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Featured researches published by Henry A. Homburger.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1999

The Diagnosis and Incidence of Allergic Fungal Sinusitis

Jens U. Ponikau; David A. Sherris; Eugene B. Kern; Henry A. Homburger; E. Frigas; Thomas A. Gaffey; Glenn D. Roberts

OBJECTIVE To reevaluate the current criteria for diagnosing allergic fungal sinusitis (AFS) and determine the incidence of AFS in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). METHODS This prospective study evaluated the incidence of AFS in 210 consecutive patients with CRS with or without polyposis, of whom 101 were treated surgically. Collecting and culturing fungi from nasal mucus require special handling, and novel methods are described. Surgical specimen handling emphasizes histologic examination to visualize fungi and eosinophils in the mucin. The value of allergy testing in the diagnosis of AFS is examined. RESULTS Fungal cultures of nasal secretions were positive in 202 (96%) of 210 consecutive CRS patients. Allergic mucin was found in 97 (96%) of 101 consecutive surgical cases of CRS. Allergic fungal sinusitis was diagnosed in 94 (93%) of 101 consecutive surgical cases with CRS, based on histopathologic findings and culture results. Immunoglobulin E-mediated hypersensitivity to fungal allergens was not evident in the majority of AFS patients. CONCLUSION The data presented indicate that the diagnostic criteria for AFS are present in the majority of patients with CRS with or without polyposis. Since the presence of eosinophils in the allergic mucin, and not a type I hypersensitivity, is likely the common denominator in the pathophysiology of AFS, we propose a change in terminology from AFS to eosinophilic fungal rhinosinusitis.


JAMA Neurology | 2008

Neuromyelitis optica and non organ-specific autoimmunity.

Sean J. Pittock; Vanda A. Lennon; Jérôme De Seze; Patrick Vermersch; Henry A. Homburger; Dean M. Wingerchuk; Claudia F. Lucchinetti; Hélène Zéphir; Kevin G. Moder; Brian G. Weinshenker

BACKGROUND Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is often associated with other clinical or serological markers of non-organ-specific autoimmunity. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the relationship between NMO spectrum disorders (NMOSDs), including NMO, longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis, and recurrent optic neuritis, and autoimmune disease. We concentrated on the association with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), Sjögren syndrome (SS), or serological evidence of these disorders, which commonly is a source of diagnostic confusion. DESIGN Retrospective blinded serological survey. SETTING Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, and Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Lille. METHODS Group 1 included 153 US patients with NMOSDs (78 with NMO and 75 with longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis) and 33 control subjects with SS/SLE. Group 2 included 30 French patients with SS/SLE, 14 with NMOSDs (6 with NMO, 6 with longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis, and 2 with recurrent optic neuritis), 16 without NMOSDs, and 4 with NMO without SS/SLE. RESULTS For group 1, NMO-IgG was detected in 66.7%, antinuclear antibodies in 43.8%, and Sjögren syndrome A (SSA) antibodies in 15.7% of patients with NMO and longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis. Five NMO-IgG-seropositive patients with NMOSDs had coexisting SLE, SS, or both. Antinuclear antibodies and SSA antibodies were more frequent in NMO-IgG-seropositive patients than in NMO-IgG-seronegative patients (P= .001). For group 2, NMO-IgG was detected in 5 of 14 patients (35.7%) with NMOSDs and SS/SLE and in 2 of 4 patients (50.0%) with NMO without SS/SLE (P= .59). We detected NMO-IgG only in patients with NMOSDs and not in 49 controls with SS/SLE but without optic neuritis or myelitis from the 2 cohorts (P= .01). CONCLUSION Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders with seropositive findings for NMO-IgG occurring with SS/SLE or non-organ-specific autoantibodies is an indication of coexisting NMO rather than a vasculopathic or other complication of SS/SLE.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2000

Guidelines for Clinical Use of the Antinuclear Antibody Test and Tests for Specific Autoantibodies to Nuclear Antigens

Arthur Kavanaugh; Russell Tomar; John D. Reveille; Daniel H. Solomon; Henry A. Homburger

