554 resultados para CROHN


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TNF-alpha neutralising agents such as Infliximab (Remicade(R)), Etanercept (Enbrel(R)) and the IL-1 receptor antagonist Anakinra (Kineret(R)), are currently used clinically for the treatment of many inflammatory diseases such as Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. These protein preparations are expensive to manufacture and administer, need to be injected and can cause allergic reactions. An alternative approach to lowering the levels of TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta in inflammatory disease, is to inhibit the enzymes that generate these cytokines using cheaper small molecules. This paper is a broad overview of the progress that has been achieved so far, with respect to small molecule inhibitor design and pharmacological studies (in animals and humans), for the metalloprotease Tumour Necrosis Factor-alpha Converting Enzyme (TACE) and the cysteine protease Caspase-1 (Interieukin-1 beta Converting Enzyme, ICE). Inhibitors of these two enzymes are currently considered to be good therapeutic targets that have the potential to provide relatively inexpensive and orally bioavailable anti-inflammatory agents in the future.

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IL-1 is a key proinflammatory driver of several autoimmune diseases including juvenile inflammatory arthritis, diseases with mutations in the NALP/cryopyrin complex and Crohn's disease, and is genetically or clinically associated with many others. IL-1 is a pleiotropic proinflammatory cytokine; however the mechanisms by which increased IL-1 signaling promotes autoreactive T cell activity are not clear. Here we show that autoimmune-prone NOD and IL-1 receptor antagonist-deficient C57BL/6 mice both produce high levels of IL-1, which drives autoreactive effector cell expansion. IL-1 beta drives proliferation and cytokine production by CD4(+)CD25(+)FoxP3(-) effector/memory T cells, attenuates CD4(+)CD25(+)FoxP3(+) regulatory T cell function, and allows escape of CD4(+)CD25(-) autoreactive effectors from suppression. Thus, inflammation or constitutive overexpression of IL-1 beta in a genetically predisposed host can promote autoreactive effector T cell expansion and function, which attenuates the ability of regulatory T cells to maintain tolerance to self.

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Indomethacin administration in animals increases permeability of the small intestine, leading to inflammation that mimics Crohn`s disease. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs increase the permeability of the intestinal epithelial barrier and should therefore be used with caution in patients with Crohn`s disease. We analyzed the protective effects of octreotide and the tumor necrosis factor-alpha inhibitor infliximab in a rat model of indomethacin-induced enterocolitis. Male Wistar rats received 20 mg of infliximab or 10 mu g of octreotide 24 h prior to injection with indomethacin. Intestinal permeability was analyzed using Cr-51-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid clearance. No microscopic or macroscopic alterations were observed in the rats receiving infliximab or octreotide, both of which increased permeability (P < 0.001 versus controls). Our macroscopic and microscopic findings might be related to the low specificity of infliximab and suggest that cytokines affect the intestinal epithelial barrier, as evidenced by the protective effect that infliximab had on the permeability parameters evaluated.

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) comprises two chronic, tissue-destructive, clinical entities: Crohn`s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), both immunologically based. Bowel symptoms are predominant, but extra-intestinal complications may occur, including involvement of the oral cavity. Oral involvement during IBD includes several types of lesions: the most common are aphthae; uncommon lesions include, among others, pyostomatitis vegetans and granulomatous lesions of CD. Starting with a presentation of six patients with oral manifestations, which were crucial for the final diagnosis of IBD, a review on the subject is presented. Oral involvement in IBD may be previous or simultaneous to the gastrointestinal symptoms. However, in the majority of cases, bowel disease precedes the onset of oral lesions by months or years. In many patients, the intestinal symptoms may be minimal and can go undetected; thus, most authors believe that the bowel must be thoroughly examined in all patients with suspected IBD even in the absence of specific symptoms. Usually, the clinical course of oral lesions is parallel to the activity of IBD; therefore, oral manifestations are a good cutaneous marker of IBD.

