1.Human Parvovirus B19 and Rheumatoid Arthritis in Korea.
The Journal of the Korean Rheumatism Association 2001;8(1):14-19
BACKGROUND: The pathogenic human parvovirus B19 is the etiologic agent of erythema infectiosum and causes other events including aplastic crisis,hydrops fetalis and fetal loss.Recently,it has been reported in many articles that human parvovirus B19 infection is associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).In contrast to these reports from the United Kingdom,Germany,Japan and China,different results were reported that there is no association between human parvovirus B19 and the pathogenesis of RA in Northern Ireland,Finland and France.This study aimed to investigate the association between human parvovirus B19 and RA in Korea. METHODS: Sera from 104 patients with RA,40 with osteoarthritis (OA)and 32 with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)were tested for IgG and IgM of human parvovirus B19 by ELISA (Biotrin),respectively. RESULTS: There were no statistical differences among RA,OA and SLE patients in both anti-human parvovirus B19 IgG and IgM (p>0.05).Human parvovirus B19 IgM was positive in only four RA patients and negative in all SLE and OA patients. CONCLUSION: Human parvovirus B19 infection showed no association with RA in Korea,which is different from reports from other countries,especially Japan and China which are our neighbors.We thought that this result was due to the ethnic or national differences of baseline titer of anti-human parvovirus B19.Therefore anti-human parvovirus B19 test for RA patients is not necessary in Korea.In conclusion,we suggest that the indication and interpretation of anti-human parvovirus B19 testing in RA patients should be applied differently for each nation.
Arthritis, Rheumatoid*
;
China
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Erythema Infectiosum
;
Humans*
;
Immunoglobulin G
;
Immunoglobulin M
;
Japan
;
Korea*
;
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic
;
Osteoarthritis
;
Parvovirus
;
Parvovirus B19, Human*
2.Does Human Parvovirus B19 have a Role in the Formation of the Anemia and the Disease Activity in Rheumatoid Arthritis?.
Korean Journal of Clinical Pathology 2001;21(4):287-291
BACKGROUND: The pathogenic human parvovirus B19 replicates only in erythroid progenitor cells. The blood-group P antigen has been reported to be the cellular receptor of this virus. Human parvovirus B19 is known to be the etiologic agent of erythema infectiosum and causes a chronic anemia resulting from a persistent infection in immunocompromised patients. Recently, it has been re-ported to play a role in rheumatoid arthritis activity (RA). This study was aimed to determine whether human parvovirus B19 has a role to play in chronic anemia of RA which is the case in immunocompromised patients. We also investigated the association between the activity of the disease in RA and human parvovirus B19 infections. METHODS: Of 107 patients that had RA, 49 patients had anemia and 58 patients did not. We used ESR and CRP results to estimate the degree of disease activity. Thirty-eight patients having RA had a normal ESR and 69 patients had a high ESR. Sixty patients had normal CRP and 47 patients had high CRP. Sera of patients were tested for the presence of anti-human parvovirus B19 (IgG and IgM) using ELISA (Biotrin, Co. Dublin, Ireland). RESULTS: Of 107 patients who had RA, 79.4% (85/107) and 3.7% (4/107) were positive for IgG and IgM, respectively. There were no statistical differences between RA patients with anemia and those without anemia in the anti-human parvovirus B19 test (P>0.05). There were also no statistical differences between patients that had a normal or high ESR/CRP ratio (P>0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Human parvovirus B19 did not play a role in the formation of the chronic anemia of RA which is different from the cases of immunocompromised patients. Furthermore, we found no association between disease activity in RA and human parvovirus B19 infections.
Anemia*
;
Arthritis, Rheumatoid*
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Erythema Infectiosum
;
Erythroid Precursor Cells
;
Humans*
;
Immunocompromised Host
;
Immunoglobulin G
;
Immunoglobulin M
;
Parvovirus
;
Parvovirus B19, Human*
3.Diagnostic Availability of the Soluble Transferrin Receptor in RA Patients.
