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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A longitudinal (10-22 month) evaluation of intestinal symptoms and function was performed in five children with symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. All received cotrimoxazole, ketoconazole, and immunoglobulins. A search for enteric pathogens and intestinal function tests were repeatedly performed in all patients. Mild episodes of diarrhea were observed in two children. One had cow's milk protein intolerance. Giardia lamblia was found in an asymptomatic carrier. Evidence for impaired intestinal function was found in all patients. These consisted of positive D-xylose and
iron
oral loads, increased steatorrhea, increased fecal excretion of alpha 1-antitrypsin, abnormal intestinal permeability, and increased food antibody levels. Our results suggest that severe diarrhea may be uncommon in children with
HIV infection
receiving antimicrobial prophylaxis, but that the intestinal function is frequently, and often markedly, impaired.
...
PMID:Impaired intestinal function in symptomatic HIV infection. 186 78
In summary, the
HIV
virus was transmitted to approximately 90% of recipients by infectious blood and blood products transfused prior to donor and product testing begun in March 1985. Self-elimination of at-risk donors several years prior to testing donor blood helped to reduce the number of infected donations. Virtually all contaminated donors are now eliminated. The multiply transfused patient developed a stimulated dysregulated immune system due to the numerous antigens and the
iron
in red cells and plasma. This dysregulated immune system has resulted in a variable response to the added exposure of the
HIV
virus. The incubation period and progression to disease have been prolonged and variable. Although a small number of patients have progressed as rapidly as other at-risk groups, many continue to do well without therapeutic intervention. Natural history of the disease needs continual monitoring to determine the ultimate outcome of these transfusion recipients.
...
PMID:AIDS in the transfusion recipient. 198 13
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods have been used to address issues regarding the relevance and feasibility of zinc binding to "zinc finger-like" sequences of the type C-X2-C-X4-H-X4-C [referred to as CCHC or retroviral-type (RT) zinc finger sequences]. One-dimensional (1D) NMR experiments with an 18-residue synthetic peptide containing the amino acid sequence of an
HIV
-1 RT-zinc finger domain (HIV1-F1) indicate that the sequences are capable of binding zinc tightly and stoichiometrically. 1H-113Cd spin echo difference NMR data confirm that the Cys and His amino acids are coordinated to metal in the 113Cd adduct. The 3D structure of the zinc adduct [Zn(HIV1-F1)] was determined to high atomic resolution by a new NMR-based approach that utilizes 2D-NOESY back-calculations as a measure of the consistency between the structures and the experimental data. Several interesting structural features were observed, including (1) the presence of extensive internal hydrogen bonding, and (2) the similarity of the folding of the first six residues to the folding observed by X-ray crystallography for related residues in the
iron
domain of rubredoxin. Structural constraints associated with conservatively substituted glycines provide further rationale for the physiological relevance of the zinc adduct. Similar NMR and structural results have been obtained for the second
HIV
-1 RT-zinc finger peptide, Zn(HIV1-F2). NMR studies of the zinc adduct with the NCP isolated directly from
HIV
-1 particles provide solid evidence that zinc finger domains are formed that are conformationally similar (if not identical) to the peptide structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Zinc finger motif for single-stranded nucleic acids? Investigations by nuclear magnetic resonance. 200 83
The histopathologic changes of bone marrow during infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are described. Bone marrow biopsies from 73 patients at different stages of
HIV
-1 infection were studied. Indications for biopsy included peripheral blood abnormalities, suspicion of lymphoma, or search for specific pathogens. Common histopathological features, suggestive of
HIV
-1 infection but nonpathognomonic were hypercellularity (67%), myelodysplasia (86.1%), plasmacytosis (98.6%), lymphocytic infiltration (31.1%) and histiocytic infiltration with or without granulomata (13.7%). Increases in reticulin fibers (54.7%), and stainable
iron
deposits, vascular congestion and serous atrophy of fat were frequent features. Opportunistic infections and neoplastic complications were detected in 7 cases: pathogens were demonstrated in 4 cases (Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI), Cryptococcus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania) and lymphoma in 3 cases (1 Burkitt lymphoma and 2 Hodgkin's disease). Bone marrow hypoplasia is usually a terminal event in AIDS and may be iatrogenic.
...
PMID:Bone marrow findings in HIV infection: a pathological study. 210 65
A new method is described for determining molecular structures from NMR data. The approach utilizes 2D NOESY back-calculations to generate simulated spectra for structures obtained from distance geometry (DG) computations. Comparison of experimental and back-calculated spectra, including analysis of cross-peak buildup and auto-peak decay with increasing mixing time, provides a quantitative measure of the consistence between the experimental data and generated structures and allows for use of tighter interproton distance constraints. For the first time, the "goodness" of the generated structures is evaluated on the basis of their consistence with the actual experimental data rather than on the basis of consistence with other generated structures. This method is applied to the structure determination of an 18-residue peptide with an amino acid sequence comprising the first zinc fingerlike domain from the gag protein p55 of
HIV
. This is the first structure determination to atomic resolution for a retroviral zinc fingerlike complex. The peptide [Zn(p55F1)] exhibits a novel folding pattern that includes type I and type II NH-S tight turns and is stabilized both by coordination of the three Cys and one His residues to zinc and by extensive internal hydrogen bonding. The backbone folding is significantly different from that of a "classical" DNA-binding zinc finger. Residues C(1)-F(2)-N(3)-C(4)-G(5)-K(6) fold in a manner virtually identical with the folding observed by X-ray crystallography for related residues in the
iron
domain of rubredoxin; superposition of all main-chain and Cys side-chain atoms of residues C(1)-K(6) of Zn(p55F1) onto residues C(6)-Y(11) and C(39)-V(44) of rubredoxin gives RMSDs of 0.46 and 0.35 A, respectively. The side chains of conservatively substituted Phe and Ile residues implicated in genomic RNA recognition form a hydrophobic patch on the peptide surface.
