Abstract

Utilizing an adjuvant arthritis model in rats, we examined humoral immunity to collagen and inflammation in animals with active disease and during drug therapy. Humoral immunity to types I or II collagen was not detected in the sera of rats with advanced adjuvant arthritis; this was in marked contrast to rats with type II collagen-induced arthritis which possessed serum antibodies to native and denatured type II collagen. Hind paw edema and bone pathology were monitored as parameters of inflammation. A new investigational drug, Wy-41,770, was most effective in reducing all of these aspects of inflammatory disease while indomethacin, methylprednisolone, and D-penicillamine caused a less significant diminution of only some of these parameters of inflammation. Antibodies to collagen were not detected in the sera of rats treated with the drugs under study. These data demonstrate that adjuvant arthritis can occur in rats in the absence of antibodies to types I or II collagen.

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