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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The immunological responsiveness of a panel of 17 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) was studied in an in vitro model of xenogeneic sensitization against mouse lymphoid cells. Generation of cytotoxic thymus-derived (T) cells evaluated by a chromium release assay against labeled target cells was found to be drastically impaired in these
lupus
patients. Such depression was independent of drug therapy at the time of the study, clinical status, and other immunological parameters such as antibodies against native DNA, complement levels,
cryoglobulinemia
, circulating immune complexes, or T- and bone marrow-derived (B)-cell numbers. In contrast to the cytotoxic response, the proliferative responses to phytohemagglutinin, to allogeneic lymphocytes, and to xenogeneic lymphocytes were not significantly different from those of normal individuals. The latter response was shown to be H-2 restricted with the primed lymphocyte test. These results suggest the presence of a selective defect in the generation or in the expression of killer cells rather than a deficiency in antigen recognition by T cells. The role of serum factor(s) was examined by educating the lymphocytes of normal subjects in the presence of serum from
SLE
patients. Such manipulation affected both the generation of killer cells and the proliferative response. Finally our observations indicate that depression of cell-mediated immunity in
SLE
patients may be associated with several mechanisms including a cellular one, specifically affecting the generation of killer T cells, and a humoral one possibly as a result of antilymphocytic antibodies and(or) immune complexes.
...
PMID:Selective depression of the xenogeneic cell-mediated lympholysis in systemic lupus erythematosus. 11 Aug 33
In order to evaluate the incidence of extraglomerular immunoglobulin deposits and to correlate their presence with histopathologic abnormalities, we performed both prospective and retrospective immunofluorescence studies of renal biopsy specimens. Of 200 diagnostic biopsy specimens examined prospectively, 21 had extraglomerular deposits, 19 in association with presumed immunologically-mediated glomerulonephritis. Nine had linear immunoglobulin deposits on tubular basement membrane (antitubular basement membrane antibodies), in one case coexisting with granular deposits, and 13 had granular deposits on tubular basement membrane, in peritubular capillaries and/or arteries, or in tubular cytoplasm (probably immune complexes). Linear deposits on tubular basement membrane were usually associated with antiglomerular basement membrane nephritis or methicillin-associated interstitial nephritis; granular extraflomerular deposits were seen primarily in
systemic lupus erythematosus
,
cryoglobulinemia
or membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis.. The incidence of immunoglobulin deposits was high in the three groups of patients examined retrospectively being present in 37 or 47 patients with antiglomerular basement membrane mephritis, 22 or 32 patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
of 24 of 130 renal allograft recipients. The contribution of antitubular basement membrane antibodies to renal damage was difficult to assess, although studies in experimental animals attest to their pathogenicity. The occurrence of granular extraglomerular deposits appeared to correlate roughly with the degree of tubulointerstitial injury in the patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
.
...
PMID:Extraglomerular immunoglobulin deposits in human nephritis. 12 32
A patient with subacute bacterial endocarditis, who had a prosthetic mitral valve, exhibited hypocomplementemia, mixed (IgG, IgM)
cryoglobulinemia
, and widespread dermal vasculitis with IgM deposited at the dermoepidermal junction. Postmortem findings included immune-complex glomerulonephritis and deposits of IgG in the choroid plexus. These findings are consistent with a generalized vasculitis, which may be mediated by circulating immune complexes; basement membrane localization of immune complexes to the skin and choroid plexus appears not to be specific for
systemic lupus erythematosus
, as has been previously thought, but may represent the general phenomenon of immune-mediated pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Vascular disease in infective endocarditis. Report of immune-mediated events in skin and brain. 14 66
Predominantly IgM immunofluorescent deposits have been found in 30% of normal, non exposed skin in a group of rheumatoid arthritis patients. Neither clinical nor biological correlation have been found. Because one case with
cryoglobulinemia
was positive, study of other non
lupus
, cryoglobulinemic, immune complexe type of diseases has been done. The results were negative. Further investigations are needed to explain this observation.
...
