Lymphocytes Subsets in Osteoarthritis Versus Rheumatoid Arthritis
1Ola Leheita, 1Nahed Y. Abed Elrazek, 1Soha
Younes, 2Amany Zakareya Mahmoud
Departments of 1Clinical Pathology, 2Rheumatology
& Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal
University, Ismailia
Egypt.
It has been suggested that osteoarthritis (OA) is induced by
mechanical stress manifested by cartilage destruction with no or minimal
involvement of the immune response as compared to that in rheumatoid arthritis
(RA). This study is a trial to investigate the hypothesis that the immune
response has a critical role in the pathogenesis of OA. This work was performed
on 2 groups of patients: the first group included 20 primary OA knee patients
and the second group included 18 RA patients as autoimmune controls. Patients
of both groups were diagnosed according to the revised criteria of the American
college of Rheumatology (ACR). All patients were
subjected to complete history taking, clinical examination, degree of severity
of OA, disease activity for RA patients and routine laboratory assays.
Radiological examinations were done for the wrists, hands and both knees for
both RA and OA patients. Flow cytometric assessment of T cell (T helper, T
cytotoxic), B cell, Natural killer cells and the CD4/CD8 ratio in the
peripheral blood (PB) was carried out for both groups. The results of this
study showed no statistical difference between the two studied groups regarding
the percentages of the different lymphocyte subsets. These findings reflect the
similarity of immune cell profile in both RA and OA patients, and raised the
possibility that abnormalities in T cell and its subsets may contribute to the
pathogenesis of OA, and predispose to chronic progressive immune response in
the synovial membrane (SM) with cartilage destruction. Targeting the cascade
that leads to abnormal immune response may open new avenues for treating OA.