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Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCAs) are antibodies against antigens in the cytoplasm of neutrophil granulocytes (the most common type of white blood cell). They are detected as a blood test in a number of autoimmune disorders.
TypesThere are two types, depending on the pattern of staining on light microscopy:
PathophysiologyThe exact reason why people develop ANCAs is unknown. It is assumed that ANCAs act by causing release of lytic enzymes from the white blood cells (Falk et al 1990), causing inflammation of the blood vessel wall (vasculitis). HistoryANCAs were originally described in Davies et al in 1982 in segmental necrotising glomerulonephritis, and by van der Woude et al in 1985 in Wegener's. The Second International ANCA Workshop, held in The Netherlands in May 1989, fixed the nomenclature on perinuclear vs. cytoplasmic patterns, and the antigens MPO and PR3 were discovered in 1988 and 1989, respectively (Jennette et al 1990). References
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