Annals of internal medicine
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Activation of resting T-lymphocytes induces synthesis of interleukin-2 (IL-2) and expression of cell surface receptors for this lymphokine. In contrast to resting normal T-cells that do not express high-affinity IL-2 receptors (IL-2R), abnormal T-cells of patients with leukemia-lymphoma, certain autoimmune disorders, and individuals rejecting allografts express this receptor. Exploiting this difference in receptor expression, antibodies to the IL-2 receptor have been used effectively to treat patients with leukemia and lymphoma. ⋯ Further, to increase its cytotoxic effectiveness, the monoclonal antibody has been armed with toxins or radionuclides. Alternatively, IL-2 itself has been linked to a toxin to kill IL-2 receptor-bearing cells. Thus, IL-2 receptor-directed therapy provides a new method for treating certain neoplastic diseases and autoimmune disorders and for preventing allograft rejection.
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To conduct neurologic, immunologic, and virologic studies in patients with a chronic debilitating illness of acute onset. ⋯ Neurologic symptoms, MRI findings, and lymphocyte phenotyping studies suggest that the patients may have been experiencing a chronic, immunologically mediated inflammatory process of the central nervous system. The active replication of HHV-6 most likely represents reactivation of latent infection, perhaps due to immunologic dysfunction. Our study did not directly address whether HHV-6, a lymphotropic and gliotropic virus, plays a role in producing the symptoms or the immunologic and neurologic dysfunction seen in this illness. Whether the findings in our patients, who came from a relatively small geographic area, will be generalizable to other patients with a similar syndrome remains to be seen.