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Characterization of the Leucocytic Infiltrate of Rheumatoid Synovium from Tissue Sections and Synovial Eluates

Authors :
Hadam M
Fritz P
Joachim Müller
J. G. Saal
Source :
Macrophages and Natural Killer Cells ISBN: 9781468443967
Publication Year :
1982
Publisher :
Springer US, 1982.

Abstract

Connective tissue diseases and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are characterized by polyclonal B-cell hyperreactivity associated with an oligoclonal, disease-related pattern of autoantibody production. The underlying defects in immune regulations may be found either in the peripheral blood or locally at sites of lymphocyte/plasma cell infiltration. Our interest has focused on the local microenvironment of the inflammed joint as the main site for RA. The dynamic changes in histopathology-cellular infiltration and fibroblast proliferation- characteristic of RA-synovitis require separate analysis of the different states of the disease. In contrast to the morphological approach, a functional analysis of joint inflammation requires isolating the infiltrating cells. In this study, we report first on the distribution of mononuclear and polymorphonuclear (PMN) phagocytes in paraffin sections of different stages of RA-synovitis. Second, infiltrating lymphocytes were isolated from RA-synovium and the cellular eluates analysed for T-cell subpopulations.

Details

ISBN :
978-1-4684-4396-7
ISBNs :
9781468443967
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Macrophages and Natural Killer Cells ISBN: 9781468443967
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........26aa87bd98a8bc9871523691f43f4d0f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-4394-3_34