Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Asplenia syndrome is usually associated with complex congenital cardiovascular defects. These patients often succumb to overwhelming infections. A complete immunological evaluation was therefore conducted on 13 consecutive patients with asplenia syndrome and 12 age-matched patients with congenital heart disease but without evident splenic problems. IgG, IgA, IgM and C3 and C4 values were normal for age in all subjects studied. T cell subsets, including the percentage of CD3, and CD4 cells and the CD4/CD8 ratio were significantly different in patients and controls (P less than 0.01, respectively). Lymphoproliferative responses to mitogens (ConA, concanavalin A, phytohemagglutinin and pokeweed mitogen) were also decreased in patients. Fc-mediated clearance of sensitized autologous erythrocytes was significantly impaired in patients (n = 13) when compared with age-matched controls (n = 5) (clearance t1/2 59.0 +/- 9.6 minutes vs. 12.5 +/- 1.6 minutes, P less than 0.001). Thus profoundly impaired reticuloendothelial clearance and decreased T cell function might account for the life-threatening infections frequently seen in patients with congenital asplenia syndrome.
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PMID:Immunologic study of the asplenia syndrome. 146 8

Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC) is a heart disease of unknown aetiology characterised by impaired ventricular function usually associated with dilatation of the cardiac chambers. In order to test the hypothesis of an immunological cause for the disease at the genetic level, we performed linkage analysis between the putative disease locus and some of the potential candidate genes involved in the immune response or coding for the targets for autoantibodies in a large multigeneration family (63 members) from southern Italy with autosomal dominant transmission of the disease. Twenty-nine polymorphic markers on 18 different chromosomal locations were investigated, including markers linked to the genes coding for the HLA antigens, the immunoglobulin heavy and light chains, the receptors for the immunoglobulin Fc fragments, the subunits of the T cell receptor and the associated CD3, CD4, CD8, and CD45 antigens, interleukins 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 11, the interleukin 1 and 2 receptors, and the genes coding for the beta 1 adrenoreceptor, the adenine nucleotide translocator-1, and the cardiac alpha and beta myosin heavy chains. No evidence for genetic linkage to IDC was found at any of these candidate loci. These results indicate that the still unidentified IDC gene maps outside several loci involved in the regulation of immune reactivity.
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PMID:Absence of linkage between idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and candidate genes involved in the immune function in a large Italian pedigree. 783 53

The prevalence and incidence of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction was examined in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Sixty-nine randomly selected patients diagnosed with HIV infection who were followed in HIV clinics were prospectively evaluated by 2-dimensional echocardiography. Mean follow-up duration was 11 months. Additionally, 39 consecutive HIV-infected patients referred to the Cardiomyopathy Service and found to have LV dysfunction by 2-dimensional echocardiography were also studied. Of the 39 referred patients, 34 (87%) were referred for recent onset, unexplained, congestive heart failure. During this time, the HIV clinic population comprised 1,819 alive and actively followed patients; the 39 cardiomyopathy referrals therefore constituted a crude rate of 2.1% for this population. Of the 69 prospectively studied patients without clinical heart disease, a 14.5% prevalence of global LV hypokinesia and an incidence of 18%/patient-year were found. During a maximal 18-month follow-up period, 4 prospective patients (5.8%) developed symptoms of congestive heart failure. A greater proportion of prospective and referred patients with LV dysfunction had CD4 counts < 100/mm3 (62 and 79%, respectively) than did that of those without LV dysfunction (35%). In conclusion, the high rate of unexpected LV dysfunction in this HIV-infected population suggests that early cardiac contractile abnormalities may involve a significant number of patients, most of whom have low CD4 counts. A subgroup of these patients appears to progress to symptomatic congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Prevalence and incidence of left ventricular dysfunction in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 846 88

