30 research outputs found

    Synthetic peptides: the future of patient management in systemic rheumatic diseases?

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    Symposium: Advances in autoantibodies in SLE

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    [No abstract available

    AutoAbSC.Org -- Autoantibody Standardization Committee in 2006

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    The Autoantibody Standardization Committee was established in the early 1980s based on the recognized needs for reference human autoimmune sera that were critical for academic, clinical, and industrial laboratories. To date, 14 reference reagents are available without charge from the Biological Reference Reagents distribution center at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A web site has been developed under "AutoAbSC.Org" to communicate to the wider stakeholder community and to facilitate ongoing activities in continuing the mission in autoantibody standardization

    Antibodies to fibrin-bound tissue-type plasminogen activator in systemic lupus erythematosus are associated with Raynaud's phenomenon and thrombosis

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    Fibrinolysis triggered by t-PA bound to fibrin is one of the main antithrombotic mechanisms. Defects in the fibrinolytic system - decreased tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) activity and elevated levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), in patients with SLE have been associated with an increased tendency to thrombosis. In the present study, 43 patients with SLE fulfilling the ACR criteria for the disease, were studied for the presence of autoantibodies to fibrin-bound t-PA, i.e. the physiological active form of this plasminogen activator. A solution of 200 IU/ml of t-PA was incubated with solid-phase fibrin prepared as previously described. Sera diluted 1:50 were incubated with fibrin-bound t-PA, the plates were then washed, and bound immunoglobulins were detected using a polyvalent peroxidase-labeled goat anti-human Ig. Plates coated with fibrin alone were used as controls. Sera were considered positive when A490/630 obtained with normal human sera in two independent test was greater than the mean plus 2 SD. Eleven of 43 (26%) SLE sera demonstrated antibody reactivity against fibrin-bound t-PA. Within the anti-t-PA positive group there was a higher proportion of SLE patients with severe Raynaud's phenomenon and thrombotic events when compared to the anti-t-PA negative group: 36% vs 6% and 18% vs 6%, respectively. These results suggest that autoantibodies to fibrin-bound t-PA could play a role in the pathogenesis of vascular disease in some SLE patients
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