Lae Hee CHUN ; Think You KIM ; Hye Rim LEE ; Woong Soo LEE
Korean Journal of Clinical Pathology 1998;18(3):420-424
BACKGROUND: The transferrin receptor (TfR) is expressed on almost all cellular surfaces and is shedded into the blood to form the soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR). The sTfR has been known to be a good marker to reflect cellular iron status and to differentiate between iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and anemia of chronic disease (ACD) without the need for a bone marrow aspiration in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. So we aimed to evaluate the diagnostic availability of sTfR in patients with RA and degenerative joint disease (DJD). METHODS: Eighty-seven outpatients visiting the Department of Rheumatology at HYUH were studied and divided into anemic and non-anemic groups according to their Hb levels (female< 12 g/dL, male< 14 g/dL). The sTfR was measured by ELISA method (Quantikine IVDTM, R&D system). To differentiate whether the anemia was due to iron deficiency or other causes, we used the RBC parameters and a discriminant index which was calculated from serum iron, ferritin and TIBC instead of a bone marrow aspiration, an invasive procedure of which interpretation can be subjective. RESULTS: The median was higher (31.09 nM) than the normal reference values (9-28 nM) only in the anemic group of RA. The medians were within normal limit in all the other groups. sTfR levels were high in 15 of the 28 RA anemic patients which were composed of 10 patients with IDA, 4 with non-anemic RA and 1 with non-anemic RA & DJD. CONCLUSIONS: In the present study, sTfR was increased not only in IDA but also in ACD of RA patients and also in non-anemic patients, which showed that sTfR cannot be used to differentiate these two types of anemia by itself and the further tests are needed. We conclude that the expression of TfR in RA patients was dependent not only on iron deficiency but also on the disease itself.
Anemia
;
Anemia, Iron-Deficiency
;
Arthritis, Rheumatoid
;
Bone Marrow
;
Chronic Disease
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Ferritins
;
Humans
;
Iron
;
Joint Diseases
;
Outpatients
;
Receptors, Transferrin*
;
Reference Values
;
Rheumatology
;
Transferrin*
4.Epidemiologic study of viral respiratory infection in children and comparison between the direct and indirect immunofluorescent assay.
Lae Hee CHUN ; Jung Oak KANG ; Doh Sik MINN ; Ile Kyu PARK ; Jae Won OH ; Tae Yeal CHOI
Korean Journal of Clinical Pathology 1999;19(4):433-439
BACKGROUND: Studies on the incidence and seasonality of respiratory viruses that are the main cause of lower respiratory tract disease in children are insufficient in Korea. In the present study, the epidemiology of respiratory viruses in children was studied during the last 2 years and, the indirect immunofluorescent (IF) method was compared with the direct IF method. METHODS: A total of 814 pediatric inpatients hospitalized for lower respiratory tract infection at Hanyang University Hospital were studied from April, 1996 to July, 1998. Nasopharyngeal aspirates were obtained from these patients and indirect IF (Respiratory Panel I Viral Screening & Identification Kit, Light Diagnostics, Chemicon, Temecula, CA, USA) was performed for the following viruses : respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), parainfluenza virus type I, II and III, influenza virus A, B, and adenovirus. Sixty-nine of these samples were tested by direct IF (IMAGENTM, DAKO, UK) and indirect IF, simultaneously. RESULTS: 1) Viral pathogens were detected in 30.5% of nasopharyngeal aspirates. Among the positive cases, RSV was 60.6%, influenza A 35.3%, adenovirus 5.2%, influenza B 4.0%, and parainfluenza II 0.8%. 2) The occurrence rate of RSV in spring, summer, fall and winter was 7.3%, 13.6%, 31.45%, 33.45%, respectively, and showed a unique pattern in that the incidence rate in the summer of 1997 was 22.2%. A unique pattern was also observed for influenza A, which was continuously detected from December 1997 to July 1998. 3) The positive rate of indirect IF was statistically higher than that of direct IF. Excluding the results of the influenza A, there was no statistically significant difference between the two methods. CONCLUSION: RSV was the most frequently detected virus in viral respiratory infections in children. Infection usually began in the fall and most frequently detected in the winter and lasted until spring. High incidence of RSV in summer 1997 and continuous detection of influenza A till summer 1997 suggest some change of epidemic pattern. The discordance between direct and indirect IF was probably due to the difference in quality of the anti-influenza A reagent rather than a real difference in the two methods.
Adenoviridae
;
Child*
;
Epidemiologic Studies*
;
Epidemiology
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Influenza, Human
;
Inpatients
;
Korea
;
Mass Screening
;
Orthomyxoviridae
;
Paramyxoviridae Infections
;
Respiratory Syncytial Viruses
;
Respiratory Tract Diseases
;
Respiratory Tract Infections
;
Seasons
5.A Case of Chronic Granulomatous Disease in which Enterococci were Observed in Culture.
