Anti‐Ro(SS‐A) autoantibodies in central nervous system disease associated with Sjögren's syndrome (CNS‐SS)
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 44 (5) , 899
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.44.5.899
Abstract
Objective: To examine in Sjögren9s syndrome (SS) the interrelationship between the presence of the anti-Ro(SS-A) antibody response and (1) concomitant presence and type (ie, focal or nonfocal) of CNS disease (CNS-SS), (2) cross-sectional brain MRI or CT, and (3) abnormal cerebral angiography. Methods: Neurologic, neuroimaging, and angiographic features of CNS-SS patients were correlated with the presence of precipitating anti-Ro(SS-A) autoantibodies detected by gel double-immunodiffusion or quantitative ELISA, which detects antibodies directed against the 60-kd peptide. Statistical analyses were performed using Fisher9s exact test (two-tailed) with Haldane9s adjustment and odds ratio with Cornfield 95% confidence intervals. Results: Precipitating antibodies against the Ro(SS-A) antigen, determined by gel double-immunodiffusion, were present in an increased frequency in CNS-SS patients with (1) documented clinical CNS disease, (2) focal clinical CNS manifestations and serious complications, (3) large regions of increased signal intensity, consistent with ischemia/infarcts on brain MRI scans or regions of decreased attenuation consistent with infarcts on CT, and (4) abnormal cerebral angiograms consistent with small-vessel angiitis. Finally, the anti-Ro(SS-A) antibody response in CNS was directed against the 60-kd peptide specificity, determined by ELISA. Conclusions: Clinical, neuroimaging (cerebral CT), and angiographic observation suggest that a subset of anti-Ro(SS-A) antibody-positive, in contrast with negative, CNS-SS patients have more serious and extensive CNS disease, some with frank cerebral angiopathy. Anti-Ro(SS-A) antibodies are postulated to play a role in mediating or potentiating vascular injury in CNS-SS.Keywords
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