The following guideline presents a series of recommendations based on published medical literature for use of the antinuclear antibody (ANA) test and tests for specific autoantibodies to nuclear antigens in the diagnostic evaluation, prognostic assessment, and monitoring of patients with systemic rheumatic diseases. The guideline emphasizes the need for clinical evaluation to improve the usefulness of test results in patient management. Consideration is given to appropriate use of the generic ANA test in the initial evaluation of patients with signs and symptoms of a systemic rheumatic disease, the evaluation of patients suspected of having lupus erythematosus, use in clinical situations in which the ANA test is required to establish a disease diagnosis, and identification of clinical situations in which the ANA test has little value. Sections are also devoted to recommendations aimed at improving the analytic methods used to detect and measure ANA and specific autoantibodies to nuclear antigens and to the appropriate use of tests for specific autoantibodies in several disease situations that commonly occur in patients with suspected or documented systemic rheumatic diseases. Emphasis is placed on the use of these tests only in situations in which the test results can be expected to provide information necessary for clinical decision making. Those tests of limited medical usefulness and situations in which test results are likely to be misleading are also identified.


Neurology | 2008

CNS aquaporin-4 autoimmunity in children.

Andrew McKeon; Vanda A. Lennon; Timothy Lotze; S. Tenenbaum; Jayne Ness; Mary Rensel; Nancy L. Kuntz; J. P. Fryer; Henry A. Homburger; Jill V. Hunter; Brian G. Weinshenker; Karl N. Krecke; Claudia F. Lucchinetti; Sean J. Pittock

Background: In adult patients, autoantibodies targeting the water channel aquaporin-4 (AQP4) are a biomarker for a spectrum of CNS inflammatory demyelinating disorders with predilection for optic nerves and spinal cord (neuromyelitis optica [NMO]). Here we describe the neurologic, serologic, and radiographic findings associated with CNS AQP4 autoimmunity in childhood. Methods: A total of 88 consecutive seropositive children were identified through service evaluation for NMO-IgG. Sera of 75 were tested for coexisting autoantibodies. Clinical information was available for 58. Results: Forty-two patients (73%) were non-Caucasian, and 20 (34%) had African ethnicity. Median age at symptom onset was 12 years (range 4–18). Fifty-seven (98%) had attacks of either optic neuritis (n = 48; 83%) or transverse myelitis (n = 45; 78%), or both. Twenty-six (45%) had episodic cerebral symptoms (encephalopathy, ophthalmoparesis, ataxia, seizures, intractable vomiting, or hiccups). Thirty-eight (68%) had brain MRI abnormalities, predominantly involving periventricular areas (in descending order of frequency): the medulla, supratentorial and infratentorial white matter, midbrain, cerebellum, thalamus, and hypothalamus. Additional autoantibodies were detected in 57 of 75 patients (76%), and 16 of 38 (42%) had a coexisting autoimmune disorder recorded (systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren syndrome, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, Graves disease). Attacks were recurrent in 54 patients (93%; median follow-up, 12 months). Forty-three of 48 patients (90%) had residual disability: 26 (54%) visual impairment and 21 (44%) motor deficits (median Expanded Disability Status Scale 4.0 at 12 months). Conclusions: Aquaporin-4 autoimmunity is a distinctive recurrent and widespread inflammatory CNS disease in children.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Frequency and Significance of Antibodies to Liver/Kidney Microsome Type 1 in Adults With Chronic Active Hepatitis

Albert J. Czaja; Michael P. Manns; Henry A. Homburger

To assess the frequency of antibodies to liver/kidney microsome type 1 (anti-LKM1) in patients with chronic active hepatitis, 131 such patients were tested by an indirect immunofluorescence assay. Of 62 patients with type 1 autoimmune hepatitis, none were seropositive. In contrast, 3 of 11 patients with autoimmune hepatitis and antimitochondrial antibodies (27%) were seropositive for anti-LKM1. Each had responded to corticosteroid therapy, and retesting of sera confirmed that each had been misclassified as antimitochondrial antibody positive. None of the patients with chronic active hepatitis B (14 patients) or C (24 patients) had anti-LKM1. Similarly, none of the 20 patients with cryptogenic disease had these antibodies. It is concluded that anti-LKM1 is specific for type 2 autoimmune hepatitis and is infrequent in adult patients seen at a referral center in the United States for chronic active hepatitis. Anti-LKM1 reactivity may be misinterpreted as antimitochondrial antibody reactivity by indirect immunofluorescence. Chronic hepatitis B and C virus infections are not important stimuli for the production of anti-LKM1, and testing for anti-LKM 1 is unlikely to clarify the nature of cryptogenic disease.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