Immunologic similarities have been demonstrated between Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3), group A streptococcal M protein, and cardiac myosin. Previous studies have also shown that T lymphocytes obtained from CVB3-infected mice expressing the H-2k MHC haplotype gave an immunodominant proliferative response to the NT4 peptide (GLKTENEGLKTENEGLKTE) of the streptococcal M5 protein. We now show that the NT4 peptide can induce inflammatory heart disease in MRL/++ (H-2k) mice and that induction of anergy to this peptide protects against CVB3-induced myocarditis. MRL/++ mice infected with CVB3 for 7 days or immunized twice at 7-day intervals with the streptococcal NT4 peptide in CFA developed myocarditis. Treatment of the immunized mice with either anti-CD4 or anti-IAk mAbs inhibited cardiac inflammation. Injection of MRL/++ mice with NT4 covalently coupled to syngeneic splenocytes tolerized the animals to this peptide as shown by reduction of the proliferative response. NT4-tolerized mice had significantly reduced myocarditis, although virus titers in the heart were elevated. A control peptide, VP1-10 from the CVB3 capsid protein VP1, did not protect the mice from CVB3-induced myocarditis. The results suggest that immunity to NT4 induced during CVB3 infections is important to the development of cardiac inflammation.
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PMID:Streptococcal M protein peptide with similarity to myosin induces CD4+ T cell-dependent myocarditis in MRL/++ mice and induces partial tolerance against coxsakieviral myocarditis. 861 82

As more effective therapies have produced longer survival times for HIV-infected patients, non-infectious complications of late stage HIV infection such as the development of severe global left ventricular dysfunction (dilated heart muscle disease) have emerged. The demographic and clinical characteristics of HIV-infected patients who develop dilated heart muscle disease as well as potential risk factors are, as yet, poorly characterized. Of 174 patients enrolled in a prospective longitudinal study, a total of nine patients, all with CD4 T cell counts < 200 mm-3, developed symptomatic heart disease (congestive heart failure n = 7, sudden cardiac death n = 1 and cardiac tamponade n = 1); three of these patients developed progressive cardiac dysfunction leading to primary cardiac failure and death. An additional 55 HIV-infected patients referred to our Cardiomyopathy Service were found to have global left ventricular dysfunction, with 84% having New York Heart Association Class III or IV congestive heart failure on presentation. Clinical characteristics associated with severe symptomatic cardiac dysfunction included low CD4 T cell counts, myocarditis associated with non-permissive cardiotropic virus infection on endomyocardial biopsy and persistent elevation of anti-heart antibodies. No relationships to any specific HIV risk factor or opportunistic infection were found. These findings suggest that a severe form of HIV-related dilated heart muscle disease is largely a disease of late stage HIV infection. Virus-related myocarditis and cardiac autoimmunity may play a role in the pathogenesis of progressive cardiac injury. Long-term longitudinal studies of larger HIV-infected cohorts are warranted to identify clinical, behavioral and immunologic risk factors.
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PMID:Dilated heart muscle disease associated with HIV infection. 868 2

Cardiac myosin-induced myocarditis proved to be a valuable virus-free murine model with which to investigate autoimmunological mechanisms in inflammatory heart disease. The disease was shown to be T cell-mediated. In this contribution the functional role of CD4 and CD8 molecules and the conditions that are required to make the cardiac tissue susceptible to an autoimmune attack are discussed.
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PMID:Cellular immune mechanisms in myosin-induced myocarditis. 868 7

Peripartum cardiomyopathy is a classic but uncommon entity in African women about which there is little etiologic understanding. From January 1990 to March 1996 a series of 30 cases of peripartum cardiomyopathy was collected at the Principal Hospital in Dakar, Senegal. Peripartum cardiomyopathy was defined as the occurrence of cardiac insufficiency in a woman with no previous history of heart disease, during the period between the second and twentieth weeks after delivery confirmed by ultrasound evidence of dilated cardiomyopathy. The overall incidence of peripartum cardiomyopathy during the study period was 30 out of 1200 deliveries. The mean age of the women in the study was 34 years and mean parity was 5.2. In 13.3% of cases births involved twins. There were no predisposing socio-economic or climatic factors. The clinical picture was severe cardiac failure in 80.3% of cases and left ventricular insufficiency in 16.6%. In all cases ultrasound findings were typical of dilated cardiomyopathy. Serum selenium and vitamin B1 levels were normal. Measurements of T CD4 and CD8 in eight patients were normal. Conversion enzyme inhibitors were administered to twenty patients. Complete remission was achieved in 14 patients, three patients died, and thirteen patients presented ultrasonic evidence of persistent dilated cardiomyopathy. One patient relapsed after a subsequent delivery. These findings are in agreement with previous reports concerning the clinical and prognostic features of peripartum cardiomyopathy in Africa.
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PMID:[Etiopathogenic, ultrasonographic and prognostic features of postpartum cardiomyopathy]. 913 97

