Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 I read the first paper, and the follow-up. These are tentative, first read responses: 1) It seems odd, and very frustrating, that we are told nothing about the duration of disease, prior treatment history, coinfection test results, or current clnical presentation in these patients whose monocytes were assessed for cytokine release. Yet all patients were from one GP's practice! How hard could it have been to compile that data? Without such information, we have nothing to correlate these findings to but the selection criteria, which appear to have been that patients were making enough Bb antibodies to test positive via serology. 2) There is at least one study I recall clearly that shows what at a glance seems like the inverse result. Immune cells (identified as macrohpages, not monocytes) exposed to borrelia outer surface proteins in that study were seen to produce high levels of IL-12, low levels of IL-10, in a ratio extreme enough to force naive T cells (Th0) into the Th1 phenotype. The hypothesis considered there was that by generating this response, borrelial OSPs protected the bugs from effective antibody development, which they stated required the presence of Th2 cells. 3) I suppose in a very speculative way you could reconcile the results by saying that the positive antibody status of the 'late stage' patients acrued from the higher levels of IL-10 facilitating Th2 cell, antibody-forming responses vs. the inflammmatory response observed in response to borrelial OSPs in the other study I am referring to. 4) You could end up with a forking immune response that looks a little like this: In response pattern 1, high levels of inflammatory cytokines are generated but effective antibody development is minimized. Any bugs that are killed are quickly removed from the body, but not many are. In response pattern 2, low levels of inflammatory cytokines are generated, but effective antibody development is increased. More bugs are killed, but the inflammatory process needed to get the lysed bugs and their toxins out of the body are indequate, allowing these to accumulate. In the first response pattern, the immune system would play a prominent role in generating symptoms, but a minor role in directly attacking the bugs. In the second response pattern, the immune system would play a much reduced role in generating symptoms, a more significant role in attacking the bugs. The disease would actually be progressing away from, not toward, an 'autoimmune' model (though based on the broad reduction in cytokine release to ANY flavor of LPS, possibly toward a model of immune deficit). One might expect the first hypothesized pattern to correspond more to arthralgias, the second to correspond more to central and peripheral nervous system disease. It's just a bunch of wild speculation on my part. What a shame that we know nothing about the actual health status of those patients whose monocytes were studied. I would almost think it worth corresponding with the authors to see if anything more can be learned. S. > Mark have you checked this free text out? The results are STRIKING > but I'm still not sure I didnt see them disconfirmed somewhere > else... this one has been on my mind a long time and I lost track of > the results I thought might contradict it... > > It says lyme patient PBMC had a 70 PERCENT reduced IFNg and TNFa > response to LPS, compared to healthies. > > Doing the same comparison using borrelia lysate (which lacks LPS but > has other innate immune system ligands) as the stimulant found the > same 70 percent attenuation for TNF response vs controls, but this > time not 70 but 92 DAMN PERCENT for IFNg! > > Now thats what I call immunosuppression! I aint *even* lying! This > is right from the abstract of this paper: > > http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=97940 > > This followup says IL-10 is the primary mediator of this sorry pro- > inflammatory output: > > http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi? > tool=pubmed & pubmedid=12819085#r8 > > If this stuff is actually correct, its like, important. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 OK, found it. The study I addressed below used whole blood, not PBMC as I said. And it found the IFNg response to Bb 10x weaker in patients than in controls. THis one (also free text) used PBMC rather than whole blood, and found the IFNg response to Bb 10x STRONGER in patients than in controls. Ie, the factors found are 100-fold different. The second paper predates the first paper and is not cited by the first paper. Something must explain this. > Mark have you checked this free text out? The results are STRIKING > but I'm still not sure I didnt see them disconfirmed somewhere > else... this one has been on my mind a long time and I lost track of > the results I thought might contradict it... > > It says lyme patient PBMC had a 70 PERCENT reduced IFNg and TNFa > response to LPS, compared to healthies. > > Doing the same comparison using borrelia lysate (which lacks LPS but > has other innate immune system ligands) as the stimulant found the > same 70 percent attenuation for TNF response vs controls, but this > time not 70 but 92 DAMN PERCENT for IFNg! > > Now thats what I call immunosuppression! I aint *even* lying! This > is right from the abstract of this paper: > > http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=97940 > > This followup says IL-10 is the primary mediator of this sorry pro- > inflammatory output: > > http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi? > tool=pubmed & pubmedid=12819085#r8 > > If this stuff is actually correct, its like, important. