Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (bacterial infection)
15,226 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The primary manifestation of the immunodeficiencies is undue susceptibility to infection. This means too many, too severe, too prolonged, too complicated and too unusual infections. Infections in immunodeficiency have a characteristic cause depending on the nature of the immune deficiency. Antibody deficiencies are associated with infections with gram-positive infections. Cellular immune deficiencies are associated with mycobacterial, protozoan, fungus, virus, and opportunistic bacterial infection. Phagocytic disorders are associated with staphylococcal, fungal, and gram-negative organisms. Complement disorders are associated by neisserial infections. Infections have also been implicated in the pathogenesis of some immunodeficiencies in some circumstances. These include human T lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III), rubella virus, cytomegalovirus, and Epstein-Barr virus. Several infectious syndromes in specific immunodeficiencies have been identified. Examples include enteric cytopathic human orphan (ECHO) virus encephalitis in agammaglobulinemia, and meningococcal meningitis in C6 deficiency. Infections can also be induced by live vaccines given in immunodeficiency (e.g., paralytic polio in agammaglobulinemia.) Unusual infectious syndromes will be illustrated including parainfluenza infection in severe combined and immunodeficiency, Legionella pneumonia in chronic granulomatous disease, and Cryptosporidium infection in hyper-IgM immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Infectious complications of the primary immunodeficiencies. 352 71

From 1965 to 1983, Nocardia asteroides infection was diagnosed in 16 horses at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, University of California, Davis. In 2 of the cases, the infection was traumatic in origin and local in extent; the horses recovered without relevant antimicrobial therapy. Fourteen horses had pulmonary or disseminated infections that ended fatally. All 14 had various degrees of immunosuppression. Of these, 8 were Arabian foals with combined immunodeficiency disease and 3 were aged horses with hyperadrenocorticism secondary to ACTH-secreting pituitary tumors. Of the other 3, one had lymphosarcoma, another, hepatic disease presumed to be of toxic origin, and the third, a mixed disseminated bacterial infection.
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PMID:Nocardia asteroides infection in horses: a review. 388 48

SM-4300, a newly developed human immunoglobulin for intravenous use, was administered to 6 patients in the pediatric field. Two cases out of 3 cases with immunodeficiency syndrome were studied in terms of absorption and excretion of SM-4300 and all of them were observed effect of preventive bacterial infection. Three cases were administered combination therapy with SM-4300 and antibiotics. Two cases were pneumonia and 1 case was pleurisy. The following results were obtained. Two cases with immunodeficiency syndrome were observed serum levels of immuno gammaglobulin before and after administration of SM-4300. At 2-3 hours after the administration of SM-4300, the serum levels got to peak and the half-lives were 22.1 days and 22.6 days, respectively. The half-lives of SM-4300 were similar to plasmin or polyethylene glycol treated and sulfonated human immunoglobulin. The clinical effects of substitution therapy against 3 patients with immunodeficiency syndrome were observed. Through the administration of SM-4300 every 18 to 21 days for 6 months, 1 case was doing well. One case with chronic bronchitis and otitis media was hanging in the balance as well as she has been administered other immunoglobulin preparations. The last case didn't control the serum levels of immunoglobulin because he did not visit a hospital until incidence of infectious disease.
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PMID:[Clinical trial of SM-4300 in the pediatric field]. 407 25

The neonatal period is a state of relative immunodeficiency during which newborns are particularly vulnerable to bacterial, protozoal, and viral infections. In addition, they localize infection poorly, mount a sluggish antibody response to injected antigens and are relatively anergic. Both in vivo and in vitro studies suggest that functional immaturity of neonatal macrophages may contribute to this immunologic hyporesponsiveness. Resistance to viral and bacterial infection and production of antibody can be enhanced in neonates by injection of adult macrophages. Specific functional defeats in newborns' monocytes have been demonstrated in their capacity to chemotax, to resist intracellular multiplication of virus and to effect antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity towards virus-infected target cells. Monocytes from newborns also appear to present antigen poorly, and to co-operate with T-lymphocytes in the suppression of IgG-production by B cells.
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PMID:Mononuclear phagocytes in the newborn: their relation to the state of relative immunodeficiency. 635 60

Deficiencies in the immune system that lead to increased morbidity and mortality from infectious complications have been well documented in patients suffering from trauma, malnutrition, sepsis, and thermal injuries. We investigated the potential benefit of immune stimulation for preventing infection in such conditions in an animal model by evaluating three drugs: Corynebacterium parvum, thymopentin (TP-5), and CP-46,665. One-hundred eighty female guinea pigs were rendered immunodeficient by first inflicting a 30% total body surface burn and then placing the animals on diets with calories inadequate to maintain body weight. One half of the animals were then given one of the three immunomodulators on the first, third, and fifth days after burn injury, to try to reverse immunodeficiency. The remaining animals received saline solution injections. Animal responses were evaluated by inserting a clot containing Escherichia coli and Bacillus fragilis into their peritoneal cavity 6 days after burn injury. The animals were followed for 21 days after burn injury. Autopsies on those that died revealed peritonitis and/or pneumonia; autopsies on these that survived showed no pneumonia and there was consistent resolution of peritonitis. TP-5 and CP-46,665, but not C. parvum, significantly improved survival rates and mean survival time in those animals receiving 100 kcal/kg/day. TP-5 and CP-46,665 may be of benefit to the severely stressed, malnourished surgical patient who is at risk of bacterial infection.
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PMID:Immunomodulators in the treatment of peritonitis in burned and malnourished animals. 637 60

