Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Model systems of respiratory infection in mice were established with Streptococcus pneumoniae, influenza virus, and Mycoplasma pulmonis. The LT50 for S. pneumoniae was 2 1/2 days, for lethal influenza 6 days, and for M. pulmonis 5 days. Morbidity in sublethal influenza infections reached a peak during days 5 to 10, with recovery indicated by the third week. The course of each pulmonary infection was followed by use of the animal's maximal ability to consume oxygen (VO2max by determining the weight, compliance, and stability of the excised lung, and in some cases by following O2 consumption of minced tissue. Depression of VO2max began early in each infection; reductions ranged from 9% at the peak of sublethal influenza infection to 50% 12 to 48 hr before the LT50 of fatal infections. The depressions were not relieved by 100% O2. The noninvasive VO2max test, evoked by cold air, was simple, rapid, and reproducible and appeared to serve as a quantitative measure of over-all function during infection. Each type of infection caused an increase in lung weight, with the largest noted during fatal Mycoplasma illness and lethal influenza. The effects on lungs by influenza and M. pulmonis infections were similar but could be differentiated from those with S. pneumoniae. With sublethal influenza, CL was reduced 30% between days 5 to 10, with recovery by the third week. Ctis was not affected. M. pulmonis infections and lethal influenza caused depressions in CL of over 60% by day 4 but only a 30% decrease in Ctis. The data suggest that the decreased compliance in influenza and M. pulmonis infections was due primarily to increased surface tension. In contrast, S. pneumoniae did not affect compliance.
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PMID:Oxygen uptake and lung function in mice infected with Streptococcus pneumoniae, influenza virus, or Mycoplasma pulmonis. 2 1

Sixty-eight patients of clinically diagnosed myocarditis, 0--15 years of age, were followed up and analyzed. Forty (58.8%) were males. The majority were older than 5 years. Clinical courses were rather mild, chronic and self-limiting at large. Only 1 case had a relation to chronic cariomyopathy. Exertional symptoms (chest pain, chest distress, syncope) were seen in 25 (36.8%). ECG changes were very common: the majority were nonspecific ST elevation, depression or both, mainly in leads II, III, V5 and V6. Positive Master' test, prolonged QTc, widened mean spatial QRS-T angle and various arrhythmias were also observed. Cardiac performance, estimated by echocardiogram and phono-mechanocardiogram was lowered in 41 (60.3%). Large IV sound and large A wave in apexcardiogram were also frequently found. All but 3 patients showed continuous elevation of serum enzymes, namely, LDH, LDH-1/LDH-2, CPK, CPK-MB, HBD and GOT. Etiological evidences were obtained by serological study in 11 cases (16.2%): 2 of Coxsackie B-1, 3 of Coxsackie B-2, 1 of Coxsackie B-4, 2 of mycoplasma pneumoniae, 1 of cytomegalovirus, 1 of ECHO-7 and 1 of rubella. We proposed a criteria for diagnosis of myocarditis as follows: (1) Exertional symptoms. (2) ECG findings. (3) Serum enzyme abnormality. (4) Lowered cardiac performance. (5) Cardiomegaly. (6) Changing character of all signs and symptoms.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of nonrheumatic myocarditis in children. 47 Jan 4

Pathogenicity trials in poultry are reported with an isolate of mycoplasma, designated 'W8', which is serologically unrelated to Mycoplasma gallisepticum, M synoviae or M meleagridis. W8 killed fowl and turkey embryos when injected into the yold sacs of embryonating eggs. Infection of one-day-old fowls, turkeys and pheasants by the air sac route caused marked growth depression and a high incidence of osteomyelitis of the vertebral column in all species. A large proportion of infected turkeys and a smaller proportion of infected pheasants also developed chondrodystrophic changes of the long bones similar to those of turkey syndrome '65. Infection did not cause mortality or macroscopic air sacculitis. No obvious pathological changes occurred in fowls following W8 infection by the air sac route at two weeks of age and only minimal changes when infection was given at one week. Infection did not appear to spread to in-contact controls. W8 was recovered most frequently and in greatest profusion from the air sacs, tracheas, kidneys and vertebral columns of fowls and turkeys following air sac infection at one day of age.
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PMID:Pathogenicity studies in poultry with an undefined serotype of Mycoplasma. 93 70

