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Query: UNIPROT:P05231 (
interleukin-6
)
23,907
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of 44-year-old woman who had shown psychiatric symptoms before and during the course of Castlemans' disease was presented. For four years, she first suffered from a paranoid-hallucinatory state and then a depressive one episodically. In the course of the latter, severe anemia developed. She was diagnosed as
Castleman's disease
, because the increased serum level of gamma-globulin and
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
), and multiple lymphomata were evidenced. A paranoid-hallucinatory state relapsed about one year later from this episode. At last, some bulbar and cerebellar symptoms, and a delirium suddenly occurred. The ischemic changes at the level of the pons and midbrain were revealed by the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination. It is certainly that both neurological and psychiatric symptoms were related to the lesions. This ischemic lesions may have resulted from the anoxia secondary to the severe anemia and/or hyperviscosity syndrome in the disease. On the other hand, the increased serum level of
IL-6
as well as the ischemic lesions might have caused psychiatric symptoms in this case, as the interferone which is one of the analogues of
IL-6
, is known to induce emotional and behavioral symptoms.
...
PMID:[A case of Castleman's disease with a variable neuropsychiatric symptomatology]. 128 94
POEMS syndrome is a rare multisystem affliction known for its signs, from which it also takes its acronym name "peripheral neuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal (M) protein, and skin lesions." Our study chronicles the course of this syndrome in a young woman with
Castleman's disease
(angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia). Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) levels were abnormally elevated at various times during a 9-month period. The authors conclude that the plasma cell dyscrasia associated with the POEMS syndrome of this patient was
Castleman's disease
. Elevation of serum
IL-6
levels might contribute to the pathogenesis of the POEMS syndrome.
...
PMID:Castleman's disease in POEMS syndrome with elevated interleukin-6. 849 3
Interleukin-6
, IL-6, is a pleiotropic cytokine which plays a central role in defense mechanisms, including the immune response, acute phase reaction and hematopoiesis. Abnormal expression of the IL-6 gene has been suggested to be involved in the pathogenesis of a variety of diseases, especially rheumatoid arthritis,
Castleman's disease
, mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis, multiple myeloma and Kaposi's sarcoma. In the case of multiple myeloma and Kaposi's sarcoma, the existence of an IL-6-IL-6 receptor autocrine loop has been implicated in the oncogenesis process. On the other hand, IL-6 has a potent anti-tumor activity against certain types of tumors. This anti-tumor effect is mediated by in vivo induction of tumor specific cytotoxic T cells and in part by a growth inhibitory activity of IL-6.
...
PMID:The evidence for interleukin-6 as an autocrine growth factor in malignancy. 164 91
Defined by histological criteria,
Castleman's disease
(CD) is a clinically and histologically heterogeneous syndrome. The functional status of immune cells in affected tissues may vary between the different forms of the disease. To address this question, the expression of cytokine genes in eight CD lymph nodes was analyzed by in situ hybridization. Two lymph nodes were taken from patients with a localized form of the disease associated with systemic manifestations, two from patients with a localized form without systemic symptoms, and four from patients with a multicentric form. Five lymph nodes exhibiting a benign follicular hyperplasia were used as controls. The
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) gene was expressed at a very high level in two cases: the two localized forms of CD associated with systemic manifestations.
