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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vaccination with an inactivated, whole cell, Q fever vaccine (Q-vax) induces lasting antibody conversion and a positive delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) skin reaction in about 60% of recipients but a long-lasting positive lymphoproliferative or mitogenic response to C. burnetii antigens with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in 85-95% of subjects. Analysis of the lymphoproliferative response to C. burnetii antigens has now been made by fractionation-reconstitution experiments with PBMC from vaccines, from past infections, and from healthy controls. The major contributor to the response in immune subjects proved to be the T lymphocyte. T cells were stimulated by both the phase I and phase II antigens of two prototype strains of C. burnetii and responses were greatly amplified by addition of
IL-2
. Similar T lymphocyte stimulation profiles were obtained with the 'Priscilla' strain of C. burnetii which represents a different biotype of Coxiella isolated from Q fever endocarditis; Q-vax is therefore likely to protect against
endocarditis
strains. Fractionation-reconstitution experiments with T and B cells from vaccines and subjects infected in the past, using various antigenic or haptenic fractions from C. burnetii indicate that protein, non-lipopolysaccharide components of the organism are responsible for the mitogenic response of immune T cells. However, the role of the lipopolysaccharide in the protective immunogen has still to be defined.
...
PMID:Analysis of the cells involved in the lymphoproliferative response to Coxiella burnetii antigens. 207 May 64
Geriatric medicine differs from internal medicine not in quality, but rather in the probability structures of diagnosis and outcome, presentation of illness and the need for explicit determination of aim of intervention. Older people need more investigation than the young if comparable levels of diagnostic accuracy are to be obtained. In view of the progressive loss of adaptability with its loss of sufficient functional and social reserves, the old more often need a formal program of rehabilitation than younger patients. Infectious diseases exemplify this difference. Age associated impairment of immunity, such as lower T-cell activity and
IL-2
production, are associated with an increasing lethality of infections, and permit the reactivation of latent infections. The loss of adaptability has its impacts on mental functioning by increasing the risk of delirium as a consequence of infectious diseases or drug side effects. The cryptic presentation of illness makes even severe infections such as
endocarditis
, peritonitis or tuberculosis difficult to diagnose. The traditional exclusion of older people from research studies contributed to the still prevailing underestimation of the complexity and need of adequate therapy in geriatric patients.
...
PMID:General medicine and geriatrics, where is the difference? The example of infective disease. 748 43
Production of proinflammatory cytokines is implicated in the pathogenesis of viridans streptococcus-induced alpha-streptococcal shock syndrome and infective
endocarditis
. Streptococcus mutans, one of the opportunistic pathogens causing infective
endocarditis
, was reported previously to stimulate monocytes and epithelial and endothelial cells in vitro to produce various cytokines. We found that glucosyltransferases (GTFs) GtfC and GtfD of S. mutans stimulated predominantly the production of interleukin-6 (IL-6) from T cells cultured in vitro. The level of IL-6 but not of tumor necrosis factor alpha in blood was significantly elevated when rats were injected intravenously with S. mutans GS-5, whereas IL-6 was detected at a much lower level when rats were challenged with NHS1DD, an isogenic mutant defective in the expression of GTFs. The serum IL-6 level was elevated in patients with
endocarditis
caused by different species of viridans streptococci which express GTF homologues. Affinity column-purified GTFs reduced the levels of detectable
IL-2
of T cells stimulated by another bacterial antigen, tetanus toxoid. These results suggested that GTFs might modulate the production of Th1-type cytokines and that GTFs of S. mutans play a significant role in stimulating the production of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-6 in vivo.
...
PMID:Induction of cytokines by glucosyltransferases of streptococcus mutans. 1209 91
Whipple's disease (WD) is a rare chronic infectious disorder caused by the rod- shaped bacterium Tropheryma whipplei. The disorder is characterized clinically by arthralgia, abdominal pain, diarrhea, malabsorbtion and progressive weight loss. Other important sites of infection include the heart (resulting in the clinical picture of
endocarditis
and heart failure) and the central nervous system (CNS) (manifestations include confusion, memory loss, focal cranial nerve signs, nystagmus and ophtalmoplegia). The bacterium is presumed to be ubiquitously present. A defect in cellular immune response may predispose patients for an infection with T. whipplei and this might explain the rarity of the disorder despite the ubiquitous bacterial presence. The presumed immunological defect is likely to be quite specific for T. whipplei, since patients are not generally affected by other infections. Decreased production of Interleukin(IL)-12,
IL-2
and Interferon (IFN)-g accompanied by an increased secretion of IL-4 are the main features of this defective immunological response. The finding of periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive macrophages in the lamina propria of tissue samples obtained by duodenal biopsy usually establishes the diagnosis. The PAS-positive inclusions represent the remnants of the bacteria. Attempts to isolate the causative agent were unsuccessful for nearby 100 years after the first recognition of the disease. In the year 2000, the bacterium was finally successfully grown on a human fibroblast cell line. Untreated WD patients suffer from a chronic progressive disorder which possibly leads to death. Most patients show a fast clinical improvement to antibiotic therapy, but clinical relapses are described frequently. There is a number of patients, unable to eradicate the bacterium even after several antibiotic treatments and patients with CNS disease, in both of whom alternative therapy strategies are necessary.
...
PMID:Current concepts of immunopathogenesis, diagnosis and therapy in Whipple's disease. 1707 38