Willkens R F, Hansen J A, Malmgren J A, Nisperos B, Mickelson E M, Watson M A
Arthritis Rheum. 1982 Dec;25(12):1435-9. doi: 10.1002/art.1780251208.
Women of the Yakima Indian Nation, a northwest Native American population, are known to have an increased prevalence of a rheumatoid arthritis-like disease characterized by erosive arthritis, frequent involvement of metacarpophalangeal and wrist joints, and positive rheumatoid factor. These patients are frequently positive for antinuclear antibodies and often demonstrate adverse reactions to gold therapy. HLA antigens were determined for 29 Yakima Indians with this disease, but there was no increased frequency of either HLA-Dw4 or HLA-DR4, in contrast to other populations with rheumatoid arthritis. There was, however, a trend toward an increase in HLA-B40 and a decrease in HLA-DR8. The relative risk for rheumatoid arthritis in Yakima Indians was 2.53 in the presence of B40 and 0.28 in the presence of DR8.
雅基马印第安民族的女性,是西北的一个美国原住民群体,已知患有一种类风湿关节炎样疾病的患病率增加,其特征为侵蚀性关节炎、掌指关节和腕关节频繁受累以及类风湿因子阳性。这些患者抗核抗体经常呈阳性,并且常常对金疗法表现出不良反应。对29名患有这种疾病的雅基马印第安人进行了HLA抗原检测,但与其他类风湿关节炎人群相比,HLA-Dw4或HLA-DR4的频率均未增加。然而,存在HLA-B40增加和HLA-DR8减少的趋势。在雅基马印第安人中,存在B40时类风湿关节炎的相对风险为2.53,存在DR8时为0.28。