Autoimmunity and Autoimmune Disorders
Autoimmunity and autoimmune disorders
Autoimmune diseases are conditions in which a person's immune system attacks the body's own cells, causing tissue destruction. Autoimmune diseases are classified as either general, in which the autoimmune reaction takes place simultaneously in a number of tissues, or organ specific, in which the autoimmune reaction targets a single organ. Autoimmunity is accepted as the cause of a wide range of disorders, and is suspected to be responsible for many more. Among the most common diseases attributed to autoimmune disorders are rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosis (lupus), multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, pernicious anemia, and scleroderma.
To further understand autoimmune disorders, it is helpful to understand the workings of the immune system. The purpose of the immune system is to defend the body against attack by infectious microbes (germs) and foreign objects. When the immune system attacks an invader, it is very specific—a particular immune system cell will only recognize and target one type of invader. To function properly, the immune system must not only develop this specialized knowledge of individual invaders, but it must also learn how to recognize and not destroy cells that belong to the body itself. Every cell carries protein markers on its surface that identifies it in one of two ways: what kind of cell it is (e.g., nerve cell, muscle cell, blood cell, etc.) and to whom that cell belongs. These markers are called major histocompatibility complexes (MHCs) . When functioning properly, cells of the immune system will not attack any other cell with markers identifying it as belonging to the body. Conversely, if the immune system cells do not recognize the cell as "self," they attach themselves to it and put out a signal that the body has been invaded, which in turn stimulates the production of substances such as antibodies that engulf and destroy the foreign particles. In case of autoimmune disorders, the immune system cannot distinguish between self cells and invader cells. As a result, the same destructive operation is carried out on the body's own cells that would normally be carried out on bacteria , viruses , and other such harmful entities.
The reason why the immune system become dysfunctional is not well understood. Most researchers agree that a combination of genetic, environmental, and hormonal factors play into autoimmunity. The fact that autoimmune diseases run in families suggests a genetic component. Recent studies have identified an antiphospholipid antibody (APL) that is believed to be a common thread among family members with autoimmune diseases. Among study participants, family members with elevated APL levels showed autoimmune disease, while those with other autoantibodies did not. Family members with elevated APL levels also manifested different forms of autoimmune disease, suggesting that APL may serve as a common trigger for different autoimmune diseases. Further study of the genetic patterns among unrelated family groups with APL suggests that a single genetic defect resulting in APL production may be responsible for several different autoimmune diseases. Current research focuses on finding an established APL inheritance pattern, as well as finding the autoimmune gene responsible for APL production.
A number of tests can help diagnose autoimmune diseases; however the principle tool used by physicians is antibody testing. Such tests involve measuring the level of antibodies found in the blood and determining if they react with specific antigens that would give rise to an autoimmune reaction. An elevated amount of antibodies indicates that a humoral immune reaction is occurring. Elevated antibody levels are also seen in common infections. These must be ruled out as the cause for the increased antibody levels. The antibodies can also be typed by class. There are five classes of antibodies and they can be separated in the laboratory. The class IgG is usually associated with autoimmune diseases. Unfortunately, IgG class antibodies are also the main class of antibody seen in normal immune responses. The most useful antibody tests involve introducing the patient's antibodies to samples of his or her own tissue—if antibodies bind to the tissue it is diagnostic for an autoimmune disorder. Antibodies from a person without an autoimmune disorder would not react to self tissue. The tissues used most frequently in this type of testing are thyroid, stomach, liver, and kidney.
Treatment of autoimmune diseases is specific to the disease, and usually concentrates on alleviating symptoms rather than correcting the underlying cause. For example, if a gland involved in an autoimmune reaction is not producing a hormone such as insulin, administration of that hormone is required. Administration of a hormone, however, will restore the function of the gland damaged by the autoimmune disease. The other aspect of treatment is controlling the inflammatory and proliferative nature of the immune response. This is generally accomplished with two types of drugs. Steroid compounds are used to control inflammation . There are many different steroids, each having side effects. The proliferative nature of the immune response is controlled with immunosuppressive drugs. These drugs work by inhibiting the replication of cells and, therefore, also suppress non-immune cells leading to side effects such as anemia. Prognosis depends upon the pathology of each autoimmune disease.
See also Antigens and antibodies; Antibody formation and kinetics; Antibody-antigen, biochemical and molecular reactions; Immune system; Immunity, cell mediated; Immunity, humoral regulation; Immunologic therapies; Immunosuppressant drugs; Major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
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A colourful family; When Barbara Hepworth married Ben Nicholson, she sealed the Nicholson clan's fate as the first family of British art. And four generations of scandal, infighting and rivalry haven't diluted the artistic gene, discovers Godfrey Barker Right: Ben Nicholson with Barbara Hepworth on a boat in Henley in the early Thirties.
Newspaper article from: The Evening Standard (London, England); 10/29/2004; 700+ words
; ...BARKER In September 1935 the artist Ben Nicholson opened a show of all-white paintings...special pleasure to one man: Ben Nicholson's father, Sir William. The...matters, of course, because to Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth Britain owes...
