Helicobacter pylori has recently been postulated to play a role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases, including idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). We investigated the prevalence of H pylori infection and the effects of its eradication in 61 patients with ITP. H pylori infection was found in 50 patients (83%), an incidence significantly higher than not only healthy volunteers in Japan (60%) but also subjects in other reported ITP series (approximately 43%-71%). In our study, the mean age of H pylori-positive ITP patients (58.0 years) was significantly higher than that of H pylori-negative ITP patients (40.5 years). Bacterium eradication efforts were performed in 29 infected ITP patients and succeeded in 27 patients (93%). The 29 patients with eradicated H pylori infections showed significant increases in platelet counts compared with patients with uneradicated infections or who were H pylori-negative. During the follow-up period (median, 11.0 months), 16 (55%) of 29 patients achieved a major or a minor response. The patients who achieved a major response had not received previous prednisolone therapy, suggesting a relationship between prednisolone therapy and the response to eradication efforts. The assessment of H pylori infection and its eradication should be attempted in cases of ITP, because this approach may be a good new strategy for treating some ITP patients, especially elderly Japanese patients. Some regional factors have been suggested as causes of H pylori-associated ITP.
A case of marginal zone B cell lymphoma of MALT type arising in the uvula and breast is reported. The patient, a 30-year-old woman who delivered a child and lactated in 1997, was suffering from Sjögren syndrome (SS). She was diagnosed with MALT lymphoma after a biopsy of the right breast and uvula. To investigate the relationship of the delivery, lactation and MALT lymphoma, we examined the immunohistochemical analysis of hormone receptors. As a result, lymphoid cells of the breast were stained with anti-progesterone receptor antibodies in the cytoplasm. Consequently, the MALT lymphoma of the uvula appeared to be associated with SS. Moreover, hormones such as progesterone may have influenced the breast involvement of MALT lymphoma in our case.
In an attempt to determine the roles of adhesion molecules in the formation and deterioration of neoplastic follicles, we used flow cytometry to investigate how strongly neoplastic B-cells express VLA-4 alpha and LFA-1 alpha on their surfaces. Neoplastic and normal B-cells were taken from 24 patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (B-NHL) and 6 with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). The expression intensities of the adhesion molecules were graded as follows: (-), (+), (+2) and (+3). Normal B-cells expressed those molecules with an intensity of (+2). The data for VLA-4 alpha expression were as follows: follicular B-NHL [10/11; (+2) and 1/11; (+)], partially follicular [5/5; (+)], diffuse [8/8; (+)] and B-CLL [6/6; (-)]. Those for LFA-1 alpha were as follows: follicular B-NHL [7/11; (+2), 4/11; (+)], partially follicular [3/5; (+2), 2/5; (+)], diffuse [3/8; (+2), 5/8; (+)] and B-CLL [3/6; (+), 3/6; (-)]. These results suggest that VLA-4 molecules expressed on neoplastic B-cells may be involved closely in the formation and deterioration of neoplastic follicles, although the expression of LFA-1 molecules seems to play only a minor part in such events.
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