Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0001175 (
AIDS
)
120,706
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We assessed the risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission from heterosexual seropositive hemophilic men to their female sex partners through an HIV serosurvey and questionnaire study conducted during 1984-1987. Five percent of 21 female partners of asymptomatic men and 11% of 35 partners of HIV-symptomatic (
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
[
AIDS
], AIDS-related complex [ARC], peripheral generalized lymphadenopathy [
PGL
]) hemophilic men had been infected when first tested. One of 19 seronegative women tested about 1 year later reportedly seroconverted. Only 18% of a sample of the serosurvey women responding to sex practices questions said their partners used condoms "nearly always." Over 60% engaged in oral/genital sex in addition to vaginal intercourse. Only 12% of still-seronegative women followed the preventive strategy of consistent avoidance of oral/genital sex, together with consistent condom use by the male partner. Further evidence for heterosexual transmission comes from the CDC national
AIDS
surveillance reports showing 25 women who acquired HIV infection through heterosexual contact with U.S. hemophilic men (September 6, 1988). Seven (28%) were diagnosed and reported in the first 6 months of 1988. Their ages range from 20 years to more than 70 years. The dates of infection for the women are unknown but must have been at least 5 years before
AIDS
diagnosis for at least one. Only approximately 30% of their male partners had already manifested any HIV-associated illness. Through May 18, 1988, six cases of
AIDS
have occurred in children whose infection was acquired through exposure of the mother to a hemophilic partner. Four were diagnosed in latter 1987. The median age at diagnosis was 4.5 months. Four had died. None of their mothers is as yet diagnosed.
...
PMID:Sex practice correlates of human immunodeficiency virus transmission and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome incidence in heterosexual partners and offspring of U.S. hemophilic men. 291 61
Expression of the C3b/C4b receptor (CR1) was studied on erythrocytes of 153 individuals infected with HIV and 104 age-matched normal individuals by measuring the uptake of 125I-labelled monoclonal anti-CR1 antibody. The mean number of CR1 sites on erythrocytes of asymptomatic seropositive individuals (822 +/- 270; mean +/- s.d.) and of patients with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (
PGL
; 775 +/- 320) did not differ significantly from that of normal subjects. The number was significantly lower in patients with AIDS-related complex (ARC; 543 +/- 233; P less than 5 x 10(-3)) and further decreased in patients with
AIDS
(442 +/- 271; P less than 1 x 10(-4)), whether they presented with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) or opportunistic infections. An additional finding was that of decreased expression of antigenic and functional CR1 in neutrophils from patients with
AIDS
, as assessed by radioimmunoassay of CR1 in detergent-solubilized cells and the capacity of intact cells to form rosettes with C3b-coated erythrocytes. Low numbers of CR1 on cells from patients with
AIDS
were not due to occupation of the receptor by C3 fragments on immune complexes. The correlation that was observed between decreased numbers of CR1 on erythrocytes and clinical subpopulations of symptomatic HIV-infected patients suggests that CR1 expression on erythrocytes may represent a valuable marker of the severity and natural history of HIV-associated disease.
AIDS
1987 Jul
PMID:Decreased expression of the C3b/C4b complement receptor (CR1) in AIDS and AIDS-related syndromes correlates with clinical subpopulations of patients with HIV infection. 296 32
The presence of core antigens of retrovirus HTLV-III/LAV, referred to as "AIDS-related virus" (AV), has been sought in lymph node samples of patients with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (
PGL
, 28 patients), prodromal
AIDS
(1 patient) and
AIDS
with Kaposi sarcoma (3 patients). In 30 patients the deposition of viral antigens, detected by monoclonal antibodies to HTLV-III and LAV, could be observed within the germinal centers (GCs) primarily within the extracellular network of immune complexes, and the two patients who were negative were atypical. No AV could be found in normal tonsil or in samples with follicular hyperplasia of unknown etiology (20 cases). These findings, taken together with the ultrastructural identification of typical retrovirus particles in all 9
PGL
and 2
AIDS
cases studied, indicates that the network of follicular dendritic (FD) cells is an important reservoir of AV virus antigen at this site. The persistence of this retrovirus inside the GCs helps explain how the follicular hyperplasia affecting FD cells and B blasts in
PGL
may in progressive cases be accompanied by destruction of FD cells and gradual development of T4+ lymphopenia. T4+ T cells may circulate through the GCs and become infected with AV there. In addition, the identification of retrovirus antigen in situ may be of diagnostic value.
