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BACKGROUND: The authors have previously reported a possible increased risk of the familial occurrence of Crohn's disease in patients with celiac disease. AIM: The aim of the current study was to evaluate in a case-control study the familial occurrence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in first-degree relatives of patients with celiac disease. METHODS: One hundred eleven consecutive patients with biopsy-proven celiac disease were interviewed to ascertain whether IBD was present in first-degree relatives. The number of relatives, their ages, and possible IBD status were collected in a questionnaire. When a diagnosis of familial IBD was reported, the diagnosis was checked in the hospital records. Two hundred twenty-two controls matched for age and sex (111 from the general population and 111 from orthopedic wards) were also interviewed regarding the possible occurrence of IBD in first-degree relatives. The chi2 test was used to evaluate the difference in proportion of familial occurrence of IBD among individuals with celiac disease and controls. RESULTS: Among 600 first-degree relatives of patients with celiac disease, 10 cases of IBD were identified among first-degree relatives (7 cases of ulcerative colitis and 3 cases of Crohn's disease), whereas only 1 case of IBD was identified among the 1,196 first-degree relatives of control patients (p < 0.01). When ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease were analyzed separately, only the prevalence of ulcerative colitis was statistically significant (p 相似文献   

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Immunoregulatory properties of cytokines may mediate disordered inflammatory events in ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD). In the present study, profiles of cytokines produced by activated macrophages were studied in colonic tissue from 43 patients with and without inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Cytokine messenger RNA (mRNA) extracted from mucosal biopsy specimens was studied using polymerase chain reaction assay techniques. A greater percentage of active UC samples had detectable levels of mRNA for interleukins (IL) 1, 6, and 8 and gro than samples in inactive UC and noninflammatory controls. These cytokines were comparable in active UC and inflammatory controls. Expression of gro mRNA in active UC tissue was significantly higher than in active CD. Tumor necrosis factor was detected in only 7 of 43 samples with no difference between groups. Active and inactive CD did not differ in percentage of cytokine mRNA expression. IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) was detected in more inflammatory controls than in CD and was expressed in fewer IBD patients than IL-1. Expression of proinflammatory cytokines in grossly inactive CD and possible defective production of IL-1ra may explain disease reactivation and chronicity.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Although a growing number of reports have described inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) complicated with cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, there are limited molecular studies that investigate CMV genome in intestinal sections of patients with IBD. METHODS: A cross-sectional prospective study was conducted between September 2000 and June 2003 in a cohort of 85 patients diagnosed with IBD (58 with ulcerative colitis and 27 with Crohn's disease) in two adult gastrointestinal referral centers in Athens, Greece. Prevalence of CMV infection was estimated by pathologic studies in intestinal sections and by molecular assays in blood and intestinal tissue samples and compared with a control group of 42 individuals with noninflammatory disease. RESULTS: Immunohistochemical staining showed CMV antigen in 10 IBD patients (7 with ulcerative colitis; 9 with severe disease), whereas CMV antigen was not detected in any of the controls. CMV genome in both the intestinal tissue and blood was found by polymerase chain reaction in 23 (27.1%) of the total IBD patients, in 18 (31.0%) of those with ulcerative colitis, and in 5 (18.5%) of those with Crohn's disease. In addition, five (5.9%) IBD patients (2 with ulcerative colitis and 3 with Crohn's disease) had detectable CMV genome in their intestinal samples but not in their blood. In the control group, five (11.9%) individuals had detectable CMV genome in their blood, but only one (2.2%) in his intestine. CONCLUSION: Patients with ulcerative colitis had more often detectable CMV genome in their blood as well as in their intestinal tissue samples as compared with controls (P = 0.022 and P < 0.0001, respectively). However, patients with Crohn's disease had more often detectable CMV genome only in their intestinal tissue samples as compared with controls (P = 0.001). Detection of CMV genome in blood or intestinal tissue was significantly associated with short duration of IBD (P = 0.0088 and 0.04, respectively) but not with age, sex, severity of the disease, activity at colonoscopy, pancolitis, administration of a specific treatment, and surgery. In this cross-sectional prospective study, detection of CMV genome or antigen in the intestine was commonly associated with IBD.