A controlled trial of cyclosporine in the treatment of primary biliary cirrhosis

Russell H. Wiesner; Jurgen Ludwig; Keith D. Lindor; Roberta A. Jorgensen; William P. Baldus; Henry A. Homburger; E. Rolland Dickson

Primary biliary cirrhosis is a progressive disease of the liver characterized by the immunologic destruction of bile ducts; effective therapy is lacking. We therefore evaluated the safety and efficacy of low-dose cyclosporine in 29 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis without evidence of damage to the lobular architecture (precirrhotic disease) or portal hypertension. The patients were randomly assigned to receive either cyclosporine (4 mg per kilogram of body weight per day) or placebo. After one year 17 of the 19 patients assigned to cyclosporine had improvement or stability in their degree of fatigue, and 18 in their degree of pruritus. In contrast, among the 10 patients assigned to placebo, fatigue increased in 4 (P less than 0.06) and pruritus worsened in 6 (P less than 0.001). Those assigned to cyclosporine also had significant decreases in serum levels of bilirubin, alanine aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, gamma globulin, and the titer of antimitochondrial antibodies. For the 20 patients who have completed two years in the study, liver biopsies (coded specimens) showed evidence of histologic progression in only 1 of 13 patients in the cyclosporine group, as compared with 5 of 7 in the placebo group (P less than 0.003). No patient has permanently discontinued cyclosporine because of side effects; however, signs of nephrotoxicity developed in 12 of 19, and 9 of 19 had increased blood pressure. We conclude that in patients with precirrhotic primary biliary cirrhosis, immunosuppressive therapy with cyclosporine is promising and deserves further evaluation.


Neurology | 1997

Peripheral neuropathy associated with sicca complex

Ian A. Grant; Gene G. Hunder; Henry A. Homburger; Peter James Dyck

Peripheral neuropathy occurs in Sjögrens syndrome, a disorder in which systemic immunologic phenomena, including vasculitis, are common. Neuropathy also occurs with isolated sicca complex (keratoconjunctivitis sicca and xerostomia); whether this represents a distinct syndrome is unclear. We retrospectively studied 54 patients with sicca complex and peripheral neuropathy to determine mode of presentation, neuropathic patterns, frequency and pattern of serologic abnormalities, and frequency of systemic disease, including necrotizing vasculitis. Peripheral neuropathy was the presenting problem in 87%. Although sicca symptoms occurred in 93%, they were a presenting complaint in only 11% and were usually mild, reported only after specific inquiry. Minor salivary gland biopsy was positive in 73%. Sensory neuropathies strongly predominated; 61% of patients manifested either sensory polyneuropathy or polyganglionopathy. Less common patterns included sensorimotor polyneuropathy (17%) and polyradiculoneuropathy (11%). Vasculitic neuropathy was demonstrated in only two patients, but nonspecific epineurial inflammation was present in 70% of nerve biopsies. Clinical evidence of systemic disease was uncommon, particularly in the sensory polyganglionopathy group, in whom extraglandular features other than weight loss occurred in only 1 of 12 patients. Antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens, the most specific serologic marker of Sjögrens syndrome, were present in 10.4%. We conclude that peripheral neuropathy and isolated sicca complex form a distinctive syndrome in which neuropathy is the presenting feature and sicca is easily overlooked; sensory polyneuropathy and polyganglionopathy predominate; serology is confirmatory but very insensitive; and extraglandular disease, including vasculitis, is uncommon compared with typical Sjögrens syndrome. Tests of ocular or salivary involvement are needed for diagnosis, and demonstration of inflammation in biopsied nerve is supportive. Improved definition of this disorder should permit further studies of natural history and efficacy of immunotherapy.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2001

Evaluation of serologic disease markers in a population-based cohort of patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease.

