Journal of neuroimmunology
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Antiganglioside serum antibodies from a patient treated with gangliosides were examined for cross-reactivity with lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) of Campylobacter jejuni strains associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). The patient had no preceding infection with C. jejuni and developed chronic progressive motor polyneuropathy following parenteral ganglioside treatment. Serum IgG antibodies recognised GM1 and GD1b gangliosides as well as asialo-GM1, and cross-reactivity was observed with LPSs from C. jejuni O:2, O:4, O:19 and O:41. The results give a clear indication that gangliosides and LPSs from C. jejuni serotypes associated with GBS share common epitopes.
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Controlling the extent of inflammatory responses following brain injury may be beneficial since posttraumatic intracranial inflammation has been associated with adverse outcome. In order to elucidate the potential role of anti-inflammatory mediators, the production of interleukin-10 (IL-10) was monitored in paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum of 28 patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and compared to control samples. The pattern of IL-10 was analyzed with respect to the patterns of IL-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) in both fluids during a time period of up to 22 days. ⋯ Neither CSF nor serum IL-10 values correlated with the dysfunction of the BBB. IL-10, IL-6 and TGF-beta1 showed similar patterns in CSF over time, whereas rises of TNF-alpha corresponded to declines of IL-10 levels. Our results suggest that IL-10 is predominantly induced intrathecally after severe TBI where it may downregulate inflammatory events following traumatic brain damage.
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Review Historical Article
The pathology of multiple sclerosis: a historical perspective.
In the century and a half since multiple sclerosis (MS) was first recognized, the pathology of the condition has been defined with increasing detail. From the recognition and definition of MS as a clinical phenomenon, studies of the diseased brain tissue have progressed in a manner dependent on the science of the time. ⋯ During this evolution, many hypotheses concerning the pathogenesis of MS have been overturned, and the interpretation of some clearly delineated gross and histological findings have been reversed. This review plots the progress and highlights current theories and emerging concepts regarding one of the most enigmatic of neurological diseases.
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Central nervous system (CNS) involvement is a prominent feature of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infection. Monocytes and CD4+ T cells traverse the blood brain barrier (BBB), and serve as vehicles for the virus and perpetrators for brain pathology by their production of neurotoxins. In the present study cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from HIV-1-infected patients were analyzed for the presence of chemotactic factors. ⋯ Unlike the CSF samples of controls, all CSF samples from HIV-1-infected patients induced chemotaxis of T cells activated with IL-2. The significance of IP-10 as a T cell chemotactic cytokine in HIV-1-infected CSF is shown by (1) the correlation of the IP-10 levels with the extent of T cell chemotaxis, (2) the neutralization of T cell chemotaxis by anti-IP-10 antibodies and (3) the correlation of the chemotactic response of CSF samples on activated T cells and the CSF white cell count in the patients. Our data provide evidence that IP-10 contributes to the accumulation of activated T cells in the CSF compartment in HIV-1-infected individuals.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities in a phase III trial of Avonex (IFNbeta-1a) for relapsing multiple sclerosis. The Multiple Sclerosis Collaborative Research Group.
This report provides results of CSF analyses done in a subset of relapsing remitting MS patients participating in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase III clinical trial of IFNbeta-Studies supported by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (grants RG2019, RG2827),a (Avonex , Biogen). The clinical trial demonstrated that IFNbeta-1a treatment resulted in significantly reduced disability progression, annual relapse rate, and new brain lesions visualized by cranial magnetic resonance imaging. The objectives of the current study were to determine: (a) whether CSF abnormalities in MS patients correlated with disease or MRI characteristics, and (b) effects of IFNbeta-1a therapy on these CSF abnormalities. ⋯ The current study documents significant reductions in CSF WBC counts in patients treated with IFNbeta-1a for 104 weeks. This finding is considered relevant to the therapeutic response, since CSF WBC counts were found to be positively correlated with subsequent clinical and MRI disease activity in placebo-treated relapsing MS patients.