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Microbial agents are a possible cause of ulcerative colitis. We have previously reported evidence of bacteria invading the colonic mucosa of patients with ulcerative colitis. We have isolated bacteria from inflamed colonic mucosa, examined the localization of the species in the mucosa, and assayed for serum antibodies to the bacteria. METHODS: Cohorts of 31 per group were enrolled from patients with active ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, ischemic colitis, and colon adenomas. A group of 31 healthy controls were also studied. The presence of bacteria in biopsies of patients with ulcerative colitis was analyzed by both isolation and immunohistochemistry. Sera from patients were tested for bacterial antibodies using both Western blots and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). RESULTS: Only sera from patients with ulcerative colitis gave specific reactions with Fusobacterium varium in Western blot assays. The detection rate of specific bands was higher for patients with ulcerative colitis (61%) than for subjects with either Crohn's disease (13%) or healthy controls (29%) (P < 0.001 and P = 0.021, respectively). The ELISA showed that the mean optical densities with extracts of F. varium as antigen were significantly higher for ulcerative colitis patients than for subjects with either Crohn's disease or healthy controls (P < 0.001). Immunohistochemical detection of F. varium in colonic mucosa was significantly higher in patients with ulcerative colitis (84%) than for subjects with either Crohn's disease (16%) or other controls (3-13%) (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Fusobacterium varium bacteria were present in a significant number of patients with active ulcerative colitis, and should be tested in therapeutic trials in order to confirm the causal relationship between F. varium and ulcerative colitis.  相似文献   

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The aim of this study was to identify major histocompatibility complex alleles associated with the development and clinical features of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Genotyping at the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DRB1 and DQB1 loci was performed on individuals from 118 Caucasian IBD sibling pair families and on 216 healthy controls. Both population- and family-based association tests were used to analyze data obtained on the entire study population and on clinical subgroups stratified by diagnosis, ethnicity, and disease distribution. HLA DRB1*0103 was significantly associated with IBD (OR = 6.0, p = 0.0001) in a case-control analysis of non-Jewish IBD-affected individuals. This association was apparent among both Crohn's disease (OR = 5.23, p = 0.0007) and ulcerative colitis (OR = 7.9, p = 0.0001) patients and was confirmed in the non-Jewish IBD population by results of family-based association analysis using the transmission disequilibrium test. HLA DQB1*0501 was also associated with IBD (OR = 1.64, p = 0.02) in the non-Jewish population. but statistically significant association of this allele with disease was not detected for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis separately. No significant associations were identified among the Jewish patients. In the non-Jewish IBD families, IBD was as strongly associated with the DRB1*0103 DQB1*0501 haplotype as with the DRB1*0103 allele alone. The carrier frequency of the DRB1*0103 allele was found to be 10-fold higher in Crohn's disease patients with pure colonic involvement than in healthy controls (38.5% vs. 3.2%; p = 0.0002). These data demonstrate the association of the HLA DRB1*0103 allele with both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis and with large intestine-restricted disease in non-Jewish IBD patients and therefore identify HLA DRB1*0103 as a potentially important contributor to disease susceptibility and to expression of colonic involvement in IBD.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND/AIMS: Chronic inflammatory cells in colonic mucosa is a histopathologic feature in patients with collagenous colitis and inflammatory bowel disease. The aim of this study was to compare the distribution of mast cells and macrophages in the colonic mucosa of patients with collagenous colitis, Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis. METHODOLOGY: Patients with histologically confirmed collagenous colitis (n = 13), Crohn's disease (n = 20) or ulcerative colitis (n = 20) and normal control patients (n = 20) were included in this study. Biopsy specimens were obtained from the sigmoid colon of each patient, and immunostained using antibodies to tryptase (AA1) and CD68. The number of mast cells and macrophages located in upper and lower part of the lamina propria was determined. RESULTS: The number of mast cells in the