DiGeorge Syndrome is a congenital immunodeficiency characterized clinically by hypocalcemic tetany, congenital heart disease, unusual facies, and increased susceptibility to infection. Pathologically, the syndrome is marked by the abscence or hipoplasia of the thymus and parathyroid glands as well as cardiac or aortic arch abnormalities. Most patients show partial or complete T cell immunodeficiency and normal or near-normal B-cell immunity. A review is made on a clinical case of DiGeorge syndrome is presented. A 52 days old boy, was admitted through emergency. There was no familial evidence of alcoholism or immunodeficiency. He showed irritability due to hypocalcemia. The examination revealed facial and cardiovascular abnormalities and the immunological investigation revealed hypogammaglobulinemia, deficiency of the cell, CD4 and CD8 decreased and with inverted relation. Chest X ray showed cardiomegaly grade II, and no thymus was seen. The diagnosis of the complete DiGeorge syndrome was based on the abnormalities found.
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PMID:[Immunogenetic study in a case of DiGeorge syndrome]. 929 18

We report on some members of two unrelated families showing the characteristic features of Robinow syndrome. In a consanguineous Kuwaiti family, the index case with Robinow syndrome showed some unusual features including severe IUGR, laxity of ligaments, hyperextensible joints, redundant skin folds, severe normocytic anaemia, repeated infection, increased percentage of total T cells and CD4 positive population, reduced percentage of CD8 positive cells, and EMG abnormality. In a Pakistani family with a high degree of multigenerational consanguinity, a single case with the Robinow phenotype also had congenital heart disease, mainly involving the right side of the heart, with pulmonary stenosis, tricuspid atresia, ASD, VSD, double outlet right ventricle, and right atrial isomerism. This report suggests that the disease profile of Robinow syndrome may be extended to accommodate the unusual traits mentioned above. The association of the Robinow phenotype with congenital heart disease in case 2 of this report is consistent with the previously reported finding that congenital heart disease, particularly involving the right side of the heart, may be a prominent component of Robinow syndrome in a subset of patients.
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PMID:Unusual traits associated with Robinow syndrome. 959 42

Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) is one of the main regulators of the tissue factor (TF) pathway of coagulation. To tether human TFPI to the cell surface, full length or truncated TFPI lacking the third Kunitz domain were fused with domains three and four and the carboxy-terminal sequence of human CD4. Constructs were transfected into a mouse fibroblast cell line and individual clones were checked for expression using monoclonal antibodies directed against the first two TFPI Kunitz domains and against CD4. Specific human FXa binding was detected by flow cytometry using an anti-FX polyclonal antibody, and inhibition of FXa proteolytic activity was verified by chromogenic substrate assay using S-2765. In addition, TFPI-CD4-expressing cells, preincubated with FXa, specifically bound human TF-FVIIa complexes as revealed with an anti-human TF polyclonal antibody. No functional difference was observed between full length or truncated TFPI-CD4. These results demonstrate that functionally intact TFPI can be tethered to the cell surface. Genetic manipulation of, for example, endothelial cells leading to the stable expression of TFPI may inhibit the development of coronary artery heart disease following cardiac allotransplantation, and may inhibit thrombosis in the context of xenotransplantation.
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PMID:Human tissue factor pathway inhibitor fused to CD4 binds both FXa and TF/FVIIa at the cell surface. 942


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