William J. Sandborn; Edward V. Loftus; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Kenneth A. Fleming; Frank Seibold; Henry A. Homburger; Boualem Sendid; Roger W. Chapman; William J. Tremaine; Debra K. Kaul; Jeannie S. Wallace; William S. Harmsen; Alan R. Zinsmeister; Stephan R. Targan

BackgroundThe sensitivity of assays for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA), anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibody (ASCA), and antipancreatic antibody (PAB) in different laboratories is unknown. Likewise, the sensitivity and diagnostic usefulness of these assays in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in the community is unknown. MethodsAn incidence cohort of 290 patients with IBD were offered participation in the study. Blood was obtained from 162 patients (56%) (83 with ulcerative colitis, 79 with Crohns disease) who agreed to participate. ANCA was determined in five laboratories, ASCA in two laboratories, and PAB in one laboratory. ResultsIn ulcerative colitis, the sensitivity of ANCA determined in five laboratories varied widely, ranging from 0–63%. In Crohns disease, the sensitivity of ASCA determined in two laboratories did not vary significantly, ranging from 39–44%; and the sensitivity of PAB determined in one laboratory was 15%. The optimal diagnostic usefulness was obtained from one laboratory where the positive predictive values of a positive ANCA assay combined with a negative ASCA assay for ulcerative colitis, and a negative ANCA combined with a positive ASCA for Crohns disease, were 75% and 86%, respectively. ConclusionsIn patients with IBD, the sensitivity of ANCA varied widely in different laboratories, whereas the prevalence of ASCA was similar. The positive predictive values of the ANCA assay combined with the ASCA assay for ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease are high enough to be clinically useful.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1979

Cockroach cause of allergic asthma: Its specificity and immunologic profile

Bann Kang; Devi Vellody; Henry A. Homburger; John W. Yunginger

To assess the etiologic role of cockroach antigen in bronchial asthma, 46 asthmatic subjects were studied using in vitro assays for total and cockroach-specific IgE antibodies (IgEcr) and the responsiveness of the skin and bronchial tree to the antigen challenge in vivo. Asthmatic subjects were divided into skin test-positive (PCR) and skin test-negative (NCR) groups according to immediate skin response to cockroach antigen. The 28 in the PCR group showed high total IgE (1,901 ng/ml) and a high cockroach-specific IgE antibody level (329%) in the serum compared to the 10 in the NCR group (IgE: 915 ng/ml, IgEcr:84%) (p less than 0.001). Bronchial challenge with the antigen revealed immediate asthmatic reaction (30/33) and late asthmatic reaction (16/33) in the PCR asthmatics, whereas the NCR asthmatics showed neither immediate asthmatic reaction (2/13 showed questionable decrease in FEV1) nor late asthmatic reaction (p less than 0.001). A marked increase in peripheral eosinophils (758% vs 121%) was noted following antigen inhalation in the skin test-positive asthmatics (p less than 0.025). The results indicate that cockroach antigen causes antigen-specific IgE-mediated bronchial asthma and peripheral eosinophilia in specifically sensitized asthmatic subjects.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 1985

Immunohistochemical Investigation of Cerebral Ischemia in Gerbils

Takehiko Yanagihara; Toshiki Yoshimine; Kazuyoshi Morimoto; Kazumi Yamamoto; Henry A. Homburger

Experimental cerebral ischemia was produced in gerbils by occlusion of the right common carotid artery in the neck. The evolution of the ischemic lesions was followed from five minutes to six hours by using the immunohistochemical techniques for tubulin and creatine kinase BB-isoenzyme. The earliest lesion was found in the subiculum-CA1 and CA2 regions of the hippocampus in five minutes. There was loss of staining in the apical dendrites and perikarya of the pyramidal cells. The earliest lesion in the cerebral cortex, visible in ten minutes, was a laminar loss of staining for tubulin. Evolution of the ischemic lesions in the thalamus and caudoputamen was delayed. However, in two hours widespread ischemic lesions were seen there. Evolution of the ischemic lesions was slightly slower with the reaction for creatine kinase BB-isoenzyme as compared to the reaction for tubulin, but was far more sensitive than hematoxylin-eosin staining. The distribution of ischemic lesions detected by the immunohistochemical method compared to ischemic areas detected by an India ink perfusion study suggested that both the extent of regional ischemia and regional difference in tissue vulnerability were contributing factors for the emergence of early ischemic lesions. The mechanism for prompt disappearance of the immunohistochemical reaction for tubulin is not clear, but the present investigation demonstrates the usefulness of the immunohistochemical technique for detecting early ischemic lesions and provides a possible biochemical mechanism for cellular damage after ischemic insults.

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