...
PMID:HTLV-III/LAV viral antigens in lymph nodes of homosexual men with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy and AIDS. 300 62
Thirty-five homosexual men who had been the regular sexual partners (for at least 6 months) of anti-HIV-positive patients with
AIDS
(N = 18) or
PGL
(N = 17) were studied. Twenty-one (60%) were seropositive, but 14 (40%) were consistently anti-HIV-negative. The duration of relationship with the index case was not statistically different in seropositive compared to seronegative partners; median 26 months (range 7-60) vs 30 months (range 7-60). However, seropositive partners had a significantly higher monthly number of other sexual partners and sexually transmitted diseases and a higher frequency of insertive and receptive anal intercourse in the preceding five years. The risk of acquiring HIV infection was significantly increased by frequent receptive anal intercourse when the frequency of insertive was controlled for but not the converse. Seronegative partners had undetectable antibodies by live and fixed cell immunofluorescence and by radioimmunoprecipitation and were repeatedly negative by competitive enzyme immunoassay. Furthermore, the sera of seronegative partners lacked HIV neutralising activity. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from seronegative partners, stained with monoclonal antibodies to seven different CD4 epitopes, revealed no differences when compared to those from heterosexual controls and no qualitative differences from cells from seropositive individuals. In addition, PBMCs from seronegative partners could be productively infected by HIV in vitro. If resistance to infection in seronegative partners exists, then it is likely that mechanisms other than a specific humoral immunity or CD4 polymorphisms are involved.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the regular sexual partners of homosexual men with AIDS and persistent generalised lymphadenopathy. 310 51
We have examined the ability of monocyte-derived macrophages from patients with
AIDS
and other HIV-related disorders to kill the intracellular pathogen Toxoplasma gondii. We have also examined the capacity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from these patients to produce macrophage-activating and other lymphokines. The capacity to produce interleukin 2 and gamma interferon decreases from controls through asymptomatic seropositive subjects and lymphadenopathy groups A (benign) and B (prodromal) to
AIDS
. The decrease did not correlate precisely with the decrease in CD4+ cells in these patients. Monocyte-derived macrophages from asymptomatic HIV-infected subjects and lymphadenopathy patients showed a decreased ability to kill T. gondii after activation with recombinant gamma interferon; paradoxically, this was most striking for
PGL
group A. The defect was largely overcome by using Concanavalin A stimulated autologous supernatants. It was notable that macrophages from
AIDS
patients showed normal killing with recombinant gamma interferon, but that the supernatants from
AIDS
patients had reduced activity with normal macrophages. These studies confirm that functional defects of both lymphocytes and macrophages are found in HIV-infected subjects; they serve to emphasize the heterogeneity of the clinical and biological responses to this retrovirus, responses which have important implications in the pathogenesis and treatment of the immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:Microbicidal activity of monocyte derived macrophages in AIDS and related disorders. 311 59
Of 242 north Italian heroin addicts, 24 (9.9%) were HBsAg positive. HBeAg was positive in two of them (8.3%), anti-HBe in 16 (66.6%) and anti-HDV in 21 (87.5%). Of the 218 HBsAg negative, 182 (83.5%) had anti-HBc, 72 (33.0%) anti-HBe and 97 (44.5%) anti-HBs. One-hundred-eighty-five drug addicts were anti-HIV positive (76.4%); 77 of these (41.6%) were asymptomatic, 93 (50.3%) had
PGL
and 15 (8.1%) ARC. T4+ cell count was significantly lower in subjects with ARC as was T4+/T8+ ratio in subjects with
PGL
and ARC. During a median follow-up of 9.5 months (range 4-25), we observed three new cases of hepatitis (two caused by NANBV and one by HBV with HDV coinfection) and one new HIV infection. Ten anti-HIV positive subjects developed
PGL
and one
AIDS
.
...