Kyung Lae CHO ; Jeong Hee KIM ; Eun Jeong KIM ; Chur Woo YOO ; Chun Soo KIM ; Un Seok NHO ; Chul Kyu KIM
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 2000;43(6):846-850
Chronic granulomatous disease(CGD) is a genetically inherited disorder caused by the failure of phagocytic cells to produce superoxide. It is characterized by frequent and uncontrollable infection which often lead to death in early childhood. The first clinical signs may be confined to skin and manifest themselves as abscesses, pyoderma, eczema or draining sinuses. The disease was first reported in 1957 and thereafter the biomolecular mechanism has been found. The first report in Korea was an autopsy case in 1979 and since then there have been a few case reports. This disease is diagnosed by symptoms, such as high fever, cervical lymphadenopathy, skin nodule, lung field infiltration, periumbilical abscess, liver abscess, pyoderma and pericordal abscess. The pathogen here were catalase producing bacteria and fungi. However, we have experienced a case of CGD, in which symptoms were perianal, scrotal abscesses and lung field nodular infiltration. In this case the pathogen was found as a catalase negative Enterococcus. (J Korean Pediatr Soc 2000;43-846-850)
Abscess
;
Autopsy
;
Bacteria
;
Catalase
;
Eczema
;
Enterococcus
;
Fever
;
Fungi
;
Granulomatous Disease, Chronic*
;
Korea
;
Liver Abscess
;
Lung
;
Lymphatic Diseases
;
Phagocytes
;
Pyoderma
;
Skin
;
Superoxides
6.Detection of Cytokine Gene Expression in Ovarian Cancer Tissues.
Sung Hee JEONG ; Sang Sik CHUN ; Young Lae CHO ; Taek Hoo LEE ; Youn Joo JEONG ; hang Jin KIM ; Jung Chul KIM
Korean Journal of Gynecologic Oncology and Colposcopy 1994;5(3):29-38
The variable clinical responses seen with rnost cancer immunotherapy suggests that there is a large interindividual variation in immunoiogic response to tumors. One of the key functional parameter.s of an immune response is the loca1 production of cytokines. These multifunctional cytokines have been implicated in growth stimulation and cytotoxicity of ovarian tumor celle. To determine the presence and quantities of cytokines in ovarian cancer tissue, the cons-titutive expression of cytokine mRNA in biopsies from epithelial ovarian carcinomas was determined by using a PCR-assisted mRNA amplification asssy(RT-PCR). Using a set of cytokine-specific primers for 14 different cytokines, distinctive patterns of cytokine gene expression between normal and malignant ovarian tissues could be found. Several cytokines were detected even in the norma1 ovarian tissue including IL-1A, IL-8, TGF-A, TGF-B, GM-CSF, and IL,-2R. In case of the ovarian cancer, the signals were more intense than normal and we could detect the expression of some other cytokines, such as IL-1B, IL- 4, IL-6, IL-l0, TNF, and INF-T, which could not be detected in normal tissue. The presence of eytokines in ovarian cancer tissue could be impartant in the growth and development of cancer, more specifically, in relation to host immune responsiveness.
Biopsy
;
Cytokines
;
Gene Expression*
;
Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor
;
Growth and Development
;
Immunotherapy
;
Interleukin-6
;
Interleukin-8
;
Ovarian Neoplasms*
;
RNA, Messenger
7.Evaluation of Frozen Antibiotics for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing of Helicobacter Pylori.
Lae Hee CHUN ; Jung Oak KANG ; Sun E KIM ; Ile Kyu PARK
Korean Journal of Clinical Microbiology 1999;2(1):49-53
BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Helicobacter pylori(H. pylori) is not yet standardized but broth dilution or agar dilution are considered as standard methods. In the broth microdilution method, antibiotic dilutions of different concentrations are made each time, but most of it is discarded because only small volumes of dilutions are used. To improve this tedious procedure and the waste of reagents, antibiotic solutions in 96-well microplates were frozen at -20 degrees C to evaluate their useful storage periods. METHODS: Various concentrations of metronidazole(MTZ) and clarithromycin(CLR) solutions were divided into ten plates of 96-well microplates, sealed and stored at -20 degrees C. The broth microdilution susceptibility test was done with fresh and preserved antibiotic dilutions each month on 5 occasions for 4 strains(initial minimum inhibitory concentration(MIC) for MTZ 1, 4, 16, 64 ug/mL, initial MIC for CLR <0.125, <0.125, <0.125, 32 ug/mL) of H. pylori. The difference of MIC values of more than +/-2 log2 diluti on was considered significant. RESULTS: For both MTZ and CLR, the difference of MIC values of fresh and frozen antibiotic solutions was within +/-1 log2 dilution and the results of susceptibility test were the same for 7 months. CONCLUSIONS: Various concentrations of frozen MTZ and CLR solutions could be used for at least 7 months for the antimicrobial susceptibility testing of H. pylori.
Agar
;
Anti-Bacterial Agents*
;
Clarithromycin
;
Helicobacter pylori*
;
Helicobacter*
;
Indicators and Reagents
;
Metronidazole
8.Usefulness of platelet factor 4 as an evaluation of hemocompatibility of artificial materials.
