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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, 03 1995, 205-208, Vol 2, No. 2
MR O'Gorman, V Corrochano, J Roleck, M Donovan and LM Pachman
Juvenile dermatomyositis (JDMS) is a vasculopathy affecting primarily skin
and muscle. Although the etiology is unknown, immunopathogenetic mechanisms
appear to play a role in both the susceptibility to the disease and its
progression. We measured the percentage and absolute numbers of B cells and
T-cell subsets in the peripheral blood of untreated JDMS patients with
active early disease and compared the results with those obtained from a
study of peripheral blood obtained from a heatlhy age-related control
group. The absolute number of total lymphocytes in the peripheral blood of
the JDMS patients was significantly lower (P < 0.002) than that observed
in the healthy control population, with an associated decrease in the
absolute number of all T-cell subsets. No concomitant decrease in the
absolute number of B lymphocytes was observed in the JDMS patients. In
contrast, the percentage of B lymphocytes and the T-helper/T-suppressor
cell ratio were significantly higher in the JDMS group than in the control
group (P < 0.001 and P < 0.002, respectively). Retrospective analysis
of JDMS patients' serum samples obtained within 1 month of the flow
cytometric evaluation indicated that 79% of the sera contained an
antinuclear antibody and 46% had immunoglobulin G values above age-adjusted
reference ranges. The increased percentage of B cells, the increased T-
helper/T-suppressor cell ratio, the positive antinuclear antibody results,
and the increased concentration of serum immunoglobulin suggest that
humoral immune dysregulation may contribute to the pathogenesis of JDMS.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Flow cytometric analyses of the lymphocyte subsets in peripheral blood of children with untreated active juvenile dermatomyositis
Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60614.
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