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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (
graft-versus-host disease
)
18,032
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The antigenic status of the preimplantation embryo is ill-defined and there are no clearly recognized maternal immune reactions against this early stage of development. Following implantation, the pregnant female shows evidence of immune recognition of her intrauterine allogeneic conceptus. In a proportion of pregnancies, particularly in multiparous women, there are maternal cytotoxic antibodies exhibiting specificity for the paternally inherited HLA antigens of the fetus. When these are undetectable there may be other antibodies that are non-complement fixing and non-cytotoxic or antibodies that are not present as free molecules and incapable of identification in conventional assays. Anti-HLA antibodies pose no threat to the fetus, principally owing to their absorption by the placenta and, very likely, the harmless binding of any that do reach the fetal circulation. No potentially deleterious cytotoxic T lymphocyte generation occurs in most pregnancies. The extent to which this is due to maternal immunoregulatory control processes is not yet established. The fetal trophoblast is able to act as a protective barrier by virtue of unique properties, including a lack of conventional class I and class II HLA molecules, that render it insusceptible to immune attack. The nature and significance of any maternal recognition of non-HLA antigens on trophoblast await elucidation. Maternal immune cell traffic across the placenta occurs only at a very low level, if at all, in normal pregnancy. This may take place to a greater degree in some of the rare instances of fetal
graft-versus-host disease
, but this is complicated by the associated fetal
immunodeficiency
. Maternal IgG antibodies are transmitted across the placental trophoblast by receptor-dependent mechanisms to provide immediate protection for the neonate against environmental pathogens. Leakage of fetal erythrocytes, leukocytes and platelets into the maternal circulation can elicit IgG isoantibodies that take advantage of the same mechanisms to gain access to the fetus, with pathological consequences. Autoantibodies in women with various disease states may similarly pass into the fetus but these normally produce only mild and transient effects. The development of the fetal immune system begins at an early stage of gestation. It is competent to respond to intrauterine infections from as early as 12 weeks and has full functional potential at birth. Maternally acquired IgG is available for up to 9 months of life until the infant's own immune system has been adequately primed and activated following first exposure to specific antigens. The normal fetomaternal immune relationship represents a remarkable harmonious association between two genetically disparate individuals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The normal fetomaternal immune relationship. 144 16
In order to determine the incidence and causes of death during the first 100 days after BMT (early deaths) in a pediatric population we have examined data reported in the AIEOP BMT Registry. Up to July 1990, data on 486 children who underwent allogeneic (180) or autologous (306) BMT were evaluable. The children had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (148 cases), acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (127 cases), neuroblastoma (82 cases), chronic myelogenous leukemia (15 cases), aplastic anemia (nine cases), solid tumors, lymphoma,
immunodeficiency
or storage diseases. The overall survival is 55% for allogeneic HLA matched and 38% for autologous transplants at 5 years, 24% for HLA mismatched graft at 2 years. Out of the 486 children, 70 (14%) died during the first 100 days after BMT: 33/306 (11%) after autologous BMT, 24/150 (16%) after allogeneic matched BMT and 13/30 (43%) after mismatched BMT. Causes of early death were as follows: disease progression: 12 children (10/306 after autologous and 2/180 after allogeneic BMT); infection: 12 children (five after autologous and seven after allogeneic BMT); interstitial pneumonitis: 21 children (seven after autologous and 14 after allogeneic BMT); cardiac failure: five children (four after autologous BMT); veno-occlusive disease: eight children (three after autologous, five after allogeneic BMT); acute renal failure: three children (one after autologous and two after allogeneic BMT); multiple organ failure: two cases (one after autologous BMT); cerebral hemorrhage: three children (one after autologous BMT); hypertension: one child; acute
GVHD
: three children (12% of early deaths after allogeneic BMT).
...
PMID:Early deaths in children after BMT. Bone Marrow Transplantation Group of the Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP) and Gruppo Italiano Trapianto di Midollo Osseo (GITMO). 146 3
A 16 year old boy underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from an human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-identical sibling for severe aplastic anaemia. He was symptomatic for 7 years before transplantation and had received multiple red blood cell and platelet transfusions. Conditioning for BMT consisted of cyclophosphamide, antilymphocyte globulin and total lymphoid irradiation. Engraftment was rapid, there was no evidence of rejection despite the history of multiple blood product transfusions and he did not develop acute or chronic
graft versus host disease
. He was well for the first 8 months after transplantation but then developed fevers, interstitial pneumonia, herpes simplex infections and cytomegalovirus enteritis. Serological studies revealed antibodies to human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and he was considered to have acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Retrospective analysis of the serum samples showed that he was seronegative for HIV until approximately 10 months before transplantation when his serum became HIV positive. Lymphocyte function studies done after transplantation suggested immunologic recovery at 3 months post-transplant with a brisk though subnormal response to phytohaemagglutinin stimulation. T cell subset analysis performed subsequently showed complete absence of CD4 positive cells indicating immune incompetence which was associated with clinical features of AIDS. Bone marrow transplantation had failed to produce sustained immunologic reconstitution and prevent the progression of HIV to which he ultimately succumbed.
...
PMID:Failure of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation to benefit HIV infection. 149 64
We searched for evidence that
immunodeficiency
in
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) is in part due to alloimmune damage to lymph nodes. We used immunoperoxidase techniques to stain T-cell subsets, pan-B cells, and follicular dendritic reticular cells (FDRC) in frozen sections of lymph nodes from 80 marrow graft recipients (56 with
GVHD
, 11 autografts, and 13 allografts without
GVHD
). We found that 46% of the
GVHD
patients had reversed CD4:CD8 ratios and only 13% of non-
GVHD
patients had such disturbed ratios (p = 0.006). Pan-B (CD22) cell labeling was present in the follicular regions of 73% of patients without
GVHD
and only 53% of patients with
GVHD
(p = 0.05). Focal FDRC staining was geographically concordant with clusters of B cells in 88% of cases (p less than 10(-7)). These data confirm that disturbed intranodal CD4:CD8 ratios are present more frequently in
GVHD
patients than in non-
GVHD
patients or in autografted patients. They suggest more delayed follicular B-cell reconstitution in
GVHD
patients. They show an extremely tight association of FDRC with clusters of B cells in the recovering lymph node, as in the developing fetal node. We hypothesize that the lack of follicular dendritic cells may contribute to dysfunctional B-cell maturation by ablating orderly antigen presentation and clonal expansion in the lymph node cortex.
...
PMID:Abnormal CD4:CD8 ratios and delayed germinal center reconstitution in lymph nodes of human graft recipients with graft-versus-host disease (GVHD): an immunohistological study. 150 36
The case is a 45-year-old female who underwent right total nephroureterectomy and partial cystectomy for renal pelvic cancer. During the operation, she received blood transfusion. On the 10th postoperative day, she developed high fever and skin rush on the face, which were followed by liver dysfunction and pancytopenia. On the 18th post-operative day, she died of sepsis. Autopsy revealed hypoplasia and aplasia of the bone marrow and severe atrophy of the systemic lymph nodes and spleen. The characteristic clinical course and autopsy findings of this case closely resembled
graft-versus-host disease
which is observed after bone marrow transplantation or blood transfusion given to patients with severe
immunodeficiency
. It is therefore strongly suggested that postoperative erythroderma of this case was induced by graft-versus-host reaction due to blood transfusion given during the operation.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of postoperative erythroderma after nephroureterectomy possibly induced by graft-versus-host reaction following blood transfusion]. 153 97
The presence of two distinct T-cell receptors (TCR) alpha/beta and gamma/delta dimers as well as of the activated T cells was analysed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from seventeen recipients of allogeneic bone marrow transplants for leukemia and for severe aplastic anemia. Nine of seventeen recipients expressed an elevated percentage of T cells bearing TCR gamma/delta receptors in their peripheral blood. Seven out of nine cases having elevated gamma/delta positive cells showed chronic graft-versus-host (GVH) disease; one patient was treated with Cyclosporin A, and one patient was asymptomatic. In the twelve patients with GVH or other clinical symptoms, activated T cells (CD3+/HLA-DR+) were elevated indicating an autoreactive or alloreactive cell population. Our results confirmed earlier in vitro data showing that TCR-gamma/delta-bearing lymphocytes may be an activated T-cell population, and this T cell subset might be involved in mediating
GVH disease
, or in prolonging
immunodeficiency
after transplantation.
...
