The contribution of autoimmune phenomena to the pathogenesis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is poorly understood. We investigated the relationship between IgG-anti-Fab gamma autoantibodies and the main immunologic feature of AIDS, the decrease of CD4+ helper lymphocytes. Sera of 33 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected (HIV+) hemophilia patients with AIDS/AIDS-related complex (ARC), 57 HIV+ patients without AIDS/ARC, 23 HIV-negative (HIV-) patients, and 76 healthy controls were tested for antibody activity against the Fab region of IgG. Patients with AIDS/ARC had significantly higher IgG-anti- Fab gamma activity than HIV+ patients without AIDS/ARC, HIV- patients, or controls (P less than .0001). A striking inverse association was found between IgG-anti-Fab gamma and CD4+ cell counts (r = -.69; P less than 10(-6)). Sequential testing in 16 AIDS/ARC patients showed that an increase in the IgG-anti-Fab gamma activity was invariably accompanied by a decrease in the CD4+ cell count. IgG-anti-Fab gamma antibodies may play an important role in the immunopathogenesis of AIDS.
Recombinant human rt-PA was administered to 22 patients with deep vein thrombosis at a dosage of 30 to 120 mg/day (0.5 to 1.76 mg/kg body weight/24 hr) over 2 to 10 days. rt-PA induced phlebographically documented substantial recanalization in 18 of 21 patients. The lowest dose of 0.5 mg/kg/24 hr tested here was thrombolytically effective, whereas a dose of 0.95 mg/kg/24 hours and more led to hemorrhagic complications and premature discontinuation of therapy in four of six patients. Blood clotting analysis did not reveal any substantial decrease in fibrinogen concentrations, whereas the euglobulin clot lysis time and thromboelastography demonstrated a systemic fibrinolytic effect. Therapy with rt-PA can thus be considered as an alternative and effective method of therapy in treatment of deep vein thrombosis. The results of this study show that even a dosage of lower than 0.5 mg/kg/24 hr might prove to be effective. Further studies would be required to show whether the fibrin specificity of rt-PA leads to a superiority of this fibrinolytic substance over the conventional thrombolytic agents, streptokinase and urokinase.
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