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IBD are a group of complex polygenetic diseases also involving environmental factors. Evidence for a role for bacteria in IBD include an increased abundance of mucosa-associated bacteria in IBD (which occurs even where there is no intestinal inflammation), and the positive impact of antibiotics on the progress of both Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) of the pouch - pouchitis. Bacteria are necessary for most animal models of IBD. The increased abundance of mucosal bacteria in IBD is not non-specific because while some mucosal bacteria are more abundant this is not the case for all mucosal bacteria including the very abundant Bacteroides vulgatus. On the other hand, antibiotic treatments are not curative, and the humoral immune Ig response to bacterial antigens which is more evident in CD, appears to be polyclonal. While this argues against a role for specific bacteria causing a classical infection, certain mucosal bacteria may damage the mucosal barrier. This would promote invasion by other commensal mucosal bacteria triggering an immune response. Altered adaptive, and to a lesser extent, innate immunity have been extensively studied, and genetic defects in the CARD15 (or NOD2) gene that encodes a bacterial sensing protein modulating innate and adaptive immunity are strongly associated with ileal CD. However, the penetrance of the homozygous CARD15 frameshift mutation, which is the most strongly CD-associated genotype, is very low with only 4% of humans with this developing CD. Furthermore, mice with the same defects in CARD15 do not develop spontaneous ileitis or colitis. Therefore, there have to be other aetiological factor(s). Altered permeability is a consistent finding in subclinical CD. There are other data to suggest that altered mucin is an early event in UC. We propose that the pathogenesis of IBD is multifactorial involving specific mucosal bacteria, defective barrier function and altered mucosal immunity in an aetiology triangle.

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OBJECTIVE: Dendritic cells (DC) are the only antigen-presenting cells that can activate naive T lymphocytes and initiate a primary immune response. They are also thought to have a role in immune tolerance. DC traffic from the blood to peripheral tissue where they become activated. They then present antigen and the costimulating signals necessary to initiate an immune response. In this study, we investigated the number, subsets, and activation pattern of circulating and intestinal DC from patients with clinically mild ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn's disease. METHODS: Patients were recruited, if they were not taking immunosuppressive therapy, and were assessed for clinical severity of their disease using for UC, the Clinical Activity Index, and for Crohn's disease, the Crohn's Disease Activity Index. Blood CD11c(+) and CD11c(-) DC subsets, expression of costimulatory antigens, CD86 and CD40, and the early differentiation/activation antigen, CMRF44, were enumerated by multicolor flow cytometry of lineage negative (lin(-) = CD3(-), CD19(-), CD14(-), CD16(-)) HLA-DR+ DC. These data were compared with age-matched healthy and the disease control groups of chronic noninflammatory GI diseases (cGI), acute noninflammatory GI diseases (aGI), and chronic non-GI inflammation (non-GI). In addition, cryostat sections of colonoscopic biopsies from healthy control patients and inflamed versus noninflamed gut mucosa of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients were examined for CD86(+) and CD40(+)lin(-) cells. RESULTS: Twenty-one Crohn's disease and 25 UC patients, with mean Crohn's Disease Activity Index of 98 and Clinical Activity Index of 3.1, and 56 healthy controls, five cGI, five aGI, and six non-GI were studied. CD11c(+) and CD11c(-) DC subsets did not differ significantly between Crohn's, UC, and healthy control groups. Expression of CD86 and CD40 on freshly isolated blood DC from Crohn's patients appeared higher (16.6%, 31%) and was significantly higher in UC (26.6%, 46.3%) versus healthy controls (5.5%, 25%) (p = 0.004, p = 0.012) and non-GI controls (10.2%, 22.8%) (p = 0.012, p = 0.008), but not versus cGI or aGI controls. CD86(+) and CD40(+) DC were also present in inflamed colonic and ileal mucosa from UC and Crohn's patients but not in noninflamed IBD mucosa or normal mucosa. Expression of the CMRF44 antigen was low on freshly isolated DC, but it was upregulated after 24-h culture on DC from all groups, although significantly less so on DC from UC versus Crohn's or healthy controls (p = 0.024). The CMRF44(+) antigen was mainly associated with CD11c(+) DC, and in UC was inversely related to the Clinical Activity Index (r = -0.69, p = 0.0002). CONCLUSIONS: There is upregulation of costimulatory molecules on blood DC even in very mild IBD but surprisingly, there is divergent expression of the differentiation/activation CMRF44 antigen. Upregulation of costimulatory molecules and divergent expression of CMRF44 in blood DC was also apparent in cGI and aGI but not in non-GI or healthy controls, whereas intestinal CD86(+) and CD40(+) DC were found only in inflamed mucosa from IBD patients. Persistent or distorted activation of blood DC or divergent regulation of costimulatory and activation antigens may have important implications for gut mucosal immunity and inflammation. (Am J Gastroenterol 2001;96:2946-2956. (C) 2001 by Am. Coll. of Gastroenterology).

