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Featured researches published by Sheldon M. Wolff.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

The Effect of Dietary Supplementation with n—3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids on the Synthesis of Interleukin-1 and Tumor Necrosis Factor by Mononuclear Cells

Stefan Endres; Reza Ghorbani; Vicki E. Kelley; Kostis Georgilis; Gerhard Lonnemann; Jos W. M. van der Meer; Joseph G. Cannon; Tina S. Rogers; Mark S. Klempner; Peter Weber; Ernst J. Schaefer; Sheldon M. Wolff; Charles A. Dinarello

We examined whether the synthesis of interleukin-1 or tumor necrosis factor, two cytokines with potent inflammatory activities, is influenced by dietary supplementation with n-3 fatty acids. Nine healthy volunteers added 18 g of fish-oil concentrate per day to their normal Western diet for six weeks. We used a radioimmunoassay to measure interleukin-1 (IL-1 beta and IL-1 alpha) and tumor necrosis factor produced in vitro by stimulated peripheral-blood mononuclear cells. With endotoxin as a stimulus, the synthesis of IL-1 beta was suppressed from 7.4 +/- 0.9 ng per milliliter at base line to 4.2 +/- 0.5 ng per milliliter after six weeks of supplementation (43 percent decrease; P = 0.048). Ten weeks after the end of n-3 supplementation, we observed a further decrease to 2.9 +/- 0.5 ng per milliliter (61 percent decrease; P = 0.005). The production of IL-1 alpha and tumor necrosis factor responded in a similar manner. Twenty weeks after the end of supplementation, the production of IL-1 beta, IL-1 alpha, and tumor necrosis factor had returned to the presupplement level. The decreased production of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor was accompanied by a decreased ratio of arachidonic acid to eicosapentaenoic acid in the membrane phospholipids of mononuclear cells. We conclude that the synthesis of IL-1 beta, IL-1 alpha, and tumor necrosis factor can be suppressed by dietary supplementation with long-chain n-3 fatty acids. The reported antiinflammatory effect of these n-3 fatty acids may be mediated in part by their inhibitory effect on the production of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1983

Wegener's granulomatosis : prospective clinical and therapeutic experience with 85 patients for 21 years

Anthony S. Fauci; Barton F. Haynes; Paul Katz; Sheldon M. Wolff

Eighty-five patients with Wegeners granulomatosis were studied for 21 years at the National Institutes of Health. Patients were treated with a protocol consisting of cyclophosphamide, 2 mg/kg body weight d, together with prednisone, 1 mg/kg body weight d, followed by conversion of the prednisone to an alternate-day regimen. Complete remissions were achieved in 79 of 85 patients (93%). The mean duration of remission for living patients was 48.2 (+/- 3.6) months. Twenty-three patients are off all therapy for a mean duration of 35.3 (+/- 6.3) months without therapy. This study provides a prospective experience with Wegeners granulomatosis and shows that long-term remissions can be induced and maintained in an extremely high number of patients by the combination of daily cyclophosphamide and alternate-day prednisone therapy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988

Detection of Circulating Tumor Necrosis Factor after Endotoxin Administration

Hamish R. Michie; Kirk R. Manogue; David R. Spriggs; Arthur Revhaug; Sarah T. O'Dwyer; Charles A. Dinarello; Anthony Cerami; Sheldon M. Wolff; Douglas W. Wilmore