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Arts: Follow that line Although the abstract works of Ben Nicholson have dropped out of fashion and no longer seem daring, says TOM LUBBOCK, an exhibition of his later drawings reveals a draughtsman of timeless ability
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 8/13/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...artist famous for his circles is Ben Nicholson. His paintings, drawings and...daring, now seems safe. And Nicholson's own art, once a byword for...almost kitsch. Can it be saved? "Ben Nicholson: drawings and painted reliefs...
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LIVING WILL THE ARTS: VISUAL ART THE ARTS: VISUAL ART A BEN NICHOLSON EXHIBITION BEGAN WITH A WIFE'S BEQUEST
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Herald; 2/24/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...have mattered had Vogler not spent 20 years married to Ben Nicholson, one of the most important artists of his generation...Modern Art in Edinburgh. "It said, 'I leave half my Ben Nicholson pictures to Edinburgh and half to the Kunsthalle Museum...
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Hampstead's heyday Belsize Park was the place for artists in the 1930s. SARAH JANE CHECKLAND describes how Ben Nicholson and his contemporaries made London the avant-garde capital
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 6/21/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...of the British abstract artists Ben Nicholson, Barbara Hep-worth and Henry...gentle artists was all but empty. Ben Nicholson: the Vicious Circles of his Life...Murray at 25; an exhibition of Ben Nicholson's work opens at the Bernard...
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The alphabet man The painter and printmaker William Nicholson has long been eclipsed by his more famous son, the abstract artist Ben. But in his time he was a man of substance: a celebrated society portraitist, friend of the great and good, he even taught Winston Churchill to paint.
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 10/24/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Beardsley burgeoned after their deaths, Nicholson's was not only partly buried but...totally eclipsed by that of his son Ben who, as Britain's most important...Tate, Alan Bowness, (himself Ben Nicholson's son-in-law), called him...
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Ben Nicholson, you are soooo dreamy. Omigod. He talked to us!
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 9/11/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...going to put a paragraph here explaining who Ben Nicholson is and why we're writing about him, but we...ve ever eaten, mostly due to the presence of Ben Nicholson." And: "Although Ben does resemble Opie, Richie Cunningham and that...
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Concord High School senior class president Ben Nicholson says he and his friends have formed a philosophy about high school society. [Derived headline]
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 4/9/2007; 700+ words
; ...High School senior class president Ben Nicholson says he and his friends have formed...philosophy about high school society. Nicholson will be attending Brown University...Matt Golde, Scott Salchunas, Nicholson and Kevin Schofield. Back row...
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THE GUILLOTINE Twentieth-Century Classics That Won't Last No 18: BEN NICHOLSON
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 5/9/1999; ; 577 words
; ...world and its phobia of authentic modernity. Ben Nicholson, for example. Nicholson was a fine, subtle artist who could manipulate...red and white? Mir. And so it goes. For all Nicholson's unquestioned talent, for all the grace...
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Nicholson, Ben.(from TLS, Aug. 18, 2000)(Review)(Reprint) (book review) (book review)
Magazine article from: Biography; 1/1/2001; ; 396 words
; Ben Nicholson: The Vicious Circle of His Life and Art. Sarah Jane Checkland. London: John Murray, 2000. 486 pp. [pound]25.00. This...
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Man charged with fraud ; A man has been charged with fraud after the alleged theft of paintings by the English abstract artist Ben Nicholson.
Newspaper article from: Western Morning News, The Plymouth (UK); 1/13/2009; 280 words
; A man has been charged with fraud after the alleged theft of paintings by the English abstract artist Ben Nicholson. Police investigated a reported burglary at an address in St Ives, West Cornwall, last July. They later found the paintings...
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Ben Nicholson
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Ben Nicholson Ben Nicholson (1894-1982) was the first English painter to create geometrical abstract paintings and reliefs that directly contributed to the international abstract movement. Ben Nicholson was born near Uxbridge, England, on...
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Nicholson, Ben
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
Nicholson, Ben (1894–1982). British...Buckinghamshire, son of Sir William Nicholson and Mabel Nicholson, who was the sister...1931 (they divorced in 1938) she and Ben Nicholson took a keen interest in each other...
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Nicholson, Sir William
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
Nicholson, Sir William (1872–1949). British painter and graphic artist, the father of Ben Nicholson . He was born in Newark-on-Trent and studied at Sir Hubert Herkomer...
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Barbara Hepworth
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...married another British artist, Ben Nicholson. Under his influence, her sculpture...and geometrical. Hepworth and Nicholson traveled through France for most...fear for the first time. She and Nicholson had about $100 in the bank at...
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Ede, H. S.
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
...whom he was friendly included Ben and Winifred Nicholson (whom he met in 1923 and who...from the past. Works of art by Ben Nicholson and Brancusi would sit alongside...represented include David Jones, Ben Nicholson, Alfred Wallis , and Christopher...
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