IL-6
gene overexpression occurred inside follicles of these lymph nodes. The morphology of follicular cells hybridizing with the
IL-6
probe or labeled with an anti-
IL-6
monoclonal antibody suggested that follicular dendritic cells expressed the
IL-6
gene. In contrast, no
IL-6
gene expression was detected inside follicles of the six other CD lymph nodes or of the five control lymph nodes. In interfollicular areas,
IL-6
gene-expressing cells were detected in all lymph nodes by both in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. In CD lymph nodes, positive cells were located outside sinuses, in close contact with blood vessels and plasma cells. This distribution was clearly different from that observed in control lymph nodes, in which
IL-6
gene-expressing cells were present inside sinuses. A similar difference between CD and control lymph nodes was observed for the distribution of IL-1 beta and IL-1 alpha gene-expressing cells in interfollicular areas. The morphology of interfollicular
IL-6
-producing cells was heterogeneous, consistent with that of macrophages, interdigitating cells, lymphocytes, and endothelial cells, and different from that of plasma cells. Taken together these results show that CD is consistently associated with a particular pattern of
IL-6
gene expression in interfollicular areas whereas elevated
IL-6
gene expression inside follicles only occurs in the localized form of the disease associated with systemic manifestations. The variable pattern of
IL-6
gene expression as well as the clinical and histologic heterogeneity of CD indicate that different immune mechanisms may be involved in the different forms of this disease.
...
PMID:Interleukin-6 gene expression in Castleman's disease. 195 81
A 13-year-old girl presented with general fatigue, back pain, anemia, hyperimmunoglobulinemia, and a mediastinal mass on chest radiograph. A mass was surgically removed, and its histologic examination determined the diagnosis of
giant lymph node hyperplasia
(
Castleman's disease
). With removal of the hyperplastic lymph node, the clinical symptoms soon disappeared and the abnormal laboratory findings were markedly improved within 1 month: serum IgG levels decreased from 4350 mg/dl to 1829 mg/dl. Immunostaining on the lymph node sections revealed polyclonal B-lymphocyte and T-lymphocyte populations. The patient's lymph node cells were cultured without any mitogenic stimulation, and the culture supernatants were assayed for their
B-cell differentiation factor
(BCDF) activity to induce IgG production by our Epstein-Barr virus-transformed cell line. The patient's lymph node cells produced high levels of BCDF activity: the supernatants could increase the IgG production from 140 ng/ml to 410 ng/ml when the values became from 140 ng/ml to 142 ng/ml or 148 ng/ml with those of the control lymph node cells. These results suggest that the hyperimmunoglobulinemia and its prompt improvement with removal of the hyperplastic lymph node may have been related to the spontaneous production of high levels of BCDF activity by the lymph node cells in the patient.
...
PMID:Giant lymph node hyperplasia (Castleman's disease) with spontaneous production of high levels of B-cell differentiation factor activity. 264 33
Castleman's disease
is a syndrome consisting of
giant lymph node hyperplasia
with plasma cell infiltration, fever, anemia, hypergammaglobulinemia, and an increase in the plasma level of acute phase proteins. It has been reported that clinical abnormalities disappear after the resection of the affected lymph nodes, suggesting that products of lymph nodes may cause such clinical abnormalities.
Interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) is a cytokine inducing B-cell differentiation to immunoglobulin-producing cells and regulating biosynthesis of acute phase proteins. This report demonstrates that the germinal centers of hyperplastic lymph nodes of patients with
Castleman's disease
produce large quantities of
IL-6
without any significant production of other cytokines. In a patient with a solitary hyperplastic lymph node, clinical improvement and decrease in serum
IL-6
were observed following surgical removal of the involved lymph node. There was a correlation between serum
IL-6
level, lymph node hyperplasia, hypergammaglobulinemia, increased level of acute phase proteins, and clinical abnormalities. The findings in this report indicate that the generation of
IL-6
by B cells in germinal centers of hyperplastic lymph nodes of
Castleman's disease
may be the key element responsible for the variety of clinical symptoms in this disease.
...
