing electronmicroscopy it was described that in patients with SpA the number of membranous (M) cells, which are scarce in normal ileum, is increased in number in inflamed mucosa. They showed a thin rim of cytoplasm covering groups of lymphocytes. In chronic inflammatory lesions necrotic M-cells, rupture of M-cells and lymphocytes entering the gut lumen was observed. The bursting of M-cells at the top of the
lymphoid
follicles leads to interruption of the gut epithelial lining and gives the luminal content access to the
lymphoid
tissue. This can be responsible for an exponential increase of local antigen stimulation. Accelerated luminal antigen presentation through a break in the epithelial layer, together with cytokines released from activated monocytes, might induce a second line of defense aiming at elimination of the massive antigen penetration into the mucosa. The postulated switch from secretory local immunity to a systemic type of local immune reaction could have different consequences:the local down-regulation of J chain in the IgA immunocytes could shift the production of polymeric IgA to monomers, jeopardizing secretory immunity; the disproportionate increase of IgG-producing cells could favor further inflammation and tissue damage through complement activation and arming of the killer cells, and cause autoimmune responses locally and in target organs at a distance (e.g. joint organs). The discovery of subclinical gut inflammation in the SpA had therapeutic consequences. Sulphasalazine (SASP) has been proven to be an active drug in the treatment of
IBD
. Since the gut could play a crucial role in SpA, it was logic to use this drug in the treatment of this disease. Multiple open and double-blind studies have proven the effectiveness of this drug in SpA.
...
PMID:[Significance of intestinal inflammation in the pathogenesis of spondylarthropathies]. 876 79
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