Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The amount of IgG present on the surface of platelets (platelet-bound IgG, or PBIgG) was measured using a quantitative antiglobulin consumption assay developed by Dixon et al. (1975). Normal platelets or platelets from patients with thrombocytopenia due to a decreased production had less than 10 X 10(-15) g of IgG/platelet. Studied were 364 blood samples drawn from 196 patients; 173 patients had idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura; 65 (93 %) of 70 in the acute phase of their disease had elevated PBIgG (values up to 100 times greater than the normal); 98 (76.5 %) of 128 blood samples from patients during a chronic phase had abnormally high PBIgG but the levels of IgG were generally lower than those observed in the acute phase; 75 (75 %) of 100 samples from patients in remission did not have pathologically increased PBIgG. Usually when the platelet count improved (after prednisone therapy or after splenectomy), PBIgG decreased. The PBIgG determination was not useful for predicting the response to prednisone therapy or the further evolution of the disease, except when PGIgG remained elevated after high-dose prednisone therapy; this generally implied a poor prognosis. PBIgG have also been found elevated in other diseases such as lupus erythematosus and in one case of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. This assay may be of a great clinical interest, especially for the diagnosis of ITP.
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PMID:[Detection of platelet antibodies in idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (author's transl)]. 57 87

Leukocyte acid phosphatases were investigated in 146 patients with different chronic diseases. The method of investigation used was that of Kaplow and Burstone slightly modified by the authors in what regards the pH of the incubation medium. Normal or slightly increased scores were observed in the granulocytic series of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. In patients with rheumatoid arthritis, chronic hepatitis, lupus erythematosus disseminatus and chronic lymphocytic leukemia a moderate enzymatic activity was generally observed in the lymphocyte and more marked in severe forms of disease. A marked increase of the enzyme activity was observed in patients with myeloma. The possibility of a correlation between the intensity of enzyme activity and immunoglobulin formation is discussed.
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PMID:Behaviour of leukocyte acid phosphatase in various chronic diseases. 98 26

Leukocyte acid phosphatases were investigated in 146 patients with different chronic diseases. The method of investigation used was that of Kaplow and Burstone slightly modified by the authors in what regards the pH of the incubation medium. Normal or slightly increased scores were observed in the granulocytic series of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. In patients with rheumatoid arthritis, chronic hepatitis, lupus erythematosus disseminatus and chronic lymphocytic leukemia a moderate enzymatic activity was generally observed in the lymphocyte and more marked in severe forms of disease. A marked increase of the enzyme activity was observed in patients with myeloma. The possibility of a correlation between the intensity of enzyme activity and immunoglobulin formation is discussed.
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PMID:Behaviour of leukocyte acid phosphatase in various chronic diseases. 107 75

The significance of cold lymphocytotoxins, observed at 15 degreesC, is not clearly understood at the present time. The frequency of their appearance has been studied in normal subjects (blood donors, aged people, vaccinated subjects, post-traumatic splenectomy) and in patients with a neurologic disease (multiple sclerosis), a neoplasic disease (breast cancer)and hematologic diseases (thrombocytopenia, acute leukemia, chronic lymphatic leukemia, Hodgkin disease and systemic lupus erythematosus). There are no antibodies found in the geriatric group; they are found only in 3,9 % of blood donors and in 18 % of the subjects after vaccinations. A range of 17 to 30 % is found in subjects with breast cancer or multiple sclerosis. More than 50 % of the individuals with Hodgkin disease or lupus erythematosus produce these antibodies (52 % and 73 % respectively). In acute leukemias and chronic lymphatic leukemias, lymphocytotoxic antibodies sometimes appear at 37 degrees, reacting with autologous cells and having no HL-A specificity.
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PMID:[Cold lymphocytotoxins: their relationship with various physiological and pathological conditions]. 108 28

The one-direction radial diffusion method has been used in studies of the blood sera from 75 subjects and the kappa and lambda immunoglobulin types levels have been determined. The kappa:lambda (K:L) index was also calculated. The index values in sera of 20 healthy subjects remained in the range from 1.58:1 to 2.14:1 (mean: 1.86:1). The normal index values have been stated in 5/5 sera of patients with bacterial pneumonia. In 12/12 sera from patients with plasma cell myeloma the significant abnormalities of the index values have been noted. Abnormal index values have also been stated in 9/10 patients with acute leukemia, 4/9 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, 7/8 patients with lupus erythematosus and 4/4 patients with autoimmune hemolytic anemia. The quantitative determination of particular immunoglobulin types may be useful in the diagnostics of the immunoglobulin types may be useful in the diagnostics of the immunoglobulin monoclonal synthesis. The abnormalities of the K:L index observed in patients with leukemias and autoimmune disease suggest that these diseases are frequently characterized by the monoclonal synthesis of immunoglobulins.
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PMID:[Serum immunoglobulin types and their levels in patients with proliferative and autoimmune diseases of the hematopoietic system]. 250 35

