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Review
. 1996 Feb 13:778:325-37.
doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1996.tb21140.x.

Intraocular inflammatory disease (uveitis) and the use of oral tolerance: a status report

Affiliations
Review

Intraocular inflammatory disease (uveitis) and the use of oral tolerance: a status report

R B Nussenblatt et al. Ann N Y Acad Sci. .

Abstract

Intraocular inflammatory disease, or uveitis, is a disorder that mostly affects children and young adults. It is the cause of about 10% of the severe visual handicap in the United States. Many of the severe, sight-threatening uveitic conditions are thought to be driven by putative autoimmune mechanisms, often with high-dose oral prednisone use as treatment, along with cytotoxic agents, antimetabolites, and cyclosporine adjunctively. The feeding of the uveitogenic retinal S-Ag to rats immunized with the same antigen resulted in clinical protection. A pilot study in which two patients, one with pars planitis and the other with Behcet's disease, were fed with the retinal S-Ag resulted in these patients' immunosuppressive medication being decreased and/or stopped. The trial also provided us with information concerning dosage and expected immune responses. A randomized, masked study looking at the effect of feeding retinal antigens to uveitis patients is ongoing.

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