scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers on "C-reactive protein published in 1977"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that patients with active SLE usually do not have CRP in their sera, and the results distinguish this group of patients from those with active RA, a disease generally marked by CRP positivity.
Abstract: The presence of C-reactive protein (CRP) was determined in the sera of 70 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 24 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and 17 patients hospitalized with acute infections. CRP (precipitin reaction > 3 mm) was present in only 2 of 50 patients with active, uncomplicated SLE (4%). However CRP was found in the sera of 11 patients with active SLE in the presence of superimposed infection. Treatment of the intercurrent infection resulted in the loss of CRP from the sera of these SLE patients. CRP was found in 85% of patients with active RA and in 100% of non-SLE infected patients. Appropriate treatment of the latter group resulted in loss of CRP from the convalescent sera. Corticosteroid therapy did not appear to influence the presence of CRP in the RA or SLE groups. Fourteen of 50 noninfected patients (28%) with active SLE were not receiving steroids at the time of CRP negativity. Appropriate experiments with mixed sera failed to demonstrate serum factors that could influence CRP precipitation in the CRP-negative SLE group. These studies suggest that patients with active SLE usually do not have CRP in their sera, and the results distinguish this group of patients from those with active RA, a disease generally marked by CRP positivity. Moreover, the finding of significant CRP precipitin in the sera of SLE patients may suggest the presence of superimposed infection.

113 citations


Book ChapterDOI
26 Apr 1977
TL;DR: Three aspects of immunological function were studied in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis: atopic status and serum IgE levels; serum concentration of C-reactive protein; and C3 activation.
Abstract: Three aspects of immunological function were studied in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis (inflammatory bowel disease): atopic status and serum IgE levels; serum concentration of C-reactive protein; and C3 activation. The incidence of atopy, assessed by prick testing with common allergens, did not differ in patients with inflammatory bowel disease from healthy controls. 12 of 39 patients with Crohn's disease and 5 of 20 with ulcerative colitis, among whom were some non-atopic subjects, had elevated serum levels of IgE. Serum levels of C-reactive protein in patients were significantly greater than normal, even in those in whom the disease was clinically quiescent. Symptomatic patients with Crohn's disease had significantly higher levels than similar patients with ulcerative colitis and in Crohn's disease the levels correlated well with an overall assessment of severity and disease activity. Although conversion of C3 was detected in fresh serum samples from inflammatory bowel disease patients and not controls, only minimal traces were present in just 7 of 89 samples of EDTA--plasma from 47 patients; this finding did not correlate with disease activity. However, there were low titres of immunoconglutinin in the sera of some patients, but not in controls, suggesting that complement activation may be occurring in vivo.

58 citations