Ainley C, Cason J, Slavin B M, Wolstencroft R A, Thompson R P
Department of Gastroenterology, St. Thomas' Hospital, London, England.
Gastroenterology. 1991 Jun;100(6):1616-25. doi: 10.1016/0016-5085(91)90660-d.
Cellular immunity is likely to be important in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease; whether it is abnormal is not clear. The heterogeneity of patients with Crohn's disease probably underlies the disparity of reports, but attempts to determine which clinical features influence cellular immunity have been largely unsuccessful. This is probably caused by the omission of nutritional status as a potential factor, even though zinc deficiency has frequently been linked with abnormal immunity. Therefore, a detailed study of nutritional and tissue zinc status, nonspecific cellular immunity, and a measure of phagocytic function was performed in 32 patients with Crohn's disease and in a control group of 18 normal subjects and 12 patients with anorexia nervosa. Fourteen patients with Crohn's disease, all patients with anorexia nervosa, but none of the normal controls were malnourished. Peripheral blood lymphocyte population levels were normal in patients with Crohn's disease and in normal controls, but there was a small decrease in the levels of patients with anorexia nervosa. In vivo delayed hypersensitivity skin test responses were profoundly depressed in patients with anorexia nervosa and decreased in patients with Crohn's disease who were malnourished or receiving systemic glucocorticoids. In vitro lymphocyte transformation was reduced in malnourished patients with Crohn's disease, but there were only minor changes in patients with anorexia nervosa. There were alterations of in vitro immunoregulation in Crohn's disease, but they were not responsible for the abnormal lymphocyte transformation responses in malnourished patients. In vitro phagocytic function was reduced in patients with active Crohn's disease. These findings suggest that depressed in vivo and in vitro cellular immunity in malnourished patients with Crohn's disease is caused by a qualitative lymphocyte defect and that depressed in vivo but normal in vitro cellular immunity in anorexia nervosa is caused by a quantitative defect. Thus, malnutrition in Crohn's disease resembles kwashiorkor; in anorexia nervosa, it resembles marasmus. Tissue zinc status was mostly normal in Crohn's disease and anorexia nervosa, and zinc deficiency was not responsible for depressed nonspecific cellular immunity in either condition.
细胞免疫在克罗恩病的发病机制中可能起重要作用;其是否异常尚不清楚。克罗恩病患者的异质性可能是报告存在差异的原因,但试图确定哪些临床特征会影响细胞免疫的尝试大多未成功。这可能是由于遗漏了营养状况这一潜在因素,尽管锌缺乏经常与免疫异常有关。因此,对32例克罗恩病患者以及18名正常受试者和12名神经性厌食症患者组成的对照组进行了营养和组织锌状态、非特异性细胞免疫以及吞噬功能指标的详细研究。14例克罗恩病患者、所有神经性厌食症患者均营养不良,而正常对照组无一例营养不良。克罗恩病患者和正常对照组的外周血淋巴细胞群体水平正常,但神经性厌食症患者的水平略有下降。神经性厌食症患者的体内迟发型超敏皮肤试验反应严重降低,营养不良或接受全身糖皮质激素治疗的克罗恩病患者的反应降低。营养不良的克罗恩病患者体外淋巴细胞转化减少,但神经性厌食症患者仅有轻微变化。克罗恩病存在体外免疫调节改变,但它们并非营养不良患者淋巴细胞转化反应异常的原因。活动期克罗恩病患者的体外吞噬功能降低。这些发现表明,营养不良的克罗恩病患者体内和体外细胞免疫功能低下是由淋巴细胞质性缺陷引起的,而神经性厌食症患者体内细胞免疫功能低下但体外正常是由数量缺陷引起的。因此,克罗恩病中的营养不良类似于夸希奥科病;在神经性厌食症中,它类似于消瘦症。克罗恩病和神经性厌食症患者的组织锌状态大多正常,两种情况下锌缺乏均不是非特异性细胞免疫功能低下的原因。