PMID:Pathogenic significance of interleukin-6 (IL-6/BSF-2) in Castleman's disease. 278 66
Castleman's disease
(CD) is a lymphoproliferative disorder characterized by enlarged hyperplastic lymph nodes. CD may be localized or multifocal, and is often associated with signs and symptoms of generalized inflammation. The systemic manifestations of CD have been previously attributed to an overproduction of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) by the tumor, although there is evidence that
IL-6
is not responsible for all of the symptoms. We describe a 9-year-old boy who developed
Castleman's disease
with systemic findings of hypochromic microcytic anemia, growth arrest, inflammation, and hyperimmunoglobulinemia. Following surgical resection, all of the symptoms and laboratory abnormalities resolved. Using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of the tumor, we found elevated levels of
IL-6
mRNA as expected, but also elevated levels of tumor necrosis factor beta (TNF-beta) and gamma interferon (gamma-IFN) mRNA. Because these cytokines are mediators of immune regulation and inflammation, we propose that TNF-beta and gamma-IFN also play an important role in the pathophysiology of
Castleman's disease
.
...
PMID:Elevated levels of tumor necrosis factor-beta, gamma-interferon, and IL-6 mRNA in Castleman's disease. 749 11
We report the case of a 35-year-old patient who presented with acute adrenal insufficiency, then developed fever, hypoalbuminuria, anasarca, thrombocytopaenia and anaemia. Lymphadenopathy appeared later with microscopic features typical of
Castleman's disease
. Clinical remission followed treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. Circulating
interleukin-6
levels were elevated initially but were normal after immunoglobulin therapy. We surmise that high circulating levels of
interleukin-6
(and ACTH) may have induced haemorrhagic necrosis of the adrenal glands and accounted for the constitutional symptoms.
...
PMID:Acute adrenal insufficiency: a new presentation of Castleman's disease. 760 51
We report six patients affected by POEMS syndrome (Polyneuropathy, Organomegaly, Endocrinopathy, Monoclonal gammopathy, and Skin changes), a peculiar multiorgan disease frequently associated with osteosclerotic myeloma or other plasma cell disorders. Sensorimotor polyneuropathy was associated with multisystem involvement in all of the patients, with osteosclerotic myeloma in 2 cases, monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance in 2 cases and
Castleman's disease
in the final two. In all of the patients, sural nerve biopsy findings were consistent with a mixed, axonal and demyelinating neuropathy. Increased levels of
Interleukin-6
were found in two cases, but the pathogenesis of the disease is far from established.
...
PMID:The POEMS syndrome: report of six cases. 769 93
The patient (TAL), a chronic asymptomatic HBV carrier with HBsAg-anti-HBsAg circulating immune complexes, was admitted to our hospital because of a nephrotic syndrome due to renal amyloidosis. There was no family history of hereditary amyloidosis. Recurrent arthralgias, asthenia, and weight loss were the prominent clinical features. Laboratory test results showing that severe chronic inflammatory activity had been present for 6 years.
Interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) serum concentration was 10 times normal and C-reactive protein was 1.9 mg/ml. A complex immunological picture was also present (immune complex formation, exuberant B-cell reactivity, and decrease in the number of CD4 T cells). A localized form of
Castleman's disease
(CD) (plasma-cell type) was diagnosed by surgical excision of a giant axillary lymph node. AA amyloid was present in the blood vessels. Within 60 days after excision of the mass, the systemic symptoms subsided, laboratory signs of inflammatory activity disappeared and
IL-6
serum concentration returned to normal, thus establishing a causal relationship between the localized
Castleman's disease
, elevated
IL-6
concentration and the chronic inflammation responsible for AA amyloidosis. At 10 months of follow-up, the nephrotic syndrome has reversed, kidney function has slowly ameliorated, and the patient has gained 12 kg. Abdominal fat aspirates drawn to search for amyloid, positive before surgery, were subsequently negative. The latter finding, and the remission of the nephrotic syndrome, provided strong evidence for regression of the amyloid deposits. However, the HBsAg-anti-HBsAg immune complexes and depression of T-helper cell activity persist. This immunological derangement is therefore not a consequence of CD. Chronic stimulation of the immune system due to the patient's inability to eliminate HBV, in the contest of perturbed immunity, may have favored the genesis of the lymphadenopathy.
...
PMID:Reversal of nephrotic syndrome due to reactive amyloidosis (AA-type) after excision of localized Castleman's disease. 791 Jul 17
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