PMID:TCR gamma/delta bearing lymphocytes in peripheral blood of allogenic bone marrow transplanted patients. 153 60
Primary immunodeficiency syndromes may be seen as "experiments of nature", giving insights into the organization and function of the human immune system. The principal categories of primary
immunodeficiency
syndromes: severe combined immunodeficiency, agammaglobulinemia and isolated T-cell defects (e.g. Di George Syndrome) are still used in view of their leading clinical presentations. However, detailed analysis of individual cases and families now shows a plethora of different diseases in each category. In this review the relationship of primary
immunodeficiency
diseases of the B-cell system and autoimmune phenomena are discussed. The pathology of thymus in severe combined immunodeficiency is shown: central maturation defects of the T-cell system are not due to "dysplasia" of the thymus but rather to enzyme defects of the lymphatic cells. Severe alterations of the thymus may also be caused by
graft versus host disease
. The clarification of genetic defects of lymphoid differentiation and maturation today may lead to improved early and prenatal diagnosis as well as specific gene therapy. The success of bone marrow transplantation in many cases of primary
immunodeficiency
disease syndromes may be considered as a consequence of successful gene therapy.
...
PMID:[Inborn immunodeficiencies]. 172 40
Over the past 20 years allogeneic bone marrow transplantation has been increasingly utilized in the treatment of acute and chronic leukemias, aplastic anemia, severe forms of thalassemia,
immunodeficiency
syndromes and metabolic disorders due to a lack of specific enzymes in the monocyte-macrophage system. Despite the overall success of this approach and besides the so-called classic complications arising from the toxicity of the conditioning regimen, occurrence of
GVH disease
and interstitial pneumonitis, there are other less common complications which have been reported mainly by teams transplanting on a large number of patients. With only a limited experience, concerning 60 patients with transplants between May 1987 and May 1991, we have seen some unusual complications such as toxoplasma encephalitis, myasthenia gravis and aseptic bone necrosis, which may give rise to difficult diagnostic and therapeutic decisions.
...
PMID:[Unusual complications of bone marrow transplantation. Experience at the BMT Unit of the Francisco Gentil Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Lisbon Center]. 180 30
We report the outcome of a non-T-cell-depleted bone marrow transplant from an HLA partially incompatible, MLR-positive, parental donor in a patient with an unusual form of
immunodeficiency
characterized by a lack of CD8 T cells and a failure of the CD4 cells to display functional activity in vitro. Without conditioning, and following a mild and transient
GVHD
, donor T cells persist in trace amounts in the host, where they coexist with the nonfunctional host T cells and cooperate with host APC in antigen recognition, thereby leading to a reconstitution of T cell functions in vitro and in vivo and development of a stable, so far unprecedented, human T-T split chimera across MHC barriers.
...
PMID:Coexistence of donor and host T lymphocytes following HLA-different bone marrow transplantation into a patient with cellular immunodeficiency and nonfunctional CD4+ T cells. 183 94
A 7-year-old leukemic girl developed pancytopenia following chemotherapy and was given several transfusions of nonirradiated blood. Within 2 weeks she developed a maculopapular rash, fever, abnormal liver function, diarrhea, and wasting. She became septic and died 6 weeks later. Transfusion-associated
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) was suspected clinically. At autopsy, changes diagnostic of
GVHD
were present in the skin and liver. The remarkable feature of the case was the histopathology of the thymus, which was morphologically "dysplastic," i.e., minute, lymphoid depleted, devoid of a corticomedullary demarcation, and completely lacking in Hassall's corpuscles. These changes were virtually identical to those seen in the thymus of children with severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID). There was no evidence of preexisting immune deficiency. There is compelling experimental evidence that
GVHD
can produce changes in the thymus that are identical to those of "thymic dysplasia." These observations have led to the hypothesis that
immunodeficiency
associated with
GVHD
may stem, in part, from injury to thymic epithelium resulting in defective T cell maturation. As a corollary of this hypothesis, it has been suggested that the pathogenesis of some forms of SCID may involve
GVHD
-associated injury to the thymus by a maternal allograft acquired in utero. This report further documents thymic pathology in human
GVHD
and discusses these changes in the light of these ideas.
...
PMID:Thymic involution with loss of Hassall's corpuscles mimicking thymic dysplasia in a child with transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease. 186 63
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