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A síndrome de Melkerson-Rosenthal (SMR) caracteriza-se por edema orofacial, paralisia facial recorrente e língua plicada. A tríade completa é incomum, com freqüência variando de 8 a 25%, sendo que a apresentação mais comum é a presença de somente um sintoma. A queixa mais freqüente é o edema facial e/ou no lábio. No presente relato, descreve-se o caso de uma jovem, 17 anos, com edema no lábio persistente e língua plicada devido à SMR. A paciente informou que o edema e as alterações na língua haviam se iniciado há 2 anos. Tratamentos prévios haviam sido realizados, porém sem sucesso. Propôs-se a injeção intralesional de 20mg de triancinolona a cada 15 dias, associada a 5mg ao dia de clofazimine por três meses. O lábio voltou ao seu aspecto normal após quatro infiltrações da medicação. Estudos recentes têm considerado a SMR como uma doença granulomatosa, sendo a fase inicial da apresentação orofacial da Doença de Crohn em alguns pacientes. Assim, pacientes com SMR deveriam ser avaliados e seguidos quanto à presença de sintomas gastroenterológicos. O tratamento com corticosteróides tem se mostrado efetivo em reduzir a tumefação do lábio associada a essa doença. Discute-se características clínicas, tratamento e importância da terapia com corticosteróides na paralisia facial associada à SMR.

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The human eukaryotic release factor 3a (eRF3a), encoded by the G1 to S phase transition 1 gene (GSPT1; alias eRF3a), is upregulated in various human cancers. GSPT1 contains a GGCn polymorphism in exon 1, encoding a polyglycine expansion in the N-terminal of the protein. The longer allele, GGC12, was previously shown to be associated to cancer. The GGC12 allele was present in 2.2% of colorectal cancer patients but was absent in Crohn disease patients and in the control group. Real-time quantitative RT-PCR analysis showed that the GGC12 allele was present at up to 10-fold higher transcription levels than the GGC10 allele (P < 0.001). No GSPT1 amplifications were detected, and there was no correlation between the length of the alleles and methylation levels of the CpG sites inside the GGC expansion. Using flow cytometry, we compared the levels of apoptosis and proliferation rates between cell lines with different genotypes, but detected no significant differences. Finally, we used a cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay to evaluate the frequency of micronuclei in the same cell lines. Cell lines with the longer alleles had higher frequencies of micronuclei in binucleated cells, which is probably a result of defects in mitotic spindle formation. Altogether, these findings indicate that GSPT1 should be considered a potential proto-oncogene.

