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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Using the NZB and NZB/NZW F1 (B/W) hybrid mouse as a model for
systemic lupus erythematosus
, an effort has been made to quantitate: (1) immune complex deposition in the glomeruli by immunofluorescent staining of immunoglobulin, (2) glomerular cellular proliferation by radioautographic measurement of [3H]Tdr incorporation into the glomerular cells in vivo, and (3) glomerular scarring by
PAS
staining. The relationship between these changes and increasing age has been examined. By radioautography it was observed that dividing glomerular cells were labelled in vivo after injection of [3H]Tdr. This provided a reproducible measure of the proliferative process in the nephritis of B/W mice. In C57B1/6J and CBA/J mice, which have a low incidence of glomerular disease, little change in the amount of glomerular cell proliferation was observed with increasing age. The NZB strain of animals showed a somewhat increased level of proliferation but this did not increase with age. In striking contrast, glomerular cell proliferation in the B/W mice increased rapidly with age. The earliest change observed in the kidney was the deposition of immunofluorescent material in the mesangium and glomerular capillary basement membrane beginning between 3 and 5 months of age and reaching a peak at 9 months. Increase in glomerular cell proliferation began about 2 months after the onset of immune complex deposition but also reached a maximum at 7 months. Glomerular sclerosis was the last change to appear and continued after the other two parameters measured has begun to decline. These data suggest that the deposition of immune complexes in the glomerulus may be an important triggering mechanism for renal cell proliferation and glomerulosclerosis in the B/W mouse. The techniques described would provide a sensitive and reproducible quantitative method for analysing the differential effects of various types of treatment of immune complex nephritis in animals.
...
PMID:Quantitative studies of immunoglobulin deposition in the kidney, glomerular cell proliferation and glomerulosclerosis in NZB/NZW F1 hybrid mice. 30 Mar 12
The case described concerns a patient initially presenting the clinical symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, including the presence of nodules, and slowly developing into
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
). Besides the signs of chronic inflammation in the synovial tissue, many granulocytes and
PAS
-positive macrophages were present. At electronmicroscopy the basal membranes of the vessels were multilaminated and the endothelial cells enlarged while many macrophages contained large clumps of electrondense material which could easily be interpreted as rough endoplasmatic reticulum (RER) of plasma cells. Immunoflourescence studies showed deposition of immunoglobulins and complement in the vessel walls of the synovium, thus suggesting an immune-complex pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Chronic synovitis with marked infiltration of granulocytes in a patient with an unusual development of systemic lupus erythematosus. 50 90
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
The vessel anatomopathological lesions in a patient with
systemic lupus erythematosus
associated anti-phospholipid syndrome are described. Vasculitic lesions were nearly absent but small vessels showed hyalin thrombosis or substenosis due to subendothelial deposition of amorphous
PAS
-positive material in different anatomical districts. These findings can be related to the patient's clinical manifestations, particularly the central nervous system involvement and can be discussed regarding the possible pathogenetic mechanisms.
...
PMID:Histopathological findings in a case of systemic lupus erythematosus-associated anti-phospholipid syndrome. 191 24
Concentric membranous bodies (CMB) are described in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes in a liver biopsy from a patient with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
). Histologically, the biopsy showed binucleated hepatocytes and rosette formation with lymphocytic infiltrates in portal fields. Hepatocyte cytoplasm showed focal fatty metamorphosis, focal staining for RNA with azure B at pH 4.0 (which was perchloric acid labile), diffuse alloxan-Schiff staining for protein, and
PAS
-positive, diastase-sensitive glycogen. By electron microscopy one to three CMB were present in 10-15% of hepatocytes. CMB appeared as concentric, "fingerprint" or parallel arrays of particle-studded, membranous profiles. Other membranous configurations included mazelike forms. The space of Disse was dilated. Bile ductular changes included basement membrane thickening and redoubling and luminal bulging of ductular epithelium devoid of microvilli. CMB have been rarely reported in human hepatoma and have not heretofore been observed in non-neoplastic human liver. Their appearance in hepatocytes in a patient with
SLE
may reflect an increase in protein synthesis during regeneration.
...
PMID:Concentric membranous bodies in hepatocytes from a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus. 241 78
A detailed histopathologic study was conducted blindly on biopsy specimens from 66 patients with oral discoid lesions (oral DLE) mixed in random order with biopsy specimens from control groups of 25 cases of oral lichen planus (LP), 25 cases of oral leukoplakia, 13 cases with an uncertain diagnosis termed DLE? LP? and 7 cases of galvanic lesions related to amalgam fillings. Fifty-two histopathologic variables were examined, and a ranking was calculated for the variables that provided the best discrimination between the subgroups of clinically typical oral DLE and LP and between typical DLE and leukoplakia, respectively. Histopathologic variables not previously described in oral DLE but characteristic of this disease were identified: multinucleated epithelial cells containing three or more nuclei and the presence of epithelial islands in the connective tissue. Patients with
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) in addition to oral DLE showed generally the same histopathologic features as those without
SLE
. The inflammatory infiltrates were slighter and more diffuse among the
SLE
patients as compared to the non-
SLE
patients. The simplest possible combination of histopathologic variables diagnostic for oral DLE consisted of the following five: (1) hyperkeratosis with keratotic plugs, (2) atrophy of the rete processes, (3) deep inflammatory infiltrate, (4) edema in the lamina propria, and (5) thick patchy or continuous
PAS
-positive juxtaepithelial deposits. This combination is suggested as new histopathologic criteria for oral DLE. These criteria were tested among clinically atypical cases of DLE and the other groups of mucosal lesions, with a sensitivity of 92% and a specificity of 96% against both LP and leukoplakia for the presence of two or more of the five criteria.
