Clinical Correlates of Circulating Immune Complexes in Patients with Recent Yersiniosis

Circulating immune complexes (CICs) and rheumatoid factor were studied in 31 patients with serologically confirmed yersiniosis (12 in a pilot series and 19 in a prospective series). Yersiniosis is an intestinal infection complicated occasionally by extraintestinal symptoms such as aseptic arthritis....

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of infectious diseases 1983-08, Vol.148 (2), p.223-229
Hauptverfasser: Kekomäki, R., Granfors, K., Leino, R., Penttinen, K., Lindström, P.-L., Wager, O.
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container_end_page 229
container_issue 2
container_start_page 223
container_title The Journal of infectious diseases
container_volume 148
creator Kekomäki, R.
Granfors, K.
Leino, R.
Penttinen, K.
Lindström, P.-L.
Wager, O.
description Circulating immune complexes (CICs) and rheumatoid factor were studied in 31 patients with serologically confirmed yersiniosis (12 in a pilot series and 19 in a prospective series). Yersiniosis is an intestinal infection complicated occasionally by extraintestinal symptoms such as aseptic arthritis. Four tests representing three main principles (affinity of human platelets and of Clq for complexed IgG and of conglutinin for C3) were used for the detection of CICs, which were found in all patients. Fifty-five of 62 specimens of serum from the prospective series of 19 patients reacted positively in at least one test. The conglutinin-binding assay and the platelet-125-I-labelcd staphylococcal protein A test gave positive results most frequently (74% and 84% of the time). Mean levels of CICs were significantly higher in patients with prolonged gastroenteritis than in those with histocompatibility leukocyte antigen B27-positive arthritis. During follow-up, the mean level of CICs (as measured by the platelet-protein A test) decreased significantly in patients with arthritis, while CICs and rheumatoid factor persisted in patients with prolonged gastroenteritis.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/infdis/148.2.223
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Yersiniosis is an intestinal infection complicated occasionally by extraintestinal symptoms such as aseptic arthritis. Four tests representing three main principles (affinity of human platelets and of Clq for complexed IgG and of conglutinin for C3) were used for the detection of CICs, which were found in all patients. Fifty-five of 62 specimens of serum from the prospective series of 19 patients reacted positively in at least one test. The conglutinin-binding assay and the platelet-125-I-labelcd staphylococcal protein A test gave positive results most frequently (74% and 84% of the time). Mean levels of CICs were significantly higher in patients with prolonged gastroenteritis than in those with histocompatibility leukocyte antigen B27-positive arthritis. 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ispartof The Journal of infectious diseases, 1983-08, Vol.148 (2), p.223-229
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subjects Adult
Antibodies
Antigen antibody complex
Antigen-Antibody Complex - analysis
Antigens
Arthritis
Arthritis - etiology
Bacterial diseases
Bacterial diseases of the digestive system and abdomen
Biological and medical sciences
Clinical Investigation
Female
Gastroenteritis
HLA Antigens
HLA-B27 Antigen
Human bacterial diseases
Humans
Immunoglobulin A - analysis
Immunoglobulin G - analysis
Immunoglobulin M - analysis
Infections
Infectious diseases
Male
Medical sciences
Pipas
Platelets
Reactive arthritis
Rheumatoid Factor - analysis
Yersinia
Yersinia enterocolitica
Yersinia enterocolitica - immunology
Yersinia Infections - complications
Yersinia Infections - immunology
title Clinical Correlates of Circulating Immune Complexes in Patients with Recent Yersiniosis
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