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Query: UMLS:C0039483 (
giant cell arteritis
)
3,204
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this report, point mutations of the K-ras gene at codon 146 were analyzed in 25 cases of colon cancer, 4 cases of lung cancer, and 41 cases of
lymphoid
malignancy. A codon 146 mutation substituting threonine (ACA) for alanine (
GCA
) was detected in the tumor tissue of a patient with colon cancer and was not detected in the normal tissue of the same patient. Any additional mutations of the ras gene family were not detected in this patient. These results suggest that the codon 146 mutation of the K-ras gene could be involved in the development of naturally occurring human malignancies.
...
PMID:A novel point mutation at codon 146 of the K-ras gene in a human colorectal cancer identified by the polymerase chain reaction. 201 78
Recently, a close relation has been found between infection of the gastric mucosa by Campylobacter pylori and chronic gastritis. To establish the possible existence of characteristic morphologic changes in this disease, which can be differentiated from other unrelated forms of gastritis, we analyzed the antral biopsies obtained from 75 patients, 35 with duodenal peptic ulcer and 40 with nonulcerous dyspepsia. The diagnosis of C. pylori infection is based on positive biopsy culture or, if not, when following three requirements are met: positive urease test before 24 hours, identification of the germ by Gram stain and visualization in the tissue of microorganisms with morphology similar to that of C. pylori. We found that 85.5% of the 55 patients with C. pylori infection present active chronic gastritis with
lymphoid
nodes (
GCA
+ NL), while this morphology is only found in 5 of the 20 uninfected patients. The association of
GCA
+ NL with C. pylori infection is highly significant (p less than 0.0001). We think that it could be a local immunologic response to the stimulus of the bacterial antigen, and that it has sufficient morphologic entity to differentiate it from other inflammatory processes of the gastric mucosa of still unknown etiology.
...
PMID:[Morphology of chronic gastritis associated with Campylobacter pylori infection]. 262 10
Ocular inflammatory diseases and ocular adnexal
lymphoid
tumors have become less obscure and intimidating by virtue of our ability to study the infiltrates in these various diseases for their B-lymphocyte and T-lymphocyte composition. Comparisons are also possible between lymphocytic profiles in the peripheral blood and the precise composition of the in situ infiltrates within the ocular tissue themselves. The availability of monoclonal antibodies, which can determine T-lymphocytic subsets such as T-helper cells and T-suppressor/cytotoxic cells, natural killer cells, and monocytes-histiocytes, has provided a powerful technology for the delineation of the distinctive immune composition of the inflammatory infiltrates, as well as any possible disturbances in T-cell immunoregulation. B-lymphocytes produce immunoglobulins, which may be misdirected as autoantibodies in local or systemic autoimmune diseases. Immunoglobulin-mediated and therefore B-cell derived conditions include vasculitis, progressive cicatricial ocular pemphigoid, Mooren's corneal ulcer, scleritis, and hay fever and vernal conjunctivitis. Other diseases in which B-lymphocytes, their immunoglobulin products or immune complexes formed with presently unknown antigens are potentially at fault are chronic non-specific uveitis; iridocyclitis in Behcet's syndrome; Fuch's heterochromic syndrome, ankylosing spondylitis, and Reiter's syndrome; Graves' disease; and idiopathic inflammatory orbital pseudotumor and myositis. T-cells do not produce immunoglobins, but rather secrete lymphokines or interact directly with receptors or determinants on viruses or target tissues (eg. immunosurveillance against neoplasia); it is possible that some autoimmune diseases are the result of neo-antigens on the surfaces of host tissues that have been coded for by a cryptic inciting virus. T-cell diseases include phlyctenulosis graft rejections, graft versus host disease, and possibly sympathetic ophthalmia and
temporal arteritis
. Natural killer cells are involved in many of the same diseases as cytotoxic T-cells, except that the former require no period of sensitization (natural immunity), whereas cytotoxic T-cells must undergo an antigen-specific blast transformation (acquired immunity of the delayed hypersensitivity type). In many diseases in which B-cell derived auto-antibodies are at fault, there may be local tissue or systemic T-cell imbalances, with a reduction in T-suppressor cells and a relative augmentation in T-helper cells, thereby facilitating production of misdirected auto-antibodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:B- and T-lymphocytes in ocular disease. 623 70
Giant lymph node hyperplasia is a lesion of
lymphoid
tissue, which may be accompanied by systemic manifestations like fever, anaemia and hyperglobulinaemia. A case is described with
temporal arteritis
, an association hitherto not described in the literature.