The effect of Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection on cell-mediated immunity was examined by two methods: the first method was the tuberculin skin test and the other was the measurement of the in vitro lymphocyte stimulation response to purified protein derivative (PPD) of tuberculin. Twenty-nine patients out of a total of 47 patients with a lower respiratory tract illness caused by M. pneumoniae had a negative tuberculin skin test when first tested. Twenty-three out of 26 patients with a negative tuberculin reaction in the early phase of the illness had a positive skin test when they were retested several weeks or months after the illness. The lymphocyte stimulation response to PPD was examined in 13 patients. In eight of these cases the lymphocyte response to PPD was significantly lower during illness than after recovery. Six control subjects showed no significant difference in their lymphocyte responsiveness to PPD when examined on two different occasions. These studies show that M.pneumoniae infection causes transient depression of cell-mediated immunity.
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PMID:Effect of Mycoplasma pheumoniae infection on cell-mediated immunity. 95 96

Laboratory and field experiments involving more than 100,000 birds were performed to assess the effect of simultaneous in-feed medication of chickens with salinomycin and tiamulin at various concentrations. In an artificial infection study with Mycoplasma gallisepticum, low levels of tiamulin (10-40 ppm) did not induce signs of ionophore intoxication with salinomycin at 60 ppm in the feed, whereas levels of 50 ppm caused early signs with a mild growth depression. A level of 20 ppm gave a maximum average improvement in growth rate of 12.5%. There was a dose-related response in mycoplasma lesion inhibition, with 50 ppm reducing lesions by 75%. In the two field trials, chickens suffering from mycoplasmosis complicated with infectious bronchitis and receiving 60 ppm salinomycin in the feed showed marked improvements in mortality rates, lesion scores, and feed-conversion efficiency when tiamulin was added at 20 ppm and 30 ppm in the feed. There were no signs of incompatibility between the two antibiotics at these levels.
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PMID:Simultaneous treatment of chickens with salinomycin and tiamulin in feed. 153 13

Pathological consequences of a severe outbreak of swine influenza (H1N1 virus) in the non immune sow at the beginning of pregnancy, under natural conditions. A sudden acute outbreak of fever, depression, anorexia and coughing in a group of nulliparous sows from a herd that was currently under epidemiological investigation lead to build a particular disposal of observation. The clinical signs were daily recorded including rectal temperature. Blood was taken from the sows at the beginning of the troubles and 3 weeks later for the detection of Aujesky's disease, coronavirus TGE-like, Influenza viruses A/H1N1 and A/H3N2 and Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae. Viral detection was attempted from nasal swabs and aborted fetuses during the acute phase. The clinical study showed fever reaching near 41 degrees C on most of the pigs and lasting usually from 2 to 5 days. The diagnosis of Influenza (virus swine H1N1) was established both on serology (massive seroconversion) and on the detection of the virus from the nasal swabs and from an aborted fetus. The control of the lungs of sows "not in pig" and culled showed extended lesions of bronchopneumonia and Pasteurella multocida was found. The technical consequences of this severe outbreak of Influenza on reproduction were mainly important at the beginning of pregnancy. Over 13 sows inseminated less than 1 week before the outbreak, only 3 farrowed (respectively 5.5 and 12 piglets); 7 returned to oestrus and 3 "not a pig" at 21 days (echotomography) did not show signs of heat and were culled. Over 8 pregnant sows (1 month of pregnancy), 6 farrowed normal litters and total embryonic resorption occurred in 2 sows. Over 18 pregnant sows (more than 45 days gestation) one aborted.
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PMID:[Pathologic consequences of a severe influenza outbreak (swine virus A/H1N1) under natural conditions in the non-immune sow at the beginning of pregnancy]. 255 Jan 69

We studied the effects of breeding conditions on the development of immunological abnormalities in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) with congenital T cell depression. The depression of T cell functions, the production of natural thymocytotoxic autoantibody (NTA), and the development of polyarteritis nodosa were more evident in SHR reared under a conventional (CV) environment than in specific-pathogen-free (SPF) SHR bred in a semi-barrier system. Enhancement of these immunologic abnormalities was also observed by the conventionalization of SPF-SHR. A high frequency of antibodies to mouse hepatitis virus (MHV), Sendai virus, and Mycoplasma pulmonis was detected in CV rat sera, whereas no antibodies were detected in SPF-SHR. The experimental infection of Sendai virus induced the enhancement of T cell depression and of NTA production in SPF-SHR. We interpret these results to mean that the natural infection of microorganisms causes an acceleration of immunologic abnormalities in SHR reared in a CV environment.
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PMID:Depression of T cell-mediated immunity and enhancement of autoantibody production by natural infection with microorganisms in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). 290 92