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Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are lifelong disorders predominantly present in developed countries. In their pathogenesis, an interaction between genetic and environmental factors is involved. This practice guide, prepared on behalf of the European Society of Pathology and the European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation, intends to provide a thorough basis for the histological evaluation of resection specimens and biopsy samples from patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. Histopathologically, these diseases are characterised by the extent and the distribution of mucosal architectural abnormality, the cellularity of the lamina propria and the cell types present, but these features frequently overlap. If a definitive diagnosis is not possible, the term indeterminate colitis is used for resection specimens and the term inflammatory bowel disease unclassified for biopsies. Activity of disease is reflected by neutrophil granulocyte infiltration and epithelial damage. The evolution of the histological features that are useful for diagnosis is time- and disease-activity dependent: early disease and long-standing disease show different microscopic aspects. Likewise, the histopathology of childhood-onset IBD is distinctly different from adult-onset IBD. In the differential diagnosis of severe colitis refractory to immunosuppressive therapy, reactivation of latent cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection should be considered and CMV should be tested for in all patients. Finally, patients with longstanding IBD have an increased risk for the development of adenocarcinoma. Dysplasia is the universally used marker of an increased cancer risk, but inter-observer agreement is poor for the categories low-grade dysplasia and indefinite for dysplasia. A diagnosis of dysplasia should not be made by a single pathologist but needs to be confirmed by a pathologist with expertise in gastrointestinal pathology.

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Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) have an excess risk of certain gastrointestinal cancers. Much work has focused on colon cancer in IBD patients, but comparatively less is known about other more rare cancers. The European Crohn's and Colitis Organization established a pathogenesis workshop to review what is known about these cancers and formulate proposals for future studies to address the most important knowledge gaps. This article reviews the current state of knowledge about small bowel adenocarcinoma, ileo-anal pouch and rectal cuff cancer, and anal/perianal fistula cancers in IBD patients.

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A "Pneumatosis Cystoides Intestinalis" é uma situação clínica rara que se caracteriza pela presença de múltiplos quistos de conteúdo gasoso ao nível da submucosa ou subserosa na parede do tracto gastrointestinal. A pneumatose intestinal classifica-se em idiopática e secundária. Na última forma admite-se uma relação causal com doença pulmonar obstrutiva crónica, conectivites, amiloidose, colites infecciosas, oclusão intestinal, isquémia, doença de Crohn, fármacos e iatrogenia cirúrgica e endoscópica. O espectro de manifestações clínicas compreende dor abdominal, oclusão intestinal, diarreia e hemorragia digestiva. Todavia, é frequentemente assintomática ou constitui um achado incidental no decurso de uma investigação não relacionada. Os autores apresentam o caso clínico de uma doente com pneumatose quística intestinal associada à utilização terapêutica de um antidiabético oral - acarbose (inibidor da alfa-glucosidase).

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Apresentamos o caso clínico de um doente de vinte e um anos, sexo masculino, raça branca, toxicodependente, que se queixou, no Serviço de Urgência, de febre, emagrecimento, dor abdominal e diarreia. Foi excluído o diagnóstico inicial de apendicite. Baseados nos estudos radiológicos e endoscópicos, foi feito o diagnóstico de doença de Crohn ileo-cecal e iniciado tratamento com ácido 5-aminosalicílico e corticosteroides. Dada a má resposta clínica, foi adicionada 5-mercaptopurina. Seis semanas mais tarde, o doente ficou neutropénico e a febre reapareceu. Os radiogramas e tomografia computorizada (TC) revelaram um derrame pleural direito e uma lesão cavitada nodular no segmento posterior do lobo superior do pulmão direito. Foi realizada uma biópsia pleural e foram identificados bacilos álcool-ácido resistentes (BAAR). Foi iniciado tratamento específico para a tuberculose e as imagens pulmonares desapareceram, mas a febre e as dores abdominais persistiram.

