The authors investigated immunomodulatory treatments in 15 patients with Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) (14 with childhood and one with adolescent onset RE). Positive time-limited responses were obtained in 11 patients using variable combinations of corticosteroids, apheresis, and high-dose IV immunoglobulins. Although surgical exclusion of the affected hemisphere is the only treatment that halts disease progression, immunomodulation can be considered when early surgery is not feasible, in late-onset patients with slower disease progression, and in the few cases of bilateral disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRasmussen's encephalitis is a devastating disease characterized by refractory epilepsy and progressive atrophy of one cerebral hemisphere. The only treatment option able to prevent seizures is the surgical disconnection of the affected hemisphere. The etiology of the disease remains unknown, but several laboratory findings have recently indicated the involvement of the immune system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
September 2003
Data from 756 myasthenic patients were analyzed for diagnostic criteria, clinical aspects, and therapeutic approaches. The patients were followed up at our institution from 1981 to 2001. Clinical evaluation was performed according to the myasthenia gravis score adopted at our clinic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuscle inflammation is characteristic of inflammatory myopathies but also occurs in muscular dystrophy with lack of the sarcolemmal protein dysferlin. We quantified inflammatory cells and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) expression in muscle from 10 patients with dysferlinopathy. Infiltrating cells were always present although numbers varied considerably; macrophages were more common than T cells, T cytotoxicity was absent, and MHC class I was overexpressed on muscle fibers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aims of this study were to assess the efficacy of video-assisted thoracoscopic extended thymectomy (VATET) as a treatment for myasthenia gravis (MG) and to identify prognostic factors for thymectomy success. Clinical efficacy and variables influencing outcome were assessed by life-table and Cox proportional hazards regression analysis. Complete stable remission (CSR), as defined by the MGFA Medical Task Force, was the end point for efficacy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunoreactivity of sera from patients with Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) and patients with partial epilepsy (PE) was analyzed by immunohistoblot on rat brain sections and the staining pattern compared with that obtained with antibodies to a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid and NMDA receptors. Staining for anti-glutamate receptor 3 (GluR3) was found in 82% of patients with RE and 64% of patients with PE. Histoblot analysis showed a positive staining in GluR3- and NMDA-specific regions of rat brain, providing a comprehensive CNS immunolocalization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRasmussen's encephalitis (RE) is a rare condition characterized by drug-resistant seizures, recurrent status epilepticus and progressive lateralized neurological deterioration. There is evidence of autoimmune involvement in the pathogenesis. We investigated the presence of anti-GluR3 antibodies against peptides A and B in patients with RE (n=11), partial and generalized epilepsy (n=85) and other neurological diseases (n=30).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFibrosis in Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients' muscle seems to be mediated by fibrogenic cytokines, particularly transforming growth factor-beta1. Golden retriever muscular dystrophy is a model of Duchenne dystrophy characterised by severe myopathy and muscle fibrosis. We evaluated mRNA levels and protein distribution of transforming growth factor-beta1, connective tissue growth factor and collagens in muscle of golden retriever muscular dystrophy dogs at different ages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe discovery of mutations in the neural calcium channel (CACNA1A) gene in familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM), variant of migraine with aura, led to the suggestion that this gene might be involved in familial migraine with aura (FMA). We investigated whether the mutations in FHM are present in FMA patients, analyzing genomic DNA by PCR, single stranded conformation polymorphism, sequencing and restriction enzyme. No mutations were found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Autoantibodies have been implicated in the development of chronic focal encephalitis (CFE) or Rasmussen's disease, a progressive and intractable form of epilepsy characterized by uncontrollable unilateral focal seizures, brain atrophy, and inflammation.
Objective: To investigate the origin and characteristics of the B cell population that trigger or sustain brain inflammation in patients with CFE.
Methods: The authors used immunoglobulin (Ig) complementary determining region 3 (CDR3)-size spectratyping and DNA sequencing to examine the rearranged IgG heavy chain (IgGH) transcript repertoire in resected brain samples from four patients with CFE.