PMID:[Immunofluorescent deposits in normal rheumatoid skin]. 32 86
The authors report 10 cases of selected Gougerot-Ruiter's disease and 13 cases of various vasculitis. Direct immunofluorescence studies were performed on the skin lesions and the results were correlated to various biological parameters such as dosage of serum IgA, IgG and IgM, antinuclear antibodies, Australia antigen. Complement (beta-1-C/beta-1-A) deposition was found in 9 out of 10 cases of Gougerot-Ruiter's disease as opposed to immunoglobulin deposition found only in 4 out of 10 cases. Both C3 and immunoglobin were regularly found in the vessel walls of 2 cases of
cryoglobulinemia
and 1 case of
SLE
. In the cases of thrombopenic purpura, simplex purpura. Schoenlein Henoch purpura and drug induced purpura, complement (beta-1-C/beta-1-A) and immunoglobulin were absent in the lesions. The authors discuss the different physiopathological mechanisms which may be involved in the development of Gougerot-Ruiter's vasculitis.
...
PMID:[Immunopathological study of Gougerot-Ruiter's vasculitis (author's transl)]. 32 31
Twenty-seven cases of chronic glomerulonephritis with proliferative pattern (11 cases of primary mixed IgG-IgM
cryoglobulinemia
, 8 cases of
SLE
, and 8 cases of primary membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis) were studied with particular attention to the glomerular monocyte infiltration. The latter, detected by means of nonspecific esterase technique, was compared with the presence of hyaline thrombi and intraluminal immunoglobulin lumps. Monocyte infiltration was heavy and almost constant in
cryoglobulinemia
, less important in
SLE
, and practically absent in membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. By means of immunofluorescence technique on paraffin embedded material, monocytes are shown to contain IgG and IgM, suggesting a phagocytic activity on some types of immune complexes. Since monocytes are migrant cells, and therefore easily removable from the glomeruli by the bloodstream, it seems that they could be responsible for regression of glomerular hypercellularity as reported in some patients with
cryoglobulinemia
showing clinical improvement.
...
PMID:The presence and possible role of monocyte infiltration in human chronic proliferative glomerulonephritides. Light microscopic, immunofluorescence, and histochemical correlations. 37 10
Although the association of
cryoglobulinemia
with hypocomplementemia and tissue injury in
systemic lupus erythematosus
is well recognized, composition of cryoprecipitates in terms of circulating antigens and antibodies in this disease is less clear. To clarify this question, cryoprecipitates from patients with
SLE
were examined with sensitive assay techniques for certain antipolynucleotide antibodies and DNA antigen. DNA antibodies were highly enriched relative to serum levels in the majority of cryoprecipitates. DNA antigen was also demonstrable. Antibody to ribonucleoprotein, although less frequently present, was similarly enriched in certain cryoprecipitates. In contrast, anti-double strand RNA, which was commonly detectable in relatively high titer in serum, was only minimally concentrated in a minority of cryoprecipitates. Absorption experiments using red blood cells heavily coated with polynucleotide antigen indicated that a major proportion of the IgG in certain cryoprecipitates was specific antibody. The data strongly suggest that the cryoprecipitates in
systemic lupus erythematosus
represent circulating immune complexes that are soluble at 37 degrees C and come out of solution in the cold. The marked concentration of immune complexes in the cryoglobulin offers a simple and direct method for determination of the nature of the complexes. The accumulated evidence obtained in the present study indicates that these complexes closely reflect, in their composition, the circulating immune complexes which are most significant pathogenetically in renal tissue injury.
...