Cytokines, products of stimulated macrophages, are thought to mediate many host responses to bacterial infection, but increased circulating cytokine concentrations have not been detected consistently in infected patients. We measured plasma concentrations of circulating tumor necrosis factor alpha (cachectin), interleukin-1 beta, and gamma interferon, together with physiologic and hormonal responses, in 13 healthy men after intravenous administration of Escherichia coli endotoxin (4 ng per kilogram of body weight) and during a control period of saline administration. Eight additional subjects received ibuprofen before receiving endotoxin or saline. Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor were generally less than 35 pg per milliliter throughout the control period, but increased 90 to 180 minutes after endotoxin administration to mean peak concentrations of 240 +/- 70 pg per milliliter, as compared with 35 +/- 5 pg per milliliter after saline administration. Host responses were temporally associated with the increase in circulating tumor necrosis factor at 90 minutes, and the extent of symptoms, changes in white-cell count, and production of ACTH were temporally related to the peak concentration of tumor necrosis factor. Ibuprofen pretreatment did not prevent the rise in circulating tumor necrosis factor (mean peak plasma level, 170 +/- 70 pg per milliliter) but greatly attenuated the symptoms and other responses after endotoxin administration. Concentrations of circulating interleukin-1 beta and gamma interferon did not change after endotoxin administration. We conclude that the response to endotoxin is associated with a brief pulse of circulating tumor necrosis factor and that the resultant responses are effected through the cyclooxygenase pathway.


Medicine | 1975

The hypereosinophilic syndrome: analysis of fourteen cases with review of the literature.

Michael J. Chusid; David C. Dale; Burton C. West; Sheldon M. Wolff

Several closely related disease entities make up the idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES). The syndrome is manifest by persistent and prolonged eosinophilia with organ damage. A group of 14 patients had hematologic, cardiac, and neurologic abnormalities attributable to this disease. Patient survival and response to chemotherapy was significantly better in this group than in previously reported patients. The etiology of HES remains unknown, as does the mechanism of tissue damage.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1974

WEGENER'S GRANULOMATOSIS

Sheldon M. Wolff; Anthony S. Fauci; Robert G. Horn; David C. Dale

SummaryThe clinical entity now known as Wegeners granulomatosis was first reported in 1936. Since then the diseases histopathology has been clarified, although its etiology remains unknown. Treatment requires immunosuppressant therapy and careful following of affected patients. The present report reviews the historical background for the discovering of Wegeners granulomatosis and current clinical considerations.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1979

Cyclophosphamide therapy of severe systemic necrotizing vasculitis.

Anthony S. Fauci; Paul Katz; Barton F. Haynes; Sheldon M. Wolff

We studied 17 patients with severe systemic necrotizing vasculitis over an 11-year-period. Sixteen patients were treated daily with cyclophosphamide (2 mg per kilogram per day), and one was treated with azathioprine (2 mg per kilogram per day). Before entering the study, all patients had active and progressive disease, even though 16 patients had been receiving corticosteroids that had caused severe and often incapacitating toxic side effects. Three patients died during the study. Complete and often dramatic remissions occurred in the surviving 14 patients, who were then placed on alternate-day corticosteroid treatment with continuation of cyclophosphamide. Corticosteroids were later discontinued in seven patients. The mean duration of remission was 22 months (range, two to 61). No patient showed recurrence of disease during treatment with cytotoxic agents.


The Lancet | 1991

Production of interleukin-1-receptor antagonist during experimental endotoxaemia

Eric V. Granowitz; Debra D. Poutsiaka; Joseph G. Cannon; Sheldon M. Wolff; Charles A. Dinarello; Alfred A. Santos; Douglas W. Wilmore

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of sepsis. IL-1-receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) is a naturally occurring inhibitor of IL-1 activity that competes with IL-1 for occupancy of cell-surface receptors but possesses no agonist activity. We induced endotoxaemia in 9 healthy human volunteers by injection of Escherichia coli endotoxin, and measured plasma concentrations of IL-1 and IL-1ra by radioimmunoassay during the next 24 h. Peak plasma concentrations of IL-1ra were about a hundred-fold greater than those of IL-1 beta. No IL-1 or IL-1ra were detectable in the plasma of 4 volunteers injected with saline. Our results suggest that the predominant natural response to endotoxin in man is the production of antagonist rather than agonist.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1977

The ocular manifestations of Wegener's granulomatosis: Fifteen years experience and review of the literature