Seok Lae CHAE ; Han Ik CHO ; Dong Ho LEE ; Hee Sun CHUN ; Youg Joo CHA ; Seong Sup PARK ; Dong Keun HAN ; Young Ha KIM
Korean Journal of Hematology 1993;28(2):313-323
No abstract available.
Blood Platelets*
;
Platelet Factor 4*
9.Significance of Cathepsin-D Expression in Uterine Cervical Neoplasia.
Chun Hee LEE ; Sae Jin KIM ; Sang Sik CHUN ; Tack Hoo LEE ; Young Lae CHO ; Jong Min CHAE
Korean Journal of Gynecologic Oncology and Colposcopy 1997;8(4):357-362
Various clinical and histopathologic characteristics are currently used to obtain prognostic information about cervical carcinoma, but they do not predict accurately the outcome for any individual patients. Thus, there is a need to identify additional tumor characteristics that are able to predict more accurately the outcome for an individual patient with cervical cancer. In this study, we explored the relationship between cathepsin-D expression and progression of the cervical neoplasia, the correlation between response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and cathepsin-D expression, and we investigated if tumor cell cathepsin-D expression could serve as a prognostic factor in cervical carcinoma. Tumor tissues were obtained from 14 patients with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and 52 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. Cathepsin-D expression was identified by immunohistochemical methods using monoclonal antibody cathepsin-D (BioGene). Positive cathepsin-D immunoreaction in greater than 30% of carcinoma cells was scored as high expression High cathepsin-D expression was seen in 15 of 52 invasive cervical cancer but was absent in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. It was shown that cathepsin-D expression was independent of the tumor grade, tumor size, lymph node involvement, depth of invasion, parametrial invasion, and response to chemotherapy. In disease free survival analysis by log-rank test, cathepsin-D expression was not significantly associated with survival. These results show that cathepsin-D expression is not a clinically useful adjunct to assessment of prognosis in invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix.
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
;
Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia
;
Cervix Uteri
;
Disease-Free Survival
;
Drug Therapy
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Lymph Nodes
;
Prognosis
;
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
10.Polymorphism of IL-1beta; IL-1Ra, TNF-alpha Cytokine Genes in Korean Patients with Glomerulonephritis.
Mina PARK ; Yang Il KANG ; Sang Youl RHEE ; Lae Ik JEONG ; Seung Yeon NA ; Kyung Hwan JEONG ; Sang Ho LEE ; Tae Won LEE ; Chun Gyoo IHM
Korean Journal of Nephrology 2006;25(2):221-228
BACKGOUND: Recently it has been reported that several cytokine gene polymorphisms regulate cytokine production and play an important role in immune and inflammatory response. We evaluated IL-1beta IL-1Ra, and TNF-alpha gene polymorphism in patients with primary glomerulonephritis to determine the association between cytokine polymorphism and disease susceptibility. METHODS: In this study, we enrolled 118 patients with primary glomerulonephritis and healthy 300 persons who had visited the health screening center. We analyzed -511C/T polymorphism of IL-1beta tandem repeats polymorphism in intron 2 of IL-1Ra and -308G/A polymorphism of TNF-alpha We classified primary glomerulonephritis according to pathologic finding and clinical diagnosis. RESULTS: There were no differences with IL-1betaand TNF-alpha gene polymorphism between patient and control group. The carriage of IL1RN*2 was significantly associated with an increased risk of primary glomerulonephritis (patients:control=12.75:5.4%, p<0.01). IL1RN*2 was significantly frequent in patients with membranous GN or minimal change disease (p<0.05). When we classified glomerulonephritis according to clinical diagnosis, IL1RN*2 carriage rate was higher in patients with nephrotic syndrome and RPGN or acute nephritic syndrome than patients with asymptomatic urinary abnormalities (p<0.05). IL-1beta(TT) genotype was more prevalent in acute glomerulonephritis (68.4%) than asymptomatic urinary abnormalities or other glomerulonephritis. TNF2 carriage rate showed a lower tendency in patients with asymptomatic urinary abnormalities. CONCLUSION: IL1RN*2 is significantly associated with an increased risk of development of primary glomerulonephritis. We suggest cytokine gene polymorphism is also related to clinical manifestations of glumerulonephritis.
Diagnosis
;
Disease Susceptibility
;
Genotype
;
Glomerulonephritis*
;
Humans
;
Interleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist Protein*
;
Introns
;
Mass Screening
;
Nephrosis, Lipoid
;
Nephrotic Syndrome
;
Tandem Repeat Sequences
;
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha*