Immunohistochemical findings in rheumatoid nodules.
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Eighteen nodules from patients with rheumatoid disease were studied histologically and immunohistochemically. A continuum of microscopic changes was observed with varying degrees of fibrinoid necrosis, mononuclear cell infiltration and healing by fibrous scarring. In two cases there was focal evidence of arteritis. Fibrin was plentiful in the necrotic areas of nodules. Small amounts of immunoglobulin were identified in plasma cells and as irregular extracellular deposits in and around areas of necrosis. In a single small vein abnormal IgG was detected. Mononuclear cells surrounding areas of necrosis stained strongly with antisera to ferritin and a cytoplasmic macrophage antigen, stained variably with muramidase (lysozyme) and negatively with alpha-1 antitrypsin antibodies. Perls' stain for ferric iron was almost entirely negative and ultrastructural x-ray microanalysis indicated that the cytoplasm of these cells were entirely free of iron. These findings confirm the chronic inflammatory nature of rheumatoid nodules but provide no support for the view that they originate in areas of vasculitis. A relative lack of cytoplasmic antiprotease along with a strong expression of ferritin appears to be a characteristic feature of macrophages in rheumatoid tissue.