To determine the prevalence of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency in patients with cirrhosis or chronic active hepatitis, we performed a five-year prospective study of liver-biopsy specimens from 1055 adults. Thirty-four patients whose specimens contained hepatocyte inclusions characteristic of the deficiency were phenotyped, and 25 had phenotype MZ (2.4 per cent). The distribution of patients with this phenotype among the 185 patients with cirrhosis diagnosed histologically was three of 84 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (3.5 per cent), seven of 34 with non-B chronic active hepatitis (20.5 per cent), six of 28 with cryptogenic cirrhosis (21 per cent), and one of 39 with other kinds of cirrhosis (2.6 per cent). The increased prevalence of MZ in patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis and with chronic active hepatitis is highly significant (P < 0.001). Because serum levels of alpha 1-antitrypsin may be unreliable for identification of the subgroup of patients with chronic active hepatitis or cryptogenic cirrhosis, analysis of serum for the MZ phenotype and meticulous examination of biopsy specimens may be necessary.
Mast cell degranulation in the gut causes mucus secretion, mucosal edema, and increased gut permeability and may be responsible for some of the symptoms and signs of inflammatory bowel disease. We have used a novel monoclonal antibody (AAI) against tryptase expressed exclusively in the granules of mast cells to enumerate mast cells in rectal biopsies in order to study the effect of inflammatory bowel disease and drug treatment upon rectal mast cell numbers. Rectal mast cell numbers are significantly reduced in inflammatory bowel disease patients taking corticosteroids (mean 4.95 cells/mm2) when compared with control patients (10.1, P less than 0.001) and inflammatory bowel disease patients not taking corticosteroids (9.7, P less than 0.001 Wilcoxon rank sum test). The reduction in mast cell counts was independent of the degree of inflammation or architectural distortion. There was a negative correlation between the dose of corticosteroids and mast cell count (r = 0.53, P less than 0.05 Spearman rank correlation), and the mast cell count was reduced within a few days of treatment and remained low throughout steroid therapy. Mucosal mast cell depletion may be an important mechanism of action of corticosteroids in inflammatory bowel disease.
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