Two patients with common varied immunodeficiency both had increased immunoglobulin responses for a limited period of time on acquiring a bacterial infection. In one patient a relatively short-lived high-antibody response was produced on vaccination with tetanus toxoid. Although the patients varied in their course of immunoglobulin and/or antibody production, our results demonstrate that some patients with common varied immunodeficiency are able to produce both under certain circumstances.
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PMID:Transient immunoglobulin and antibody production. Occurrence in two patients with common varied immunodeficiency. 660 28

The 15th reported case of isolated renal mucormycosis (infection of the kidney with fungus of the order Mucorales, in the absence of infection elsewhere in the body) is presented. The patient was a 36-year-old human immunodeficiency virus-infected man, actively using iv drugs, who suffered 6 wk of flank pain and fever before diagnosis was made by percutaneous renal biopsy. He received 4 months of amphotericin B treatment, then no therapy for 6 months before dying with no evidence of mucormycosis. Isolated renal mucormycosis should be suspected in those with an underlying immunocompromising illness or history of iv drug use who have persistent flank pain and fever, but sterile urine cultures. Computed tomographic scanning with contrast should then be performed; findings of severe inflammation or bacterial infection, despite an indolent clinical course with sterile or nondiagnostic urine and blood cultures, are suggestive of isolated renal mucormycosis, and renal biopsy under computed tomographic guidance should be performed, despite the potential risk of disseminated infection. Although our patient was treated with amphotericin B alone, nephrectomy with or without amphotericin B therapy appears to be more likely to cure infection and relieve pain and constitutional symptoms.
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PMID:Isolated renal mucormycosis: case report and review. 757 48

The transmission, diagnosis, and clinical manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in children up to 13 years of age are reviewed, and maintenance and prophylactic drug therapies for these patients are discussed. HIV can be transmitted from mother to infant in utero, during delivery, or through breast milk. Perinatal transmission accounts for almost 90% of all pediatric HIV infections. HIV infection can be diagnosed with HIV culturing, polymerase chain reaction testing, the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, the Western blot antibody assay, or the p24 core-antigen assay. Testing should begin as soon as possible after the at-risk child reaches one month of age. CD4+ lymphocyte counts are also used in diagnosis and monitoring. The median age at diagnosis of AIDS in children with perinatally acquired HIV infection is 12-24 months. Among the many possible clinical features are Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), cytomegalovirus infection, failure to thrive, encephalopathy, recurrent bacterial infection, thrush, lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis, lymphadenopathy, pancreatis, hepatitis, anemia, and thrombocytopenia. Zidovudine is considered the drug of choice for initial therapy in HIV-infected children and is indicated for asymptomatic infection, early symptomatic disease, and advanced disease. However, new research is questioning the role of zidovudine monotherapy. Didanosine is the only agent with FDA-approved labeling for use as second-line therapy in children who do not respond to or become resistant to zidovudine. Agents under investigation for pediatric use are zalcitabine, stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine. Drug combinations, such as zidovudine plus didanosine, are also being examined. Zidovudine appears to reduce the rate of maternal transmission of HIV. Agents used prophylactically against PCP in children are trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, dapsone, and inhaled or i.v. pentamidine. HIV-infected children should also received prophylaxis against recurrent bacterial infections. The standard pediatric immunization schedule is used, but inactivated injectable poliovirus vaccine must be given instead of the live oral vaccine. Zidovudine remains the first-line agent for treating HIV infection in children. Alternatives are available for those who do not respond to zidovudine.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection in children. 764 Oct 35

A case of common variable immunodeficiency observed in an Ethiopian 13 year old girl who, from the age of 9 months, suffered from repeated, severe bacterial infections, but overcame viral infections normally, is reported. The immune defect bore upon the terminal stage of the differentiation of the B-lymphocytes, whose number was normal but which were unable to synthesize immunoglobulin in vitro. Replacement therapy with gammaglobulins controlled infection. The differential diagnosis of recurrent bacterial infection in the tropical context and means of early diagnosis are discussed.
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PMID:Recurring bacterial infection in a teenager: an Ethiopian case of common variable immunodeficiency revealed by the occurrence of rheumatoid arthritis. 767 34

Autopsy or biopsy findings in 10 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive persons from Bangalore, India, revealed a wide spectrum of pathological changes. Patients' mean age was 33.4 years and the mean duration between symptom onset and death was 27.13 days. Nine patients had evidence of neuro-acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and 8 of them succumbed to various opportunistic infections. Histologic examination showed diffuse cryptococcal meningitis in 5 cases; 2 cases showed disseminated systemic cryptococcosis. Pulmonary tuberculosis was present in 3 patients. Despite no signs of associated neurotuberculosis in any patient, 4 autopsied and 1 biopsied case showed evidence of systemic tuberculosis. Toxoplasma encephalitis was present in 2 cases; observed in this series was the first case, in India, of co-existent toxoplasma and acanthamoeba. Other bacterial infections such as meningococcal meningitis and psudomonas septicemia were found in 3 cases; pneumocystis carinii pneumonia was present in 1 case. Evidence of early HIV leukoencephalopathy was observed in the only asymptomatic HIV-positive individual (who died in a traffic accident). AIDS-associated bacterial infections caused by organisms other than Mycobacterium tuberculosis are often underdiagnosed and should be considered in developing countries. In cases of cryptococcal and tuberculosis meningitis or multiple parasitic infections, patients should be screened for associated HIV infection.
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PMID:Pathological lesions in HIV positive patients. 775 Oct 41


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