...
PMID:Oral discoid lupus erythematosus. III. A histopathologic study of sixty-six patients. 658 19
The case of a 48-year-old patient with
systemic lupus erythematosus
is discussed. Under immunosuppressive therapy, symptomless papules occurred on the shoulders, back, chest and face. Histologically, there were deposits of mucinous matter which produced an intensive blue colour in the HALE-
PAS
and alcian blue colour test. The epidermal and dermal inflammatory changes which typically occur with lupus erythematosus were absent. Whereas mucin is commonly diagnosed in lupus erythematosus, the clinical manifestation of papulous mucinosis is a rare but diagnostically significant phenomenon, since it can occur without further findings which are typical of lupus erythematosus.
...
PMID:[Papular mucinosis. A rare cutaneous manifestation of lupus erythematosus]. 796 Jul 74
We have previously shown that murine IgG3 monoclonal autoantibodies with cryoglobulin activity, derived from
lupus
-prone mice, are able to induce glomerular lesions resembling the "wire-loop" lesion typically described for human lupus nephritis. In the present study, we have further assessed the nephritogenic potential of four IgG3 anti-hapten, trinitrophenyl (TNP), monoclonal antibodies (mAb) obtained from non-autoimmune mice immunized with TNP-conjugated foreign antigens. Our results showed that two of four IgG3 anti-TNP monoclonal cryoglobulins were capable of inducing glomerular lesions, characterized by voluminous intracapillary thrombi and mesangial deposition of
PAS
-positive materials, which differed from "wire-loop" lesions generated by IgG3 monoclonal cryoglobulins with autoantibody activities. These anti-TNP monoclonal cryoglobulins, however, failed to induce glomerular lesions when mice were kept at 37 degrees C after the mAb administration. This finding formally proves that the cryoglobulin activity is critically involved in the development of glomerular lesions induced by IgG3 anti-TNP mAb. In addition, we have demonstrated a remarkable difference in the nephritogenic activities of two IgG3 anti-TNP mAb, which exhibit a marked sequence homology in the variable regions of their heavy and light chains (91.5% and 99.1% at the amino acid level, respectively) and an identical isoelectric point. Our results indicate first, that IgG3 monoclonal cryoglobulins are able to generate two different kinds of glomerular lesions, and second, that a subtle difference in variable region sequences may determine not only the nephritogenic activities, but also the type of glomerular lesions mediated by IgG3 cryoglobulins.
...
PMID:Glomerulopathy induced by IgG3 anti-trinitrophenyl monoclonal cryoglobulins derived from non-autoimmune mice. 800 99
We report six typical cases with pityriasis versicolor (PV) rubra, with a background of collagen diseases in five cases and none in one case. Two cases of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) and one case of systemic scleroderma (SSc) had both PV rubra and nigra on the trunk. Diagnosis of superficial infections of PV was made by microscopic examination of skin scrapings following KOH, and many small whitish colonies were obtained in Sabouraud's slant agar medium culture containing cycloheximide with olive oil in all cases. Malassezia sympodialis was isolated from the scales of two different lesions at a 6 week-interval in a same person (a 32 year-old male without
SLE
nor SSc) by the method of Makimura et al. [5], although the other five cases were not examined for the isolation. Histopathological features of the lesion on the dorsum of the trunk showed no epidermal hyperplasia without elongation of rete ridges and no inflammatory cell infiltration in the dermis, however there was only dilatation of small blood vessels in the dermis, which was reconfirmed capillaroscopically. In the horny layers, several yeastlike and fine filamentous structures were seen which were positive with
PAS
and Grocott stains. Both clinical and histological features led us to speculate PV rubra. All the patients were treated with anti-fungal ointment, and the lesions diminished in less than 2 weeks. No recurrence has been seen in any of the cases. This PV rubra may be independent from PV nigra, although Horiuchi [2] suggested the earlier lesion occurs in advance of PV alba or nigra.
...
PMID:Pityriasis versicolor rubra. 1187 14
Four cases of Hypertrophic Lupus Erythematosus (HLE) were reported. The lesions of HLE were observed on the forearms, face and hands in all four cases. Clinically, the lesions were erythematous, hyperkeratotic plaques. The clinical course was marked by chronicity and progression of the lesion. Histologically, marked hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, acanthosis, degenerative changes of basal cells in H/E stain, and thickened, multilayered basement membrane in
PAS
stain, were observed. The observations of Dylon stain revealed that localized amyloid deposition was observed in all four cases of HLE lesions, as fluorescent-orange colored amyloid deposits in the papillary dermis and subepidermal areas at near orjust below the dermo-epidermal junction appeared under fluorescent microscope. On the basis of clinical and histological observations, we suggest that chronic irritation, such as sunlight exposure over a long-duration, might have caused the characteristic abnormalities at the dermo-epidermal junction and also initiated the frequency of amyloid deposits locally secondary to the diseases. We compared our HLE cases to other types of lupus erythematosus (LE) skin lesions, as to whether deposition of amyloid materials were frequently observed or not. Amyloid deposition was observed in one case of DLE and none of the
SLE
cases. Localized amyloid deposition was more frequently observed in skin lesions, secondary to HLE disease, as compared to other types of LE.
...
PMID:Amyloid deposition is frequently observed in skin lesions of hypertrophic lupus erythematosus. 1243 94
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