The responses of T cells to autologous non-T mononuclear cells is called the autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction (AMLR). It seems to be an immunological response, as there is evidence of both immunologic specificity and memory. The AMLR is absent in systemic lupus erythematosis and chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and our data in normal human show that AMLR decreases with aging. Reactive T cells in the AMLR are subsequently cytotoxic to autologous B cells. We propose that the AMLR may be a protective phenomenon particularly against aberrant or neoplastic clones of B cells; and its decrease in the elderly may play an important permissive role for the development of either increased autoantibodies and/or B cell neoplasias.
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PMID:Decreased autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction with aging. 645 76

We measured the quantity of IgG bound to platelets (IgGP) by the antiglobulin consumption test (Dixon technic). In controls, the IgG level did not exceed 10 X 10(-15) g for one platelet. The amount of IgGP was often incraeased (more than 10 X 10(-l5) g) in some autoimmune diseases as lupus erythematosus, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and chronic active hepatitis. Among 26 patients presenting an idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) with a low number of platelets, 21 (77%) had a high titer of IgGP. In 6 ITP in remission, the IgGP titer was normal. After a review of the different technics detecting the IgG bound to platelets, we explain why we choose the antiglobulin consumption. This test is excellent for the research of anti-platelets auto-antibodies in ITP. Yet, the reaction remains negative in a minority of ITP. Several explanations are possible: low quantity of IgGP, presence of other anto-antibodies as IgM or IgA, cellular auto-immunity anti-platelets without antibodies, non immunologic ITP.
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PMID:[Our experince with antiglobulin consumption (Dixon test) in the study of antibodies bound to platelets]. 719 45

Nucleotide sequences of variable regions of autoantibodies may help to understand the origin of B cells secreting autoantibodies, both in the context of monoclonal lymphoid proliferations and polyclonal autoimmune diseases. We established the nucleotide sequence of variable genes of four monoclonal IgM secreted by lymphoplasmacytic proliferations and directed to myelin-associated glycoprotein, of five anti-lamin B autoantibodies in patients with a lupus like vasculitis, and of one monoclonal IgM secreted in a chronic lymphocytic leukemia patient and directed to the cardiolipin/beta 2 glycoprotein I complex. A selection process (antigen-driven?) was probably implicated in the origin of autoantibodies in the first two situations although a random process occurred in the last one.
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PMID:Autoantibodies sequencing may help to understand the physiopathology of some monoclonal lymphoid proliferations and autoimmune diseases. 817 28

DNA-hydrolyzing activity of IgG autoantibodies from sera of patients with various types of lymphoproliferative diseases was investigated. The association of DNA-hydrolyzing activity with the antibody (Ab) fraction has been proved by newly developed affinity-capture assay. Study of abzyme incidence in blood tumors and systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE) revealed linkage of anti-DNA Ab catalysts to mature B-cell tumors, and increased probability of DNA-abzymes formation on the background of autoimmune manifestations. These data suggest possible similarity between mechanisms of abzyme formation in SLE and B-cell lymphomas. A new mechanism of formation of DNA-specific catalytic Abs has been proposed based on the increased crossreactivity of polyclonal DNA-abzymes to DNA-depleted nuclear matrix proteins. The possibility of the abzyme production as Ab to the energetically destabilized ground state of the antigen has been discussed. Preliminary results were obtained that indicate the complement-independent cytotoxicity of anti-DNA autoantibodies isolated from blood of patients with SLE and chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
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PMID:Novel functional activities of anti-DNA autoantibodies from sera of patients with lymphoproliferative and autoimmune diseases. 1021 96

Activated partial thromboplastin time may be prolonged as the result of either of two different autoimmune complications of chronic lymphocytic leukemia: the development of antiphospholipid antibodies, such as lupus anticoagulant or anticardiolipin antibodies, or anti-factor VIII inhibitors, such as acquired hemophilia A. In the rare simultaneous occurrence of both inhibitors, differential diagnosis of a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time poses a number of problems during laboratory work-up, due to mutual interference of the commonly performed tests. Only careful clinical follow-up can disclose the significance of the laboratory findings. We report the case of concurrent antiphospholipid antibodies (lupus anticoagulant positivity, anticardiolipin antibodies; IgM 3880 MPL/mL and IgG 265 GPL/mL) and anti-factor VIII antibodies (46.8 Bethesda Units) in a patient with chronic B-cell lymphocytic leukemia who had prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (78.8 s). The relationship between lymphoproliferative and antiphospholipid syndrome, laboratory work-up in the case of the association of antiphospholipid and anti-factor VIII antibodies, and related problems that occur during clinical management of the patient are also discussed.
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PMID:[The antiphospholipid syndrome during chronic lymphatic leukemia. An association with anti-factor VIII antibodies]. 1052 24


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