upper part of lamina propria in patients with collagenous colitis (286 +/- 89/mm2, mean +/- SD), Crohn's disease (330 +/- 84/mm2) and ulcerative colitis (355 +/- 90/mm2), was higher than normal controls (201 +/- 44/mm2). The number of mast cells in the lower part of lamina propria in patients with Crohn's disease (345 +/- 87/mm2) and ulcerative colitis (363 +/- 86/mm2) was higher than collagenous colitis (266 +/- 63/mm2) and normal controls (309 +/- 60/mm2). The number of macrophages in the lower part of lamina propria in patients with Crohn's disease (330 +/- 63/mm2) and ulcerative colitis (301 +/- 60/mm2) was higher than in collagenous colitis (247 +/- 46/mm2) and normal controls (242 +/- 52/mm2), although there were no significant differences in the number of macrophages present in the upper part of the lamina propria among the four groups. CONCLUSIONS: Our data showed the presence of a different distribution of mast cells and macrophages in collagenous colitis and inflammatory bowel disease, and these suggest that because mucosal mast cells have been implicated in the development of Th2 response collagenous colitis is more of a Th2 type reaction rather than Th1.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are idiopathic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) involving synthesis of eicosanoids from arachidonic acid (AA), which is released from membrane phospholipids by phospholipase A2 (PLA2). A potentially important regulator of the production of these mediators is a protein activator of PLA2, referred to as PLA2 activating protein (PLAP). AIMS: The purpose of this investigation was to discover if PLAP values might be increased in the inflamed intestinal tissue of patients with IBD and in intestinal tissue of mice with colitis. PATIENTS: Biopsy specimens were taken from patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease undergoing diagnostic colonoscopy, and normal colonic mucosa was obtained from patients without IBD after surgical resection. METHODS: Immunocytochemistry with affinity purified antibodies to PLAP synthetic peptides was used to locate PLAP antigen in sections of intestinal biopsy specimens from IBD patients compared with that of normal intestinal tissue. Northern blot analysis with a murine [32P] labelled plap cDNA probe was performed on RNA extracted from the colons of mice fed dextran sulphate sodium (DSS) and cultured HT-29 cells exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS). RESULTS: PLAP antigen was localised predominantly within monocytes and granulocytes in intestinal tissue sections from IBD patients, and additional deposition of extracellular PLAP antigen was associated with blood vessels and oedema fluid in the inflamed tissues. In contrast, tissue sections from normal human intestine were devoid of PLAP reactive antigen, except for some weak cytoplasmic reaction of luminal intestinal epithelial cells. Similarly, colonic tissue from DSS treated mice contained an increased amount of PLAP antigen compared with controls. The stroma of the lamina propria of the colonic mucosa from the DSS treated mice reacted intensely with antibodies to PLAP synthetic peptides, while no reaction was observed with control mouse colons. These data were supported by northern analysis which showed that PLAP mRNA was increased in the colons of DSS treated mice and cultured HT-29 cells exposed to LPS. CONCLUSIONS: As PLAP values were increased in the intestinal mucosa of IBD patients and mice with colitis, as well as in LPS treated cultured HT-29 cells, a role was postulated for PLAP in increasing PLA2 activity, which leads to the increased synthesis of eicosanoids in intestinal tissues of patients with these inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND & AIMS: Reports of multiple sclerosis (MS), demyelination, and optic neuritis (ON) associated with anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha therapy resulted in warnings on prescribing instructions for infliximab, etanercept, and adalimumab. However, the underlying relationship between IBD and these neurologic conditions has not been established. METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study and a retrospective cross-sectional study using 1988 to 1997 data from the General Practice Research Database. A total of 7988 Crohn's disease and 12,185 ulcerative colitis patients were matched for age, sex, and primary care practice to 80,666 randomly selected controls. In the cohort study, incident cases of MS, demyelination, and/or ON (MS/D/ON) had to occur at least 1 year after registration with the physician and after the diagnosis of IBD. In the cross-sectional study, the diagnosis of MS/D/ON could either precede or follow the IBD diagnosis. RESULTS: In the cohort study, the incidence of MS/D/ON was higher in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis compared with their matched controls, reaching statistical significance for ulcerative colitis (ulcerative colitis incidence rate ratio [IRR], 2.63; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-5.15; Crohn's disease IRR, 2.12; 95% confidence interval, .94-4.50). In the cross-sectional study, MS/D/ON was more prevalent in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis compared with their matched controls (Crohn's disease odds ratio, 1.54; 95% confidence interval, 1.03-2.32; ulcerative colitis odds ratio, 1.75; 95% confidence interval, 1.28-2.39). CONCLUSIONS: Demyelinating diseases occur more commonly among patients with IBD than among non-IBD patients. Future studies should clarify whether treatment with tumor necrosis factor alpha blockers results in further increased incidence of MS/D/ON among IBD patients.