The system of mucociliary clearance has the important task to remove from the airways inhaled substances and locally formed secretions. Inborn disorders of the mucociliary transport are the result of ciliary dysfunction (primary ciliary dyskinesia) or of increased viscosity of the bronchial secretions (mucoviscidosis). By far more frequency however are acquired disturbances. Inflammation of the airways results nearly always in disorder of the mucociliary transport which in early stages is reversible. With morphologic lesions, the disturbance may become irreversible. Infectious inflammations, especially those by rhinoviruses and mycoplasma, are causing ciliostatic and ciliotoxic alterations which may disturb the mucociliary clearance up to one year following the infection. Noninfectious inflammation is at first accelerating the transport of mucus through the action of cells of the body itself, especially granulocytes and eosinophiles and mediators liberated from them. Probably, these are causing a cilioexcitation which is later followed by a long-lasting depression of the mucociliary transport caused by production of mucus with high viscosity. Therapeutic measures consist in an early anti-infectious treatment and in the stimulation of the frequency of ciliary beating by beta-adrenergic drugs.
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PMID:[Mucociliary transport and bronchial inflammation]. 306 29

Reactive arthritis is arthritis in which, although the nature of the responsible infection is known or suspected upon serological grounds, attempts at recovering the pathogen from the synovial fluid have failed. One of the main pathogenetic problems is the multiplicity of etiologic agents. Some are exogenous and may be related to the articular tropism of certain microorganisms, to immunologic depression due to an antecedent or coincident infection, and to successive reinfections by the same pathogen or by others which may promote an exacerbation of the disease. Others are endogenous and attention should be given to the local or systemic presence of an antigen as well as, in some instances, to the persistence of residual forms of infecting agents, which are more readily demonstrated with current bacteriological and serological methods. Although reactive arthritis is to be distinguished from septic arthritis, it can no longer be clearly differentiated from the classical post-infectious rheumatism. Once it has been produced, the antigenic stimulation is responsible for an immunologic response which tends to check systemic extension but may also produce tissue damage in the host. Some patients have circulating immune complexes which may bind to the joint, thereby damaging it. In other patients, particularly those who are HLA B27 positive, host-pathogen cross-reactions are demonstrated. Actually, the most frequent pathogenetic sequence seems to be a combination of two or more of these mechanisms, as there are reasons to believe that presence of the pathogen in situ is not required for the persistence of the inflammatory process. Reactive arthritis was first reported in adults following either sexually transmitted urethritis due to chlamydiae, mycoplasma or gonococci, or hepatitis B or an intestinal infection due to Yersinia, Campylobacter, Shigella, Klebsiella or Salmonella. Later, it was described in pediatric patients, particularly in Scandinavia where, for genetic reasons, the HLA B27 group is prevailing. Reactive arthritis seems less frequent in caucasian ethnic groups and above all in Latin Americans among whom HLA B27 carriers are more uncommon; however, it must be pointed out that they have not been as extensively studied and that other etiologic factors may still remain to be discovered. The course and etiology of the different forms of arthritis share certain characteristics which have been determined through a better knowledge of these conditions: onset occurs one or several weeks after a respiratory, urinary or, most often in children, digestive infection. This episode is unremarkable or latent and often overlooked.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Reactive arthritis in children]. 632 Apr 36

Groups of cattle infected singly with Trypanosoma vivax and T. congolense and, with a combination of T. vivax and T. congolense, were vaccinated against contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) 6 weeks before or after infection. All animals were revaccinated 12 weeks after primary vaccination. The primary antibody responses in cattle vaccinated 6 weeks after infection with T. vivax and a combination of T. vivax plus T. congolense were slightly depressed in contrast to other groups which were similar in their response to the control group. Although secondary antibody responses developed in all infected groups, with a delay in those infected with T. congolense, they did not reach the levels of the controls. In spite of the slight depression in antibody responses, however, 50% of the vaccinated trypanosomal animals contracted CBPP on exposure to experimental infection while the vaccinated controls were immune. It is suggested that the protective immunity to CBPP engendered by vaccination is impaired during infection with African trypanosomes and that the level of antibody response to CBPP vaccination in trypanosomal animals does not reflect the degree of immunodepression. The importance of trypanosomiasis control in ensuring success of vaccination campaigns against CBPP is discussed.
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PMID:Immunodepressive effects of trypanosomal infection in cattle immunized against contagious bovine pleuropneumonia. 675 May 11


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