A patient with a hyperacute hemolytic crisis due to AIHA of the IgG type was treated by combined plasmapheresis and exchange transfusion. A discontinuous flow centrifuge was used. Immediately after the exchange the hemoglobin level rose from 2.6 to 9.8 g/dl. The D. A. T. became weakly positive and the hemolytic crisis subsided. During the days following the exchange the autoantibodies responsible for the hemolytic crisis, switched from IgG1 and IgG3 to IgG2 and IgG4. The clinical and laboratory picture stabilized thereafter.
Since humoral factors have been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) and previous attempts at therapeutic intervention have not met with uniform success, plasma exchange (PE) was recently proposed for the management of this disease. We are currently investigating the possible effectiveness of PE in the treatment of MS, and to date 6 patients have been entered into the study. At least 4 of our patients who did not respond to conventional therapy have shown unequivocal, moderate to marked improvement following the first session of PE. At the time of treatment, these patients had an acute exacerbation of their disease. We found no correlation between clinical improvement and the serum immune complex levels, suggesting that other poorly known mechanisms were operative. Based on our preliminary results, we feel that PE may be efficacious in treating exacerbations of MS. More evidence is needed on the effects of PE in the chronic stage of the disease.
A 18-year-old woman in the 7th month of pregnancy had a mild enteritis followed within 8 days by a typical Guillain-Barré syndrome with respiratory failure requiring ventilatory support and bulbar palsy. After induction of delivery and discouraging results with steroid therapy, she was treated by plasma exchange. After 2 sessions on alternate days, a recovery of motility was observed and respiratory failure was abolished. It is pointed out that the most significant improvement was recorded immediately after the plasma exchanges, and that this correlated with the removal of immune complexes.
Mobilization of granulocytes into a serum-filled chamber, histochemical nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) reduction tests, and phagocytosis were performed in 11 patients with solid tumors treated with surgical excision and chemotherapy and in 22 untreated or surgically treated patients. The results revealed a decreased mobilization (p less than 0.001) and an impaired capability of neutrophils to reduce NBT after stimulation (p less than 0.05) in both groups of patients. The decrease in the values in the stimulated reduction of NBT was more pronounced in untreated patients than in treated ones. At the same time the phagocytic activity of neutrophils on Candida albicans, which was decreased (p less than 0.01) in untreated patients, was normal in those who had been treated with chemotherapy. There were no distinctive correlations between circulating immune complexes and granulocyte function. We propose that this newly demonstrated defect in neutrophil mobilization and low median C. albicans-stimulated NBT reduction contributes more in the evolution of the tumor than in the pathogenesis of infections and that chemotherapy seems to restore a better granulocyte function.
The rationale for and results of plasma exchange (PE) in the therapy of different immune-mediated neurological diseases such as myasthenia gravis, multiple sclerosis, acute and chronic-relapsing Guillain-Barré syndromes, polymyositis, dermatomyositis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis are reviewed. Dialysis dementia and Refsum's disease, subacute sclerosing panencephalitis and schizophrenia are mentioned, too. If we exclude the treatment of acute Guillain-Barré syndrome, where PE alone appears to be sufficient to produce recovery or improvement, the combined use of immunosuppressive drugs and/or lymphocytapheresis is probably needed in the treatment of the other diseases. PE allows the disease to be controlled rapidly while long-term pharmacological control is established. An underlying theme in this review is the need of adequately controlled studies or at least of large case lists with exhaustive reports concerning both positive and negative results since a new perspective is needed for this topic. Nonetheless, a number of uncontrolled observations suggest that probably PE effectiveness in most immune-mediated neurological diseases could be proven if the requisite trials were performed.
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