A 48-week, double-blind, randomized study was conducted in France, West Germany and the UK to compare the safety and efficacy of topical minoxidil 2% (Regaine®; registered trade mark of The Upjohn Company) solution with placebo in the treatment of early male-pattern baldness. At week 24, the end of the placebo period, there were 225 evaluable patients, 116 in the treatment group and 109 in the placebo group. The 2% minoxidil group showed superiority to the placebo group with respect to the following parameters at week 24: (1) non-vellus hair counts (p = 0.0084); (2) changes in non-vellus hair counts compared with baseline values (p = 0.0227), and (3) investigators’ evaluations of hair growth (p = 0.019). There was no significant difference between minoxidil and placebo treatment with regard to blood pressure, pulse or weight changes. No serious side effects were reported during the study. The greatest number of medical events were dermatological in nature and mainly local and mild in intensity. From week 24 to week 48 all patients received active medication and showed further hair growth. At week 48 the investigators evaluated the new hair growth as moderate or dense in 32.7% of the patients. Our conclusion confirms previous reported studies according to which topical minoxidil seems to offer a safe and efficacious treatment for early male-pattern baldness in some patients. Further studies need to be done to characterize the most likely responders.
We investigated polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) function in a 50-year-old woman with primary Sjögren's syndrome (SS). The respiratory burst of PMN was monitored by luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence using zymosan, opsonized zymosan, zymosan-activated serum, and phorbol-myristate-acetate, as well as serial dilutions of aggregated immunoglobulin (aggIg) as Fc-receptor (FcR) stimulus. The effects of serum on the chemiluminescent response as well as the binding of aggIg to PMN were also compared. We found the patient's PMN not to respond to stimulation by aggIg, only the highest concentration (greater than 180 micrograms/ml) induced a marginal chemiluminescent response in the patient. By contrast, incubation of the patient's PMN with other stimuli resulted in responses similar to those in a healthy control. Binding of aggIg to PMN was higher in the patient (3.6% vs 1.5% of the radioactivity added in the control). Sera of patient and control induced similar chemiluminescence on PMN as did that of another human serum. Our data indicate a selective functional FcR defect of PMN despite unimpaired binding of aggIg in a patient with SS.
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