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a multifactorial autoimmune disease of the neuromuscular junction. We investigated the relation between four polymorphisms of the interleukin (IL)-1 gene cluster on 2q12-22, and MG susceptibility and clinical features in a large cohort of individuals. No polymorphism was associated with MG susceptibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEight patients with Rasmussen's encephalitis, 40 patients with noninflammatory focal epilepsy, 104 patients with various neurologic diseases, and 16 healthy donors were tested for the prevalence of antibodies against the GluR3 receptor in serum and CSF. Reactivities against different peptides derived from various portions of this glutamate receptor subtype were detectable in a significantly higher number of patients with focal epilepsy than in those with other neurologic diseases, but they were not specific for the diagnosis of Rasmussen's encephalitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report the immunocytochemical localization in rat brain of affinity-purified anti-GluR3 (glutamate receptor) antibodies from two patients with Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) and from immunized rabbits. The distribution of immunolabeling was similar using antibodies from rabbits and patients with RE. No electrophysiologic responses were elicited from acutely dissociated kainate-responsive neurons isolated from rat brain when these antibodies were applied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuroimmunol
February 2001
We tested 24 MG patients with thymoma (11 invasive) for the presence of anti-neuronal nicotinic receptor subtype antibodies and found that none had antibodies against the alpha 7-containing subtype, and only one (with invasive thymoma) had antibodies directed against the alpha 3-containing subtype. In this patient, the anti-alpha 3 antibodies recognized the extracellular part of the alpha 3 subunit. They developed later than the anti-alpha 1 muscle antibodies, with their titer increasing during the illness, while that of the anti-alpha1 muscle antibody decreased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe idiopathic inflammatory myopathies are characterized by antibody- or cell-mediated immune response against unknown muscle tissue antigens. In these diseases a cellular infiltrate, composed of T and B lymphocytes, macrophages and NK cells, may invade muscle tissue with a gradient from the perivascular space to the endomysial compartment. Muscle cells may be actively involved in the processes of mononuclear cell recruitment and activation from the blood stream to the areas of inflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuropathol Exp Neurol
February 2000
Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) are muscle diseases of autoimmune pathogenesis characterized by mononuclear cell infiltration within muscle tissue. Since immune cell homing and accumulation at the site of antigenic challenge is usually mediated by chemokines, we evaluated the expression of 2 beta-chemokines--monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) and macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha)--by immunohistochemistry and polymerase chain reaction in muscles of polymyositis, inclusion body myositis, and dermatomyositis patients, and related their expression to immunopathological alterations in muscle. MCP-1 and MIP-1alpha transcripts were detected by PCR in all IIM muscles, but not in controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with myasthenia gravis (MG) have antibodies to the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) which are responsible for their muscle weakness: but some patients with MG and other neuroimmunological disorders have autonomic symptoms. We characterised the neuronal forms of AChRs (nAChRs) into two neuroblastoma cell lines and developed immunoprecipitation assays to test for antibodies to the alpha7- and alpha3-containing nAChR subtypes, present in the autonomic ganglia. We then tested 70 sera samples from MG patients, 38 from subjects with other neurological diseases, and 30 from healthy individuals, for antibodies to these two forms of neuronal AChR subtypes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mucosal administration of the native antigen or peptide fragments corresponding to immunodominant regions is effective in preventing or treating several T cell-dependent models of autoimmune disease. No data are yet available on oral tolerance with immunodominant T-cell peptides in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG), an animal model of B cell-dependent disease. We report that oral administration of the T-cell epitope alpha146-162 of the Torpedo californica acetylcholine receptor (TAChR) alpha-subunit suppressed T-cell responses to AChR and ameliorated the disease in C57Bl/6 (B6) mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMyotonia congenita (MC) is a genetic disease characterized by mutations in the CLCN1 gene (OMIM*118425) encoding the skeletal muscle voltage-gated chloride channel (ClC-1). Autosomal dominant and recessive forms are observed, characterized by impaired muscle relaxation after forceful contraction (myotonia), which is more pronounced after inactivity and improves with exercise. We report three novel and one known mutations of the CLCN1 gene in four unrelated MC families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropathy has been frequently reported in patients with IgG monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) but it is still unclear whether this association has clinical or pathogenetic relevance. In order to clarify the possible role of IgG MGUS in the neuropathy we correlated the clinical and electrophysiological features of the neuropathy with the duration and anti-neural activity of the M-protein in 17 patients with neuropathy and IgG MGUS. Ten patients (59%) had a chronic demyelinating neuropathy clinically indistinguishable from chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) while 7 (41%) had a predominantly sensory axonal or mixed neuropathy.
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