Cyclosporin A (CyA) and azathioprine (Aza) were compared with respect to renal side effects in an open controlled, randomized study of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Twelve patients were treated with CyA (mean dose 7.8 +/- 1.2 mg/kg/day) and 12 with azathioprine for 26 weeks. All patients also received prednisolone 5 mg/day. The patients had normal serum creatinine (less than 120 mumoles/liter) and protein-free urine before the trial. CyA increased serum creatinine in nine out of the 11 patients followed for 26 weeks, the mean increase was approximately 50%. Creatinine clearance was reduced by 31%. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and serum potassium were significantly increased by CyA. Urinary beta 2-microglobulin excretion was significantly increased by CyA, in five of the patients more than ten times. Urinary kallikrein excretion was reduced by more than 50% and urinary albumin excretion was doubled. All these parameters remained normal and unchanged in the azathioprine group. CyA was withdrawn in seven patients after 26 weeks. Urinary beta 2-microglobulin was still increased by 85% nine months after CyA treatment. The other parameters were gradually normalized after three to nine months except for one patient who developed renal failure. Urinary beta 2-microglobulin excretion was a very sensitive parameter for renal tubular damage in this study.
The aim of the study was to assess the effect of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) upon dental health. A questionnaire was mailed to all seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients aged 44-56 yr in the files of the two main departments of rheumatology in South Eastern Norway. Data were obtained from 125 patients, constituting 91% of the target group. The number of remaining teeth in these patients was not related to disease duration or physical dysfunction, whereas a relationship to prolonged use of medication for pain relief was indicated. Factors known to affect tooth loss in the general population, such as smoking habits, dental attendance, interdental cleaning habits, previous dental disease, and place of residence were found to be important in RA patients as well. The RA patients from Oslo had a mean number of 25 remaining teeth, which is the same as reported for the general Oslo population at this age. Oral dryness was reported by more than 50% of the RA patients, but was not related to the number of teeth. The conclusion is that serious and long lasting rheumatoid arthritis had little influence on the number of remaining teeth in this middle-aged group of Norwegians.
Cyclosporine (10 mglkglday) and azathioprine (2.5-3 mg/kg/day) were compared for 26 weeks in an open, controlled, randomized study of 24 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Each treatment group consisted of 12 patients. Those patients who took cyclosporine improved significantly in the SO-foot walk time, circumferences of proximal interphalangeal joints, Ritchie articular index, global assessment by investigator, and grip strength, when compared with baseline findings. In the azathioprine group, there was improvement only in grip strength.Immune reactions are involved in the pathogenesis of rheumatQid arthritis (RA) (1). Synovial T cells produce interleukin-2, which is essential for the proinflammatory immune reactions in rheumatoid tissues (2,3). Cyclosporine (CS) suppresses immune responses by inhibition of the production of interleukin-2 by T lymphocytes (4). CS can also prevent the devel-
The aim of this study was to examine whether there are any associations between walking time, quadriceps muscle strength and cardiovascular capacity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Thirty-one patients with RA and 26 patients with AS belonging to Steinbrocker's functional class I-II were examined. Cardiovascular capacity was calculated from the expired air during a bicycle test and quadriceps muscle strength by the peak torque from an isokinetic dynamometer test. Walking time was the time it took to walk a distance of 160 m on a flat floor and to climb up and down a staircase. In patients with RA, flat floor walking and stair climbing times correlated inversely with quadriceps muscle strength and cardiovascular capacity. Similar results were seen in patients with AS, although the association between cardiovascular capacity and stair-climbing time was not statistically significant. Multiple regression analysis was performed for all patients with quadriceps muscle strength and cardiovascular capacity applied as independent variables in two separate models. Cardiovascular capacity explained 32% and quadriceps muscle strength 21% of the variance in flat floor walking time. Quadriceps muscle strength, together with diagnosis and age, explained 38% of the variance in stair-climbing time, and cardiovascular capacity together with age and pain explained 36% of the variance. In conclusion, in spite of cardiovascular capacity and quadriceps muscle strength being associated with walking times, the findings suggest that they play only a modest role in explaining rapid walking on flat floor and in stairs.
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