Scientists Discover Trigger for AI Diseases | Arthritis Information

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Self-attacking, dormant cells switch 'on' in those with lupus, rheumatoid arthritis

 

MONDAY, Dec. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Healthy adults have potential autoimmune disease-causing cells, but these cells stay in an "off" state, a U.S. study shows.

Immune cells that attack the body cause autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Whether the switched-off cells in healthy adults are true precursors of the self-attacking immune cells and, if so, what prevents them from causing disease in certain people, isn't known, the researchers said.

J. Andrew Duty, of the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, and colleagues found that anergic (dormant) autoimmune disease-causing cells account for 2.5 percent of immune B-cells circulating in the blood of healthy adults.

These anergic cells don't appear to cause problems in healthy adults, but did produce self-reactive antibodies when exposed to a strong stimulus in lab experiments. This means these anergic cells may contain the precursors for the self-attacking B-cells in patients with autoimmune disease, the researchers said.

In previously healthy people, anergy may somehow break down and allow self-attacking B-cells to cause autoimmune disease.

The study was published in the Dec. 22 online issue of The Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Good article.  Now all we need to do is find the OFF button.  I think alot of the times that stress is the trigger.  I have been under a bunch of stress at work and at home and my RA has been increasing worse.  My goal for 2009 is to reduce the stress some how, some way and in turn will decrease my RA symptoms.  I might be living in a fantasy world but its worth a try.

Where do I sign up for the fantasy world? I'm all for it!

Bob
TTT as there has recently been some discussion r/t the "cause" or RA, etc..
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