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Showing papers by "National Jewish Health published in 1986"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that this CRP score is useful for the estimation of the severity of underlying pathologic derangement and for the longitudinal quantitative assessment of clinical impairment in patients with IPF.
Abstract: In order to develop a reproducible, quantifiable means of assessment of the clinical status of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), a composite clinical-radiographic-physiologic (CRP) scoring system was devised, using 7 variables: dyspnea, chest radiograph, spirometry, lung volume, diffusion capacity, resting alveolar-arterial PO2, and exercise O2 saturation. To assess this scoring system, we examined the relationships between CRP scores and histopathologic findings, including a cellular pathology score composed of abnormalities deemed to be potentially reversible, a fibrotic pathology score based on abnormalities felt to be essentially irreversible, and an index of overall pathologic derangement (total pathology score), derived from the sum of the cellular and fibrotic scores. The initial CRP determination at the time of open lung biopsy correlated significantly with the total pathology score (r = 0.61, p less than 0.001). The CRP score determined after 6 months of corticosteroid therapy showed a significant correlation with the fibrotic pathology score present on open lung biopsy (r = 0.76, p less than 0.001). The change in CRP after 6 months of corticosteroid therapy tended to reflect the cellular histopathologic component of the open lung biopsy (r = -0.43, p less than 0.10). Moreover, in none of these relationships did any individual component of the CRP score correlate better with the respective histopathologic index than did the CRP score itself. These data suggest that this CRP score is useful for the estimation of the severity of underlying pathologic derangement and for the longitudinal quantitative assessment of clinical impairment in patients with IPF.

259 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results extend previous autoradiographic results and suggest that androgen receptors present in the mesenchymal compartment may be necessary for the expression of androgen-elicited responses in the TfmBLE that lacks androgens receptors.

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that interval changes in BALF neutrophil content may not reflect the status of the inflammatory process or structural derangements in the lungs of some patients with IPF and could be influenced by the combination of cigarette smoking and corticosteroid therapy.
Abstract: Patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) are often cigarette smokers and are often being treated with corticosteroids at the time of bronchoalveolar lavage. We addressed the question of whether or not the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) neutrophil content of patients with IPF undergoes changes in smokers different from those in nonsmokers after institution of corticosteroids. Eighteen patients were studied (10 smokers and 8 nonsmokers). Fourteen patients (6 smokers and 8 nonsmokers) were treated orally with prednisone. The histologic assessment of alveolar inflammation and inflammatory small airways disease was no different in smokers than in non-smokers. None of the smokers treated with prednisone had pathologic evidence of emphysema in addition to IPF. Five of 6 smokers showed an increase in BALF neutrophils after 3 months of prednisone (p < 0.05), whereas the nonsmokers’ BALF neutrophils decreased or remained unchanged. This increase in BALF neutrophils in smokers was not associated with c...

16 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the immune abnormalities in hemophiliacs are the result of contact with HTLV-III but that these abnormalities may remain stable over prolonged periods.
Abstract: Twenty-nine heterosexual patients with hemophilia were investigated with histories, physical examinations, laboratory evaluations of immune function, delayed hypersensitivity skin tests, and assays for antibody to human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III). Sixteen patients were HTLV-III antibody positive and 13 were HTLV-III antibody negative. No patient had the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Patients who had antibody to HTLV-III had received significantly more units and lots of factor concentrates in the preceding 5 years than those who did not have antibody. HTLV-III antibody-positive patients had significantly fewer total T cells (Leu-1 positive) and significantly fewer helper T cells (Leu-3 positive) than HTLV-III negative patients. Antibody-positive patients also had increased amounts of IgG and decreased thymidine incorporation in response to concanavalin Ain vitro. There were no differences inin vitro lymphocyte responses to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), pokeweed mitogen,Candida, tetanus, or purified protein derivative (PPD), no significant impairments of gamma interferon or interleukin-2 (IL-2) production, and no anergy. Ten patients with antibody to HTLV-III had immunologic studies repeated 1 year after the original evaluation. A significant increase was seen in suppressor (Leu-2-positive) T cells but not in total T-cell or helper T-cell numbers, helper/suppressor ratios, or T-cell functional assays. We conclude that the immune abnormalities in hemophiliacs are the result of contact with HTLV-III but that these abnormalities may remain stable over prolonged periods.

8 citations