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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In an attempt to examine further the association between active Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection and the
chronic fatigue syndrome
(chronic EBV syndrome, or chronic or atypical mononucleosis), antibodies acting against EBV-specific DNase and
DNA polymerase
, which are expressed only during virus replication, were assayed. Serum samples from 25 healthy EBV-seropositive individuals neutralized 3.5 +/- 5.1 U (mean +/- SD) of DNase activity and 14.7 +/- 8.5 U of
DNA polymerase
activity. From these values were selected upper limits of anti-EBV enzyme activity of 17.9 and 31.3 U neutralized in normal individuals, respectively (representing the 95% confidence limit). Serum samples from six groups of subjects representing a variety of EBV-related illnesses were then studied. Only patients with notably elevated anti-EBV antibody titers to viral capsid antigen (VCA) (greater than 10,000) had elevated levels of anti-EBV DNase (38 to 56 U neutralized) and anti-EBV
DNA polymerase
(72 to 106 U neutralized). Three additional patients and two geriatric controls with average anti-EBV early antigen/VCA titers had slightly elevated levels of antibody to EBV
DNA polymerase
. IgA anti-VCA, anti-early antigen antibodies, or both, were also detected in the same patients who had high EBV DNase and polymerase antibody levels. These antibody profiles are similar to those in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Since three of the six patients with elevated anti-EBV enzyme antibody levels developed fatal lymphomas, patients with chronic EBV and this antibody profile might be in another illness category at risk for malignant disease.
...
PMID:Antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus-specific DNase and DNA polymerase in the chronic fatigue syndrome. 284 38
Forty-one patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
), 76 healthy controls matched with the patient group for age range, sex, race, and socioeconomic class, and 22 symptomatic patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD) had serum sampled for antibodies against 2 Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) replicating enzymes. Abnormal titers of antibodies were found twice as often in
CFS
patients as controls (34.1% vs. 17.1%), with SAD patients having an intermediate frequency (27.3%). Stratifying for disease severity sharpened the differences considerably, with the sicker
CFS
and SAD patients having 52% and 50% abnormal tests, respectively; more mildly afflicted
CFS
and SAD patients had a frequency of abnormal tests in the normal range. Antibodies to EBV
DNA polymerase
(
DNAP
) were the more sensitive of the two tests in that they were positive in all cases but one. These findings suggest that antibodies against EBV
DNAP
may be a useful marker in delineating a subset of patients with severe fatiguing illness for appropriate treatment trials and for monitoring their outcomes.
...
PMID:High titers of anti-Epstein-Barr virus DNA polymerase are found in patients with severe fatiguing illness. 830 19
We used differential-display PCR of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to search for candidate biomarkers for
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
). PBMCs were collected from a subject with
CFS
and an age- and sex-matched control before and 24 h after exercise. RNA expression profiles were generated using 46 primer combinations, and the similarity between the individuals was striking. Differentially expressed bands were excised, reamplified, and sequenced, yielding 95 nonredundant sequences, of which 50 matched to known gene transcripts, 38 matched to genes with unknown functions, and 7 had no similarity to any database entry. Most (86%) of the differences between the two subjects were present at baseline. Differential expression of ten genes was verified by real-time reverse-transcription PCR: five (cystatin F, MHC class II, platelet factor 4, fetal brain expressed sequence tag, and perforin) were downregulated, and the remaining five genes (cathepsin B,
DNA polymerase
epsilon4, novel EST PBMC191MSt, heparanase precursor, and ORF2/L1 element) were upregulated in the subject with
CFS
. Many of these genes have known functions in defense and immunity, thus supporting prior suggestions of immune dysregulation in the pathogenesis of
CFS
. Differential-display PCR is a powerful tool for identification of candidate biomarkers. Investigation of these markers in samples from well-designed epidemiological studies of
CFS
will be required to determine the validity of these candidate biomarkers. The real-time reverse-transcription PCR assays that we developed for assay of these biomarkers will facilitate high-throughput testing of these additional samples.
...
PMID:Differential-display PCR of peripheral blood for biomarker discovery in chronic fatigue syndrome. 1549 94
In 2006, sequences described as xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) were discovered in prostate cancer patients. In October 2009, we published the first direct isolation of infectious XMRV from humans and the detection of infectious XMRV in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
. In that study, a combination of classic retroviral methods were used including:
DNA polymerase
chain reaction and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for gag and env, full length genomic sequencing, immunoblotting for viral protein expression in activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, passage of infectious virus in both plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells to indicator cell lines, and detection of antibodies to XMRV in plasma. A combination of these methods has since allowed us to confirm infection by XMRV in 85% of the 101 patients that were originally studied. Since 2009, seven studies, predominantly using
DNA polymerase
chain reaction of blood products or tumor tissue, have reported failures to detect XMRV infection in patients with either prostate cancer or
chronic fatigue syndrome
. A review of the current literature on XMRV supports the importance of applying multiple independent techniques in order to determine the presence of this virus. Detection methods based upon the biological and molecular amplification of XMRV, which is usually present at low levels in unstimulated blood cells and plasma, are more sensitive than assays for the virus by
DNA polymerase
chain reaction of unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells. When we examined patient blood samples that had originally tested negative by
DNA polymerase
chain reaction by more sensitive methods, we observed that they were infected with XMRV; thus, the
DNA polymerase
chain reaction tests provided false negative results. Therefore, we conclude that molecular analyses using DNA from unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells or from whole blood are not yet sufficient as stand-alone assays for the identification of XMRV-infected individuals. Complementary methods are reviewed, that if rigorously followed, will likely show a more accurate snapshot of the actual distribution of XMRV infection in humans.
...
PMID:Distribution of xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) infection in chronic fatigue syndrome and prostate cancer. 2084 3