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According to UWorld question - ID#1597 [441137], a guy with a biopsy that suggests ulcerative colitis returns two weeks later, not having received treatment, with a second biopsy that shows an amelioration of pathology and decreased inflammation. The question then asks for which cytokine is most likely responsible. Answer choices were TNF-alpha, IL-1, IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, IL-12.
Answer = IL-10
62% answered correctly
I put IL-12, which 11% chose.
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My reasoning was that FA, on p. 355, states that ulcerative colitis is a Th-TWO-mediated process, which is upregulated by IL-4, -5 and -10, -13, and downregulated by IFN-gamma.
IL-12 is the closest answer because IFN-gamma and IL-12 positively regulate one another and increase the ratio of Th1/Th2-driven inflammation.
Now here's an added element of complexity: UWorld attaches two articles to the bottom of the page. I opened up the second one, which led me to PubMed, and I read the article myself. It specifically says that Crohn's disease patients have decreased IL-10 expression and that ulcerative colitis patients have increased IL-10 expression.
UWorld's explanation is that IL-10 is a general suppressor of inflammation (which is correct) and that it upregulates the Th-2 response (which is correct). However, UC is a Th2-reaction!
Does anyone have any input here?
Answer = IL-10
62% answered correctly
I put IL-12, which 11% chose.
------
My reasoning was that FA, on p. 355, states that ulcerative colitis is a Th-TWO-mediated process, which is upregulated by IL-4, -5 and -10, -13, and downregulated by IFN-gamma.
IL-12 is the closest answer because IFN-gamma and IL-12 positively regulate one another and increase the ratio of Th1/Th2-driven inflammation.
Now here's an added element of complexity: UWorld attaches two articles to the bottom of the page. I opened up the second one, which led me to PubMed, and I read the article myself. It specifically says that Crohn's disease patients have decreased IL-10 expression and that ulcerative colitis patients have increased IL-10 expression.
UWorld's explanation is that IL-10 is a general suppressor of inflammation (which is correct) and that it upregulates the Th-2 response (which is correct). However, UC is a Th2-reaction!
Does anyone have any input here?