Barton F. Haynes; Martin L. Fishman; Anthony S. Fauci; Sheldon M. Wolff

Ocular manifestations of Wegeners granulomatosis may occur secondary to contiguous granulomatous sinusitis or as a result of focal vasculitis. Contiguous granulomatous sinus disease causes nasolacrimal duct obstruction, proptosis and ocular muscle or optic nerve involvement. Focal vasculitis unrelated to contiguous upper respiratory tract disease is manifested by conjunctivitis, episcleritis, scleritis, corneoscleral ulceration, uveitis, and granulomatous vasculitis of the retina and optic nerve. A review of 29 cases of Wegeners granulomatosis and three cases of lymphomatoid granulomatosis studied over the past 15 years at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) disclosed single or multiple ocular manifestations of disease in 15 patients (47 per cent). The pattern of ocular disease, its relationship to systemic involvement, diagnostic methods and the response to therapy are discussed.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1974

Colchicine therapy for familial mediterranean fever. A double-blind trial.

Charles A. Dinarello; Sheldon M. Wolff; Stephen E. Goldfinger; David C. Dale; David W. Alling

Abstract Eleven patients with long standing familial Mediterranean fever were studied in a double-blind trial using daily colchicine or placebo. During 60 courses of placebo, 38 attacks of familial...


The American Journal of Medicine | 1979

The cardiovascular manifestations of the hypereosinophilic syndrome: Prospective study of 26 patients, with review of the literature

Joseph E. Parrillo; Jeffrey S. Borer; Walter L. Henry; Sheldon M. Wolff; Anthony S. Fauci

Abstract The major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with the hypereosinophilic syndrome is cardiac dysfunction. A review of 65 cases from the literature (historic series) revealed the following cardiovascular manifestations to be most common: dyspnea (60 per cent), signs of congestive heart failure (75 per cent), murmur of mitral regurgitation (49 per cent), cardiomegaly (37 per cent), T wave inversions on electrocardiogram (37 per cent) and pathologic findings of endocardial fibrosis, myocardial inflammation and mural thrombus formation (57 per cent). We have prospectively followed 26 patients with the hypereosinophilic syndrome for up to nine years (average follow-up prospectively was 3.3 years, retrospectively 5.7 years). Common cardiac findings in our 26 patients were dyspnea (42 per cent), chest pain (27 per cent), signs of congestive heart failure (38 per cent), murmur of mitral regurgitation (42 per cent), cardiomegaly (35 per cent) and T wave inversions (35 per cent). Thus, these patients demonstrated cardiovascular manifestations similar to those in the historic series, although the literature review showed a higher incidence of overt congestive heart failure. Of 22 patients having echocardiograms, 55 per cent demonstrated some clinical, roentgenographic or electrocardiographic evidence of cardiac involvement, but 82 per cent had echocardiographic abnormalities. This suggests that the echocardiogram is a sensitive and perhaps early indicator of cardiac involvement in this disease. Common echocardiographic findings included increased left ventricular wall thickness (68 per cent), left ventricular mass (73 per cent) and left atrial size (37 per cent). Prospective echocardiographic follow-up of 18 patients (for up to four and a half years) revealed that seven of eight untreated or inadequately treated patients had increases in left ventricular wall thickness, whereas all 10 adequately treated patients had decreases (eight of 10) or no change (two of 10) in left ventricular wall thickness. This suggests that adequate antihypereosinophilic therapy (with prednisone and/or hydroxyurea) may stabilize and, in some cases, reverse the cardiac manifestations of the hypereosinophilic syndrome. In previous studies, congestive heart failure due to eosinophilic cardiomyopathy has been reported to be very resistant to therapy. In our patients with congestive heart failure, treatment has been almost invariably effective when digitalis and diuretics were combined with adequate antihypereosinophilic therapy.

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Charles A. Dinarello

University of Colorado Denver

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Anthony S. Fauci

National Institutes of Health

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David C. Dale

National Institutes of Health

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Harry R. Kimball

National Institutes of Health

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Ronald J. Elin

National Institutes of Health

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Joseph G. Cannon

Georgia Regents University

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Seymour Perry

National Institutes of Health

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David W. Alling

National Institutes of Health

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