Quantitative and semiquantitative methods have been used to evaluate the clinical improvement of 62 patients with completed stroke who were admitted to a rehabilitation hospital. Improvement in motility and leg strength on the paretic side was minimal and was not influenced by facilitation exercise techniques. Observed changes in strength and motility occurred to about the same degree on both the nonparetic and paretic sides. Patients who had a short interval between onset of stroke and admission to the rehabilitation program improved significantly more on the paretic side than those with a longer interval. Practically no improvement in motility and leg strength was found two months following a stroke. Hemiplegia and hemiparesis were defined quantitatively on the basis of motility test scores. Patients with hemiparesis showed greater improvement in motility and self-care status in about half the time of hospital stay when compared with patients with hemiplegia. In spite of relatively static neurological deficits, all patients showed evidence of functional improvement as assessed by a self-care rating scale. The poorest functional outcome was seen in patients who had hemisensory losses in addition to hemiplegia. The observations indicate that early, functionally oriented stroke rehabilitation programs offer the best chance of aiding patients. Behavioral and sociological influences on final outcome are important and must be carefully evaluated to insure maximum chances of successes in rehabilitation.
SUMMARY The proteins present in 4% polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitates of 10 normal sera and 60 samples from patients with rheumatic diseases were studied. A variety of immunochemical methods were used, including estimation of the percentages of total serum proteins precipitated by PEG, gel filtration analyses of the precipitates, and affinity chromatography with protein A and anti-immunoglobulin columns. Substantial amounts of protein were precipitated from normal sera. Many non-immunoglobulin proteins were precipitated from patients' sera, including fibronectin, haptoglobin, albumin, transferrin, and ac-antitrypsin. Affinity chromatography with anti-immunoglobulin columns bound non-immunoglobulin proteins from PEG precipitates, but the protein A affinity column did not do so. The view that circulating antibody-antigen complexes alone are precipitated by 4% PEG is too simplistic; many non-immunoglobulin proteins are involved. They may either bind to immune complexes or be coprecipitated owing to non-specific protein aggregation.Polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation is the basis for several techniques for the detection and measurement of circulating immune complexes."' Doubts have been expressed about the specificity of PEG precipitation for this purpose,5 and there is still controversy about several points"8-namely, the proportions in which the main classes of immunoglobulins occur in PEG precipitates; which other plasma proteins accompany the immunoglobulins in significant amounts; and what role (if any) these other proteins may have in complex formation or elimination. We looked at a series of 4% PEG precipitates from patients with rheumatic disorders and healthy controls using a variety of immunochemical techniques to re-examine these questions. Patients and methods PATIENTS
SUMMARY The hypothesis that abnormal fibronectin metabolism in Crohn's disease could be an important mechanism leading to stricture formation or postoperative infection was tested in three related studies. (1) Lower concentrations of plasma fibronectin (p<0.05) were found in 20 patients with small and large bowel Crohn's disease (mean 0.24 g/l) compared with 13 patients with more limited disease confined to only small or only large bowel (mean 0.27 g/l) or 20 healthy controls (mean 0.29 g/l). (2) In 25 patients followed for 10 days after operation for Crohn's disease, there was a significant fall in fibronectin concentrations of 43% (p<001, Wilcoxon's rank-sum test). This fall was maximal on the second postoperative day and was more marked in patients undergoing more major operative procedures. (3) The predictive value of plasma fibronectin for subsequent stricture formation or progression was studied for one year; during which 10 patients developed strictures requiring operative treatment. Higher plasma fibronectin concentrations were related to stricture formation, although there was not a complete, predictive relationship. In this study we found that plasma fibronectin concentrations were low in patients with extensive or severe Crohn's disease, fall after operation and may be related to the risk of stricture formation. This relationship is unlikely to be of clinical value, although it shows the potential significance of fibronectin in the pathogenesis of strictures.
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