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 could you possibly translate the jist of what this means very briefly for those of us that aren't literate in this stuff, if it isn't too much trouble? BW, Sheila Monday, August 22, 2005, 10:09:50 PM, you wrote: EH> Mark have you checked this free text out? The results are STRIKING EH> but I'm still not sure I didnt see them disconfirmed somewhere EH> else... this one has been on my mind a long time and I lost track of EH> the results I thought might contradict it... EH> It says lyme patient PBMC had a 70 PERCENT reduced IFNg and TNFa EH> response to LPS, compared to healthies. EH> Doing the same comparison using borrelia lysate (which lacks LPS but EH> has other innate immune system ligands) as the stimulant found the EH> same 70 percent attenuation for TNF response vs controls, but this EH> time not 70 but 92 DAMN PERCENT for IFNg! EH> Now thats what I call immunosuppression! I aint *even* lying! This EH> is right from the abstract of this paper: EH> http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=97940 EH> This followup says IL-10 is the primary mediator of this sorry pro- EH> inflammatory output: EH> http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi? EH> tool=pubmed & pubmedid=12819085#r8 EH> If this stuff is actually correct, its like, important. EH> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 Basically, if this work is right there would probably be some mechanism by which Bb succeeds in manipulating some hosts to get them to make too much IL-10. IL-10 is a cytokine which is, on the whole, antiinflammatory and suppressive of Th1 immune activity. SInce we dont know at all where most of the borrelia are located - I'm swinging back toward thinking they are mostly inside cells but its just a guess - it would be impossible to specify the precise impact of the IL-10. But, excess IL-10 could interfere with the destruction of Bb (and other microbes) in a number of ways. The thing is, the data are alllllllll over the map. I am surprised these authors would publish without citing an earlier, comparable experiment in which the results differed by 100-fold! I will probably write to them sometime. > > could you possibly translate the jist of what this means very briefly for those of us that > aren't literate in this stuff, if it isn't too much trouble? > BW, > Sheila Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 Thanks , Sheila Tuesday, August 23, 2005, 6:08:53 PM, you wrote: EJ> Basically, if this work is right there would probably be some EJ> mechanism by which Bb succeeds in manipulating some hosts to get them EJ> to make too much IL-10. IL-10 is a cytokine which is, on the whole, EJ> antiinflammatory and suppressive of Th1 immune activity. EJ> SInce we dont know at all where most of the borrelia are located - EJ> I'm swinging back toward thinking they are mostly inside cells but EJ> its just a guess - it would be impossible to specify the precise EJ> impact of the IL-10. But, excess IL-10 could interfere with the EJ> destruction of Bb (and other microbes) in a number of ways. EJ> The thing is, the data are alllllllll over the map. I am surprised EJ> these authors would publish without citing an earlier, comparable EJ> experiment in which the results differed by 100-fold! I will probably EJ> write to them sometime. EJ> >> >> could you possibly translate the jist of what this means very EJ> briefly for those of us that >> aren't literate in this stuff, if it isn't too much trouble? >> BW, >> Sheila EJ> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 Actually, sorry, Scha emailed me some observations - my reading of that paper might have been wrong. (While reading it I kept stopping like 10 times to re-dredge pubmed for that contrary finding!) Specifically, the fact that removing IL-10 (by neutralizing it with antibodies) " fixed " the weak reaction of lyme blood to borrelia, does not prove that IL-10 caused the weak reaction. Possibly they implied so, or possibly I sorta made it up. I'm too tired to look right now! <james@c...> wrote: > > Thanks , > Sheila Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 I have severe Igg subclass dysfunction since I have had lyme and wonder if the benicar would correct this. Any data anywhere where I can search? thank you, Donna > >> > >> could you possibly translate the jist of what this means very > EJ> briefly for those of us that > >> aren't literate in this stuff, if it isn't too much trouble? > >> BW, > >> Sheila > > > > > > > > > EJ> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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