Forty patients with rheumatoid arthritis and upper gastrointestinal lesions due to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs entered a prospective 6-month double-blind placebo controlled study of dietary supplementation with gamma-linolenic acid 540 mg/day. Nineteen patients received active therapy (as evening primrose oil 6 g/day) and 21 received placebo (olive oil 6 g/day). No patient stopped non-steroidal anti-inflammatory therapy but three patients in each group reduced their dose. Other results showed a significant reduction in morning stiffness with gamma-linolenic acid at 3 months and reduction in pain and articular index at 6 months with olive oil. Whilst gamma-linolenic acid may produce mild improvement in rheumatoid arthritis, olive oil may itself have hitherto unrecognized benefits.
Spin echo NMR analysis is used to monitor the effect of penicillamine on intact erythrocytes obtained from patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis during a 12-week period of therapy. The results are compared to the previously reported in vitro effects of the compound (McKay, C. N. N.; et al. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1986, 888, 30-35). At clinical assessment at week 12, the 20 patients were divided into responder and nonresponder groups. The intracellular glutathione in the responder group is more oxidized (P less than 0.01) than in the nonresponder group. A retrospective analysis of the two patient groups at the initial assessment following the commencement of therapy indicated that in the nonresponder group intracellular glutathione was significantly more reduced (P less than 0.02) than in the responder group. It is postulated that penicillamine stimulates cellular defense against the oxidation of the cell membrane at the expense of cytosolic glutathione. This initial study suggests that spin-echo NMR analysis of erythrocyte glutathione can act as an early indicator of a clinical response to penicillamine therapy.
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