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND AND AIMS: A substantial proportion of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) develops osteopenia and osteoporosis in the course of disease. Recent data from a mouse model of colitis suggest that the receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin (OPG) system may be responsible for bone loss. METHODS: We investigated the activation state of the RANKL/OPG system and its association with bone loss in human IBD. Plasma levels of OPG and RANKL were correlated with bone mineral density and current IBD therapy. Colonic secretion of OPG and RANKL and cell types responsible for such secretion were determined. RESULTS: OPG plasma levels were elevated 2.4-fold in Crohn's disease (CD) and 1.9-fold in ulcerative colitis (UC) whereas soluble RANKL (sRANKL) levels were not significantly different in IBD patients compared with healthy controls. High levels of OPG were released from colonic explant cultures (CEC) derived from inflamed IBD specimens, and colonic macrophages and dendritic cells costained for OPG. sRANKL levels from CEC were low both in IBD patients and healthy controls. Interestingly, increased expression of RANKL was mainly confined to cells in the lamina muscularis. A significant negative correlation was found between OPG plasma levels and femoral neck/lumbar spine bone mineral density. CONCLUSIONS: We have demonstrated that IBD is associated with alterations in the RANKL/OPG system. Applying results from a murine model of colitis associated bone loss, the constellation of OPG and sRANKL regulation observed in our study raises the possibility that RANKL/OPG may contribute to the development of bone loss in IBD.  相似文献   

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AIM: To investigate the probable role of soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (sTREM-1) in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). METHODS: Fifty-eight patients were enrolled; nineteen healthy volunteers served as controls; 8 patients were diagnosed with Crohn's disease, and 31 with ulcerative colitis. Clinical and endoscopic activity indexes of patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis respectively were estimated. Upon admission blood was sampled; sTREM-1 and TNFαwere measured by an immunoassay and malondialdehyde (MDA) by the thiobarbitourate assay, after passage through an HPLC system. RESULTS: Median±SE of TNFαof controls, patients with Crohn's disease and patients with ulcerative colitis were 6.02±3.94, 7.98±5.08 (P = NS vs controls), and 8.45±4.15 ng/L (P = 0.018 vs controls) respectively. Respective values of sTREM-1 were 53.31±32.93, 735.10±197.17 (P = 0.008 vs controls) and 435.82±279.71 ng/L (P = 0.049 vs controls). sTREM-1 was positively correlated with Crohn's disease activity index and clinical and endoscopic activity indexes of ulcerative colitis (P = 0.002, 0.001 and 0.009, respectively). sTREM-1 of patients with ulcerative colitis was positively correlated with TNFa (P = 0.001). CONCLUSION: sTREM-1 seems to behave as a novel mediator in IBD in correlation with the degree of the inflammatory reaction of the intestinal mucosa.  相似文献   

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Recent studies have suggested that nitric oxide (NO.), the product of nitric oxide synthase in inflammatory cells, may play a part in tissue injury and inflammation through its oxidative metabolism. In this study the colonic generation of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and nitric oxide synthase activity was determined in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Colonic biopsy specimens were obtained from inflammatory bowel disease patients and from normal controls. Mucosal explants were cultured in vitro for 24 hours and NOx generation was determined. Nitric oxide synthase activity was monitored by the conversion of [3H]-L-arginine to citrulline. Median NOx generation by inflamed colonic mucosa of patients with active ulcerative colitis and Crohn's colitis was 4.2- and 8.1-fold respectively higher than that by normal human colonic mucosa. In ulcerative colitis and Crohn's colitis nitric oxide synthase activity was 10.0- and 3.8-fold respectively higher than in normal subjects. Colonic NOx generation is significantly decreased by methylprednisolone and ketotifen. The decrease in NOx generation by cultured colonic mucosa induced by methylprednisolone suggests that NO synthase activity is induced during the culture and the steroid effect may contribute to its therapeutic effect. Enhanced colonic NOx generation by stimulated nitric oxide synthase activity in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease may contribute to tissue injury.