PMID:Specific concentration of polynucleotide immune complexes in the cryoprecipitates of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 108 Apr 89
Peripheral neuropathy has been described in different rheumatic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis,
systemic lupus erythematosus
and systemic vasculitis, but usually in limited numbers of patients. Nerve injury is more frequently reported in mixed
cryoglobulinemia
. In earlier studies generally performed in small series of patients, prevalence of peripheral neuropathy varied widely. We evaluated prevalence of peripheral neuropathy in 33 unselected patients with mixed
cryoglobulinemia
(25 women, 8 men, aged from 45-71 years). Neurologic involvement was detected using a complete clinical and electrophysiologic assessment, including sensory motor conduction velocities, F wave and H reflex. Neurologic examination revealed a neuropathy in 48% of subjects, while electrophysiologic variables were altered in 82%; a percentage similar to that of subjective symptoms (91%). Among electrophysiologic investigations, F wave was altered in 22/33 subjects (67%); therefore, this variable seems to be the most reliable for the detection of neurologic involvement. Cryocrit levels were significantly higher in patients with peripheral neuropathy: abnormal examination (p less than 0.01), sensory motor conduction (p less than 0.04), and F wave alterations (p less than 0.008). In addition, hemorheological abnormalities seem to contribute to the pathogenesis of nerve injury. Our results indicate that peripheral neuropathy, to a variable degree, is present in the majority of patients with mixed
cryoglobulinemia
, and a complete clinical and electrophysiologic investigation can be useful for an early and correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy in mixed cryoglobulinemia: clinical and electrophysiologic investigations. 132 32
A male aged 58 was admitted to our hospital because of proteinuria, hematuria and bilateral pretibial edema. Laboratory tests showed normocytic, normochromic anemia and moderately impaired renal function. Antinuclear antibodies were negative. Neither M-protein nor Bence-Jones protein were detected. Light microscopic study on the biopsied renal specimen indicated a moderate mesangial proliferation accompanying with the deposition of PAS-positive and Congo red-negative materials in the subendothelial area. C3 accumulated segmentally along the capillary walls, which was clarified by immunofluorescence microscopy. Staining for IgG, IgA, IgM and light chains were negative. Electron microscopy demonstrated the deposition of microtubules in the mesangial, subepithelial and subendothelial areas. The diameter of these microtubules ranged from 40 to 80 nm. Such type of the microtubules have been reported to exist in the glomeruli in the patients with systemic diseases such as amyloidosis,
systemic lupus erythematosus
,
cryoglobulinemia
and light chain disease. In our patient, however, any clinical or serological findings suggestive of these systemic diseases were not obtained. On the other hand previous report pointed out that microtubules deposited in the glomeruli in the patients with immunotactoid glomerulopathy or other glomerulopathies. Our patient had the clinical features consistent with these glomerulopathies. However, no depositions of immunoglobulins were observed. This case is an atypical glomerulopathy accompanying with the glomerular microtubular deposits.
...
PMID:[Glomerulopathy associated with glomerular microtubular deposits: a report of a case]. 148 13
Cryoimmunoglobulins are associated with numerous clinical problems ranging from collagen vascular disorders (rheumatoid arthritis and
systemic lupus erythematosus
) to infectious processes including HIV infection. The precise role of cryoglobulins in the pathophysiology of these disorders remains unresolved. Although cold insolubility may account for some of the observed processes, it cannot explain the entire array of findings in
cryoglobulinemia
. An alternative hypothesis suggests that the subtle differences responsible for cold precipitation of these proteins renders them intrinsically more sticky, resulting in deposition of cryoimmunoglobulins on vascular surfaces. We have explored this hypothesis by characterizing the binding of monoclonal cold soluble and cryoimmunoglobulins to silica beads as a model biological surface. It is found that monoclonal, type I, IgM and IgG cryoglobulins have only a slight tendency to bind to a greater extent to this surface than cold soluble immunoglobulins. Physical studies utilizing front surface fluorescence measurements and differential scanning calorimetry show surface interaction leads to partial thermal destabilization of the proteins. To a limited extent, this destabilization is more pronounced with the cryoglobulins compared to cold-soluble control homologues. Surface bound IgM cryoimmunoglobulin was also found to fix complement less efficiently than their cold soluble surface bound counterparts. These studies do not strongly support the hypothesis that pathological mechanisms of cryoimmunoglobulins primarily involve abnormal surface interactions, although surface effects could play a limited role in some situations.
...
PMID:The interaction of cryoimmunoglobulins with a model surface. 165 45
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