...
PMID:Giant lymph node hyperplasia (Castleman's disease) associated with temporal arteritis. 734 91
Macrophages represent a critical component in the inflammatory lesions of
giant cell arteritis
. By combining immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, we have analyzed the functional heterogeneity of tissue-infiltrating macrophages in patients with untreated vasculitis. 20% of macrophages in temporal artery tissue synthesized IL-6-specific mRNA and produced IL-6 and IL-1 beta proteins. IL-6 and IL-1 beta production was not limited to CD68+ cells in the
lymphoid
aggregates but was a feature of CD68+ cells dispersed throughout the tissue. 50% of tissue-infiltrating CD68+ cells synthesized 72-kD type IV collagenase. Only a small subset of CD68+ cells produced cytokines as well as collagenase, indicating functional specialization or distinct differentiation stages of CD68+ cells in the inflamed tissue. Activation of CD68+ cells was not restricted to tissue-infiltrating cells. Expression of IL-6 and IL-1 beta was found in 60-80% of circulating monocytes of patients with untreated
giant cell arteritis
, whereas collagenase production was restricted to tissue macrophages. IL-6 and IL-1 beta production by the majority of circulating monocytes was a shared feature of patients with
giant cell arteritis
and polymyalgia rheumatica but was not found in rheumatoid arthritis. These data suggest that
giant cell arteritis
has two components of disease, an inflammatory reaction in vessel walls and a systemic activation of monocytes. Systemic monocyte activation can manifest independently without vasculitis as exemplified in patients with polymyalgia rheumatica.
...
PMID:Functional profile of tissue-infiltrating and circulating CD68+ cells in giant cell arteritis. Evidence for two components of the disease. 808 54
An asymptomatic nodule appeared in the right temporal region of an 81-year-old woman. Histopathologic examination confirmed significant thickening of the vascular wall, constriction of the vessel lumen, and infiltration of numerous eosinophils and lymphocytes. Giant cells were not seen. Lymphoid follicles and capillaries surrounded the large vessel. Elastica van Gieson staining revealed a laceration of the internal elastic lamina. Based on these clinical and histologic findings, the patient was diagnosed as having juvenile
temporal arteritis
(JTA), a disease first proposed by Lie and his colleagues in 1975. Three years later, a new eruption, again asymptomatic, appeared in the posterior region of the patient's right ear. Subsequently, she was referred to our department. Histologic examination of the new lesion confirmed the infiltration of lymphocytes and eosinophils, which was accompanied by numerous
lymphoid
follicles, and the proliferation of endothelial cells and capillaries from the deep dermis to the subcutaneous tissue. The patient was diagnosed as having Kimura disease, which is a persistent and recurrent illness. We hypothesized that JTA was a partial expression of Kimura disease and investigated whether past cases of JTA could be considered Kimura disease. As a result, we found that most cases of JTA could indeed be considered Kimura disease. Furthermore, we examined the vascular changes in the routinely and elastic fiber-stained sections of three cases with Kimura disease and two cases with angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia. The results showed occlusive vascular changes in most samples from these cases, supporting the hypothesis that JTA is an accessory lesion of Kimura disease.
...
