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Connective tissue responses in blacks in relation to disease: further observations
Authors:A P Polednak
Institution:Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, S.U.N.Y. at Stony Brook 11794.
Abstract:Additional information is presented in support of the hypothesis (Polednak: Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 41:49-58, 1974) that in some black populations certain connective-tissue responses, which are involved in protection against infection and repair after injury, also may predispose to specific chronic diseases. These diseases include some autoimmune disorders (i.e., systemic lupus erythematosus, sarcoidosis, and scleroderma) and various benign and malignant tumors involving connective-tissue cells. Complex interactions between genetic factors (HLA and non-HLA loci) and environmental agents may be involved both in the etiology of these autoimmune diseases and in population differences in the incidence of these diseases. A framework is reviewed whereby cellular responses to infectious agents, involving chiefly immunoglobulin-producing cells and macrophages, may have consequences in terms of pathogenesis of specific chronic diseases more common in some black populations. The possible role of natural selection in maintaining some of these diseases is also considered, along with the need for involvement of biomedical anthropologists in their investigation.
Keywords:Adaptation  Autoimmune diseases  Whites  Race  Racial differences  Cancer  Leiomyosarcoma  Kaposi's sarcoma  Multiple myeloma  Neurofibrosarcoma  Dermatofibrosarcoma  Malignant neurolemoma  Scleroderma  Sarcoidosis  Systemic lupus erythematosus  Keloids
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