Publication | Open Access
Depressed primary in vitro antibody response in rheumatoid arthritis.
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Citations
19
References
1979
Year
Rheumatoid DisorderRheumatologyAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyMedicineRheumatic DiseasesImmunologyAutoimmunityVitro Antibody ResponseDepressed PrimaryRegular Rheumatoid ArthritisInflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseImmunologic DiseaseImmunotherapyPsoriatic ArthritisRa SerumInflammatory ArthritisRheumatoid Arthritis
We have studied the primary in vitro antibody response toward a hapten in cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes from twenty-two patients suffering from regular rheumatoid arthritis (RA). These patients were not receiving immunosuppressive drugs or corticosteroids and had not taken Aspirin or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents for at least 72 hr. The control groups included thirty-two healthy subjects and twenty-seven control patients. The mean anti-TNP response of the RA patients was significantly lower than that of both control groups. No pre-existing anti-TNP or IgG response could be detected. A search for suppressor cells in co-cultures of RA and normal lymphocytes was negative. On the contrary, the extent of allogeneic enhancement in such co-cultures was comparable to that observed when control lymphocytes were co-cultured. RA serum added to normal lymphocytes cultures showed a dramatic inhibitory effect in only two out of nine cases. A follow-up study has strongly suggested that RA lymphocytes could increase their in vitro antibody response upon treatment.
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