...
PMID:High-resolution structure of an HIV zinc fingerlike domain via a new NMR-based distance geometry approach. 210 40
We studied trace elements (zinc, copper, magnesium,
iron
, and lithium) by atomic absorption spectrophotometry in the plasma and erythrocytes of 120 subjects: 20 healthy controls and 100 parenteral drug addicts (69 heroin and 31 heroin + other drugs). Plasma Zn and intraerythrocytic Zn and Fe were decreased, whereas plasma and intraerythrocytic Cu were significantly increased in the group of drug addicts with respect to the healthy controls. Moreover, a period of abstinence longer than 10 days was associated with lower plasma levels of Zn and Li in subjects who had taken drugs shortly before they were examined. The presence of serological markers against HBV and
HIV
did not seem to influence the behavior of the trace elements in blood.
...
PMID:Trace elements in drug addicts. 237 68
The literature is briefly summarized as to how several nutrients affect immune function, susceptibility to infection, and cancer susceptibility or progression. Nutritional deficiencies can impair immunity and so influence susceptibility to infectious agents, including ones that are common and relatively virulent in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. A variety of nutrients affect several of the immune functions that are defective in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. For example, beta-carotene increased the number of CD4+ cells; vitamin E decreased the number of CD8+ cells and increased the CD4+/CD8+ ratio; vitamin D decreased the CD4+/CD8+ ratio; and
iron
increased the number of peripheral lymphocytes in humans receiving supplementation. Furthermore, nutritional deficiencies can influence gastrointestinal function, while infectious diseases can influence nutrient requirements by altering the efficiency of absorption and the rate of tissue metabolism. Malnutrition, depressed serum zinc levels, and intestinal nutrient malabsorption have been found in AIDS patients. The above findings suggest that dietary manipulations might diminish the immune defects in
HIV infection
and enhance resistance to opportunistic infections. However, dietary alterations in immune defects are generally not well quantified and may be small relative to the magnitude of the defects observed in AIDS patients. Because conflicting or adverse effects have been reported for some nutrients, recommendations for dietary supplementation in HIV-infected individuals are premature and possibly hazardous. Further studies are much needed to relate dietary nutrient intakes to clinical outcomes.
...
PMID:The potential role of nutritional factors in the induction of immunologic abnormalities in HIV-positive homosexual men. 265 89
Major causes of anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa are malaria, iron deficiency, folate deficiency and haemoglobinopathies: now there is added also the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Anaemia is often multifactorial, with the different causes interacting in a vicious cycle of depressed immunity, infection and malnutrition. Anaemia progresses through 3 stages: compensation, with breathlessness on exertion only; decompensation, with breathlessness at rest and haemoglobin (Hb) below about 70 g/litre; cardiac failure, with Hb below about 40 g/litre. Without treatment, over half of the women with haematocrit less than 0.13 and heart failure die. Maternal anaemia, malaria and deficiencies of
iron
and folate cause intrauterine growth retardation, premature delivery and, when severe, perinatal mortality. Surviving infants have low birthweights, immune deficiency and poor reserves of
iron
and folate. They have entered already the vicious cycle of infection, malnutrition and impaired immunity. Treatment with blood transfusions is even more hazardous since the advent of AIDS, and should be limited to saving the life of the mother. Treatment of malaria is complex as chloroquine-resistant strains are now common. Prevention remains relatively easy with proguanil and supplements of
iron
and folic acid and is highly cost-effective in the improvement of maternal and infant health; it is more important than ever as it avoids the unnecessary exposure of women and infants to
HIV
transmitted through blood transfusion.
...
PMID:Tropical obstetrics and gynaecology. 1. Anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa. 269 76
Brains from AIDS patients with an
HIV
-induced encephalopathy but without opportunistic infections or indications for an inflammation were studied by immuno- and enzyme-histochemical methods. It was found that the macrophages of these brains expressed a lysosomal tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase which gave a good immunological cross-reaction with an antibody to the well-characterized
iron
-containing bovine spleen purple acid phosphatase, belonging to the group of purple phosphatases, which are regarded as a marker for a special phenotype of activated macrophages. It was discussed that the numerous brain macrophages found in AIDS encephalopathy derive from latently infected monocytes which are believed to be drawn to the brain from the bloodstream.
...
PMID:Purple acid phosphatase of human brain macrophages in AIDS encephalopathy. 279 17
Liberian sera collected in 1973 from 592 residents of agricultural and
iron
ore mining companies were tested for LAV (HTLV-III), now known as
HIV
, by ELISA and western blotting, and no positives were found. The ELISA tests were kits from ELAVIA, Institute Pasteur, France, and VIRAMED, Electro Nucleonics, USA, and the immunoblot method was that of Towbin et al. The subjects included 430 men and non-pregnant women who had no positive findings, and 162 pregnant women at parturition, of whom 7 had positive ELISAs but negative confirmatory western blots. This population had high rates of onchocerciasis, hepatitis B, nematodes, Schistosomas, Marburg virus and Ebola virus.
...
PMID:No evidence of LAV infection in the Republic of Liberia, West Africa, in the year 1973. 301 88
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