PMID:Juvenile temporal arteritis is a manifestation of Kimura disease. 1180 81
Immature dendritic cells (DCs) are scattered throughout peripheral tissues and act as sentinels that sample the antigenic environment. After activation, they modify their chemokine receptor profile and migrate toward
lymphoid
tissues. On arrival, they have matured into chemokine-producing DCs that express co-stimulatory molecules and can prime naive T cells. Normal temporal arteries contain immature DCs that are located at the media-adventitia border. In temporal arteries affected by
giant cell arteritis
, DCs are highly enriched and activated and have matured into fully differentiated cells producing the chemokines, CCL18, CCL19, and CCL21. In keeping with their advanced maturation, DCs in the granulomatous lesions possess the chemokine receptor, CCR7. CCR7 binds CCL19 and CCL21, causing the highly activated DCs to be trapped in the peripheral tissue site. The co-stimulatory molecule, CD86, which is critical for DC/T-cell interaction, is expressed by a subset of DCs captured in the arterial wall. DC/T-cell interaction does not involve interleukin-12; transcripts for interleukin-12 p40 are absent in the vasculitic infiltrates. We propose that differentiation of DCs and the autocrine and paracrine actions of chemokines in granulomatous lesions misdirect DCs away from their usual journey to
lymphoid
organs and are critical in maintaining T-cell activation and granuloma formation in
giant cell arteritis
.
...
PMID:Trapping of misdirected dendritic cells in the granulomatous lesions of giant cell arteritis. 1241 28
The occurrence of follicular bronchiolitis (FB),
lymphoid
hyperplasia of the bronchus-associated
lymphoid
tissue, is reported in association with several systemic rheumatic diseases. However, the occurrence of FB in patients with
giant cell arteritis
(
GCA
) is not described. A 64-year-old man with long-standing
GCA
subsequently presented with haemoptysis. A mass in the lower lobe of the left lung was seen on chest x-ray and computed tomography. A wedge resection was performed, and histological examination revealed bronchiectasis, granulation tissue and hyperplasia of peribronchiolar
lymphoid
aggregates, consistent with FB. FB should be included in the differential diagnosis of haemoptysis in patients with systemic rheumatic diseases.
...
PMID:Follicular bronchiolitis, an unusual cause of haemoptysis in giant cell arteritis. 1620 27
Temporal arteritis
in the young is clinically and histologically different from classic
giant cell arteritis
of the elderly population. A male patient, aged 36 years, presented with headache and a nodule in his left temporal region. Histological examination of the nodule showed that the left temporal artery was encircled by a
lymphoid
tissue with prominent germinal centres. The arterial wall was infiltrated with mixed inflammatory cells, the internal elastic lamina was disrupted, and there was marked intimal hyperplasia. The patient was diagnosed with juvenile
temporal arteritis
. Because of persistent headache after surgical excision of the lesion, the patient was treated with prednisolone. Systemic vasculitides, classic
giant cell arteritis
, Kimura's disease, and angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of the disease.
...
PMID:Temporal arteritis in a young patient. 2414 76
Immune aging results in progressive loss of both protective immunity and T cell-mediated suppression, thereby conferring susceptibility to a combination of immunodeficiency and chronic inflammatory disease. Here, we determined that older individuals fail to generate immunosuppressive CD8+CCR7+ Tregs, a defect that is even more pronounced in the age-related vasculitic syndrome
giant cell arteritis
. In young, healthy individuals, CD8+CCR7+ Tregs are localized in T cell zones of secondary
lymphoid
organs, suppress activation and expansion of CD4 T cells by inhibiting the phosphorylation of membrane-proximal signaling molecules, and effectively inhibit proliferative expansion of CD4 T cells in vitro and in vivo. We identified deficiency of NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2) as the molecular underpinning of CD8 Treg failure in the older individuals and in patients with
giant cell arteritis
. CD8 Tregs suppress by releasing exosomes that carry preassembled NOX2 membrane clusters and are taken up by CD4 T cells. Overexpression of NOX2 in aged CD8 Tregs promptly restored suppressive function. Together, our data support NOX2 as a critical component of the suppressive machinery of CD8 Tregs and suggest that repairing NOX2 deficiency in these cells may protect older individuals from tissue-destructive inflammatory disease, such as large-vessel vasculitis.
...
PMID:NADPH oxidase deficiency underlies dysfunction of aged CD8+ Tregs. 2715 Jun 66
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