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Introdução: A Doença de Crohn (DC), Colite Ulcerosa (CU) e Colite Indeterminada (CI), habitualmente designadas por Doença Inflamatória Intestinal (DII), representam um grupo heterogéneo de patologias crónicas, de etiologia desconhecida e evolução variável, podendo manifestar-se, em idade pediátrica, em cerca de 25 a 30% dos casos. Estudos epidemiológicos internacionais comprovam o aumento exponencial da sua incidência nos países industrializados, em particular da DC, nos últimos 50 anos. Objectivos: Caracterização da população pediátrica com o diagnóstico de DII, seguida na consulta de Gastrenterologia Infantil do Hospital de Dona Estefânia (HDE). Material e Métodos: Estudo descritivo e retrospectivo, mediante consulta de processos clínicos, de doentes com o diagnóstico de DII, entre 1987 e 2009 (23 anos). Utilizaram-se critérios clínicos, radiológicos e histológicos para a definição de DII. Foram estudadas as seguintes variáveis: caracterização da DII, sexo, antecedentes familiares, idade à data do diagnóstico, intervalo de tempo entre o início da sintomatologia e respectivo diagnóstico e apresentação clínica. Foram comparados quatro intervalos de tempo: 1987-1992, 1993-1998, 1999-2004 e 2005-2009. Resultados: Foram incluídas 100 crianças, 51 pertencentes ao sexo feminino, das quais 59% correspondem a DC, 38% a CU e 3% a CI. Verificou-se a presença de antecedentes familiares de DII em sete casos, não se verificando diferença significativa de sexo entre a CU e a DC. No período compreendido entre 2005 e 2009 foi registado o maior número de novos casos (55 no total; média: 11 casos/ano) e entre 1987 e 1992 registou-se o menor número de novos casos (9; 1,5 casos/ano). O intervalo de tempo que decorreu entre o início dos sintomas e o diagnóstico de DII variou entre nove meses (1987-1992) e quatro meses (2005-2009). A idade no momento do diagnóstico variou entre os 14 meses e os 17 anos, com um valor médio de 10,5 anos. A sintomatologia inaugural mais frequente foi a presença de dor abdominal, a diarreia e a hematoquézia. Conclusão: A DII engloba um grupo heterogéneo de patologias, nem sempre fáceis de diagnosticar ou classificar, dada a ausência de critérios de diagnóstico uniformes. Os resultados apresentados mostram o aumento do número de novos casos, na consulta de Gastrenterologia do HDE, nas últimas duas décadas, não se verificando diferença no que diz respeito ao sexo. O tempo que decorreu entre o início dos sintomas e o diagnóstico diminuiu ao longo dos anos, tendo permanecido inalterada a idade no momento do diagnóstico e a apresentação clínica.

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Background: Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) antagonists are effective in treating several immune-inflammatory diseases, including psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease. The paradoxical and unpredictable induction of psoriasis and psoriasiform skin lesions is a recognized adverse event, although of unclear aetiology. However, histological analysis of these eruptions remains insufficient, yet suggesting that some might constitute a new pattern of adverse drug reaction, rather than true psoriasis. Case report: The authors report the case of a 43-year-old woman with severe recalcitrant Crohn disease who started treatment with infliximab. There was also a personal history of mild plaque psoriasis without clinical expression for the past eight years. She developed a heterogeneous cutaneous eruption of psoriasiform morphology with pustules and crusts after the third infliximab infusion. The histopathological diagnosis was of a Sweet-like dermatosis. The patient was successfully treated with cyclosporine in association with both topical corticosteroid and vitamin D3 analogue. Three weeks after switching to adalimumab a new psoriasiform eruption was observed, histologically compatible with a psoriasiform drug eruption. Despite this, and considering the beneficial effect on the inflammatory bowel disease, it was decided to maintain treatment with adalimumab and to treat through with topicals, with progressive control of skin disease. Discussion: Not much is known about the pathogenesis of psoriasiform eruptions induced by biological therapies, but genetic predisposition and Koebner phenomenon may contribute to it. Histopathology can add new facets to the comprehension of psoriasiform reactions. In fact, histopathologic patterns of such skin lesions appear to be varied, in a clear asymmetry with clinical findings. Conclusion: The sequential identification in the same patient of two clinical and histopathologic patterns of drug reaction to TNFα antagonists is rare. Additionally, to the authors’ knowledge, there is only one other description in literature of a TNFα antagonist-induced Sweet-like dermatosis, emphasizing the singularity of this case report.