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Measles virus is implicated in the aetiology of Crohn's disease. This measles hypothesis is mainly supported by immunohistochemical findings that the measles related antigen is present in the intestine of patients with Crohn's disease. Recently we isolated this antigen from the intestine of a patient with Crohn's disease using a molecular cloning technique and produced the monoclonal antibody against it (designated 4F12). AIM: To discover whether the measles related antigen is uniquely present in Crohn's disease. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Colonic mucosa samples from 20 patients with Crohn's disease, 20 with ulcerative colitis, 11 with non-inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) colitis, and nine controls were immunohistochemically stained with the anti-measles monoclonal antibody 4F12. The numbers of positive cells, the ratio of positive cells to nucleated cells, and the staining intensity of the positive cells were compared. Furthermore, the distribution of the measles antigen in other human organs was examined. RESULTS: Both the number of positive cells and the ratio of positive cells to nucleated cells were significantly increased in Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and non-IBD colitis compared with controls (p<0.05) but were similar among the three disease groups. The staining intensity of the positive cells was also similar among the three disease groups. Small numbers of positive cells were observed in the oesophagus, stomach, duodenum, jejunum, and lung. CONCLUSIONS: The presence of the measles related antigen in the colonic mucosa was not unique to Crohn's disease. These results, together with the observation that such a measles related antigen was derived from host protein, do not support the hypothesis that measles virus causes Crohn's disease.  相似文献   

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OBJECTIVE: A dysregulated local immune defence with a constant influx of leucocytes provides a basis for continuous intestinal inflammation in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Since vascular adhesion protein 1 (VAP-1) is one of the adhesion molecules that mediates lymphocyte binding to endothelium, we investigated the levels of soluble VAP-1 (sVAP-1) in the sera of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients compared with healthy controls. METHODS: sVAP-1 serum levels were measured in 161 IBD patients (90 ulcerative colitis, 71 Crohn's disease) and 93 controls using a commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). sVAP-1 levels were correlated with disease activity and localization. In 42 patients, sVAP-1 levels were measured in both the active and inactive phases of the disease. RESULTS: sVAP-1 serum levels were detected in all control and IBD subjects. Mean sVAP-1 levels were 365.5 +/- 153.5 ng/ml in ulcerative colitis patients, 336.4 +/- 172.8 ng/ml in Crohn's disease patients, and 344.7 +/- 150.4 ng/ml in healthy controls. The differences between the groups were not significant. No association between disease activity or disease localization and sVAP-1 was found. CONCLUSIONS: sVAP-1 serum concentrations are not significantly different in IBD and healthy control subjects. sVAP-1 serum levels are of no value in the assessment of disease activity or severity of inflammation in patients with IBD.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Crohn's disease is associated with an increased number of macrophages in ileal and colonic mucosa. Data on macrophages in gut mucosa of patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA) are scarce. OBJECTIVE: To investigate macrophages and other antigen presenting cells in gut mucosa from patients with SpA and Crohn's disease, given the relationship between both entities. METHODS: Biopsy specimens from patients with SpA, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and from controls were immunohistochemically stained with different markers for macrophages and dendritic cells. Slides were scored semiquantitatively on a four point scale. RESULTS: SpA and Crohn's disease were associated with large numbers of CD68+ macrophages. Colon mucosa of both patients with SpA and Crohn's disease, but not ulcerative colitis, showed increased numbers of macrophages expressing the scavenger receptor CD163. CONCLUSIONS: Macrophages expressing the scavenger receptor CD163 are increased in colonic mucosa in SpA and in Crohn's disease, highlighting the relationship between these entities. The increased number of CD163+ macrophages in colon mucosa of patients with SpA suggests this is another argument for a role of macrophage scavenger receptors in this group of diseases.  相似文献   

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