Eclampsia
Treatment
Pre-eclampsia an
Autoimmune Disease
By news release
Jul 27, 2008 - 11:21:05 AM
Biochemists at The University of
Texas Medical School at Houston say they are the first to provide pre-clinical evidence that pregnancy-induced high
blood pressure or pre-eclampsia may be an autoimmune disease. Their research could provide novel diagnostic and therapeutic
possibilities for this intractable disease. Findings appear online in
Nature Medicine on July
27.
Scientists in the laboratory of Yang Xia, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at the UT Medical School
at Houston, provided evidence of the connection by inducing
symptoms similar to pre-eclampsia in pregnant mice that had been administered
autoantibodies
isolated from women with the condition. This proof-of-principle experiment is called adoptive transfer.
Unlike antibodies which attack foreign substances and clear diseases from the body, autoantibodies attack their own cells and cause conditions like lupus in which a person's immune system attacks the body's own organs and tissues, said Xia, the senior author. In the case of pre-eclampsia, autoantibodies =are believed to bind and activate an angiotensin receptor that results in artery constriction.
Pre-eclampsia like symptoms were prevented when the pregnant mice were given agents designed to block the activation of the angiotensin receptor."The antibody injection model of pre-eclampsia described here provides strong experimental support for our working hypothesis that pre-eclampsia is an autoimmune disease in which angiotensin receptor-activating autoantibodies contribute to many features of the disease," Xia and her colleagues wrote in the paper. If the research is confirmed in human trials, Xia believes this information could be used for both the earlier diagnosis and treatment of pre-eclampsia. By measuring autoantibody levels, clinicians could detect the disease weeks before symptoms appear. In addition, new drugs could be developed to inhibit the activation of the angiotensin receptor.In the meantime, Xia said further research is needed to determine what triggers the production of the autoantibodies."Pre-eclampsia is one of the leading causes of prematurity and Small For Gestational Age (SGA) infants. Many of these babies are born with underdeveloped lungs or poor lung clearance of fluid, necessitating neonatal intensive care admission and various respiratory therapies to support their breathing. We continue to struggle to find a proven prevention or treatment solution for these problems," said Nehal A. Parikh, D.O., an assistant professor of neonatal-perinatal medicine at the UT Medical School at Houston and a member of the medical staff of Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital. "If targeting the angiotensin receptor autoantibody is a useful strategy to treat pre-eclampsia, then it will also be a useful way to prevent and treat SGA associated with pre-eclampsia," Xia said. The risk factors for pre-eclampsia include: having a history of pre-eclampsia; being obese; having twins, triplets or other multiples; and developing gestational diabetes. Using Omega-3 in diet can possibly prevent eclamplsia.The study is titled "Angiotensin receptor agonistic autoantibodies induce pre-eclampsia in pregnant mice." Research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the March of Dimes, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board and Merck. Source:University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
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