PMID:HBV, HDV and HIV infections in 242 drug addicts: two-year follow-up. 318 82
The serum concentrations of 11 Ig isotypes (IgG, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgG4, IgA, IgA1, IgA2, IgM, IgD, and IgE) were measured in four relatively small groups of homosexual (or bisexual) males. All these patients were seropositive for HIV. Two of the groups (nonprogressors) were clinically stable for approximately 2 years and were characterized either as asymptomatic or with
PGL
. The third group (progressors) developed
AIDS
2-38 months after blood specimens were taken. The fourth group had
AIDS
. A fifth group of anti-HIV-seronegative heterosexual males completed the study. The geometric mean IgA serum concentration was more markedly elevated over normal control sera than any of the other study groups and was the only Ig isotype that was significantly higher in the progressor than in the nonprogressor group. The geometric IgG1 serum concentration was significantly higher in asymptomatic nonprogressors,
PGL
-nonprogressors, progressors, and
AIDS
patient groups than that in HIV-seronegative normals. In contrast, the geometric mean IgG2 serum concentration is depressed in all the anti-HIV-seropositive patients (but not significantly with the
AIDS
group). Multivariate analysis showed the Ig-isotype assays to have much less predictive power for progression to
AIDS
than the T-helper cell assays.
...
PMID:Hypergammaglobulinemia associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 326 Mar 40
In
AIDS
elevated serum Ig levels and autoimmune phenomena indicate that B cells are also involved. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can be cultivated in B cells, and HIV can stimulate B cells. In order to characterize the B-cell dysfunction and conditions for modulating it, functional studies with highly purified B cells were done in four patients with
PGL
and HIV-positive sera. Data were compared with those from patients with
AIDS
and normal controls. The experiments consisted of an in vitro study of the differentiation response (IgM/G secretion into culture supernatants) to a T cell-independent polyclonal B-cell activator (PBA) [Klebsiella pneumoniae, KlebsM]. A weak increase in IgM/G levels under stimulatory conditions was characteristic. Addition of recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL2) failed to increase the spontaneous Ig levels. However, coculture experiments using KlebsM and rIL2 resulted in Ig levels like those known from healthy individuals. Patients with frank
AIDS
did not respond with increased IgG secretion. This indicates that the abnormal B-cell differentiation response to PBAs can be modulated by rIL2 in patients with
PGL
and partly in
AIDS
(only IgM).
...
PMID:The in vitro influence of rIL2 on the B-cell dysfunction in patients with persistent generalized lymph node enlargement (PGL) or AIDS. 326 95
The prognostic value of ocular manifestations and their correlation with immune changes in HIV-infected subjects (75
PGL
, 23 ARC, and 17
AIDS
) have been longitudinally studied with an average follow-up of one year (3 to 22 months). The most common ocular manifestations were retinal cotton-wool-like spots, observed in 58.8% of
AIDS
patients and in 76.9% of those with ocular involvement. Two of three ARC patients who showed cotton-wool-like spots developed PCP a few weeks after ophthalmoscopic examination. A close correlation between ocular changes and decrease of CD4+ lymphocytes was observed. In our opinion, these ocular manifestations are as useful an indicator as opportunistic infections or
AIDS
-related neoplasias in the prognosis of HIV infection.
...
PMID:Retinal cotton-wool-like spots: a marker for AIDS? 335 56
The ECP Working Group on
AIDS
has evaluated data on seropositivity to LAV/HTLV-III supplied by members in II Western European countries. The period covered is 1981-84. The rise in LAV/HTLV seropositivity parallels the incidence of cases of
AIDS
in the different countries. LAV/HTLV now spreads freely within Europe and spread has become less dependent upon promiscuity. The epidemic is about to enter Eastern Europe. Intravenous drug abusers appear to be the risk group experiencing the most rapid spread at present. Furthermore, seropositivity in males and females outside the traditional risk groups seems on the rise, and as in the US the percentage seronegative in individuals with
PGL
is quite high.
AIDS
is rapidly becoming a major cause of cancer in young adults. A coordinated European preventive effort is urgently needed.
...
PMID:Seropositivity to LAV/HTLV-III in 11 European countries. 347 50
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>