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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ninety patients with thalassaemia major were investigated for the occurrence of antinuclear antibodies (ANA), and those with ANA were tested for antibodies to histones (AHA). ANA were detected in 7 of 27 thalassemics on oral
iron
chelator L1, and in 2 of 63 thalassaemics not on L1 (p < 0.01). AHA were seen in 4 of 7 thalassemics receiving L1 with positive ANA, and in none of the 2 not receiving L1 (p < 0.03). Joint pains were seen in patients receiving L1, but in none of the patients not receiving L1. There was no correlation between hepatitis B or
HIV
positivity and presence of ANA or joint pains. While some amount of background ANA-positivity was found in patients with thalassaemia major, it was significantly more in patients receiving L1. Laboratory evidence of drug-induced lupus-like reaction was seen only in patients who received L1. In view of serious concerns about the safety of L1 and wide variations in the incidence and severity of adverse reactions reported by different sources, an urgent regulatory audit of all trial centres is essential.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies in thalassaemia major: relationship with oral iron chelator L1. 786 14
In view of the transfusional risks of viral transmission (notably
HIV
), autologous transfusion is increasingly used; it is often the only possible type of transfusion. A 42-year-old woman with lupus erythematosus, chronic renal failure and triple cardiac valve disease demanding surgery was admitted for multifactorial severe anaemia. Treatment with erythropoietin (8000 units/day)
iron
replenishment, corticosteroids and polyvalent immunoglobulins was initiated. The patient was operated upon in April 1990. A preoperative cell-saver autotransfusion was performed during surgery. The postoperative period was uneventful. Homologous transfusion was not necessary. In this case where homologous transfusion was ruled out, erythropoiesis stimulated by erythropoietin enabled autotransfusion and cardiac surgery to be performed.
...
PMID:[Erythropoietin for autologous transfusion. Use in a case of severe anemia with allo-immunization]. 814 77
Endogenous oxidation reactions are essential for the normal biochemistry of life and are especially critical for leukocyte microbial killing mechanisms in host defense to infectious diseases. However, reactive oxidative intermediates can damage normal tissues unless kept under antioxidant control. Three selected examples of oxidant-antioxidant systems involved in infectious diseases are discussed, regulation of molecular
iron
catalyzed oxidations, superoxide scavengers and inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase in septic shock, and the use of glutathione replacement therapy in
HIV infection
and AIDS. The data suggest that antioxidants, and therapy based on increasing antioxidant potential, have a major impact on clinical infectious diseases.
...
PMID:Antioxidants in infection. 816 64
Outlined is the protocol for field research in Malawi aimed at ascertaining whether infants born to anemic mothers in areas where malaria is prevalent are at increased risk of morbidity. Specifically, the research seeks to: 1) quantify the prevalence and pattern of anemia in infants living in areas where malaria is endemic; 2) investigate whether birth hemoglobin is associated with clinical risk in infancy; 3) measure the associations between fetal anemia, maternal
iron
status, and malaria in pregnancy; and 4) quantify the contribution of maternal anemia and
iron
status to fetal growth retardation. Anemia incidence and malaria prevalence will be assessed through a larger cohort study of infants enrolled at birth and followed for up to 18 months. Also planned is a case-control study that will compare infants born with and without fetal anemia. Odds ratios for maternal anemia, iron deficiency, and parasitemia will be computed for cases and controls to determine the relative contribution of each to fetal hemoglobin status. Finally, the risk of maternal parasitemia, iron deficiency, and anemia will be measured in low-birth-weight, growth-retarded infants and those with normal birth weights. The findings will be used to develop a strategy for anemia control among high risk mothers and infants. This is of particular concern in developing countries, where blood transfusions for anemia can lead to
human immunodeficiency virus infection
.
...
PMID:A study of the consequences of malarial infection in pregnant women and their infants. 823 22
Inflammatory low
iron
is the second cause, after true iron deficiency, of acquired anaemia. It is mainly due to insufficient erythropoiesis resulting from inhibition of the erythroid progenitor and to disturbances in the synthesis and action of erythropoietin. These changes seem to be dependent on factors, such as TNF-alpha, interleukin-1 and interferon-gamma, which are released in inflammatory processes. Alterations in
iron
metabolism seem to be secondary, but also partly provoked by the same inhibitory agents. All these anaemias share a common character, i.e. lowering of serum
iron
level without increase of transferrin level, while plasma ferritin level is within normal limits. In addition to symptomatic therapy by red cell transfusions, numerous trials have shown that recombinant erythropoietin is effective in the treatment of the anaemia that accompanies cancers, chronic inflammatory and rheumatic diseases and of the anaemia provoked by
HIV infection
.
...
PMID:[Inflammatory hyposideremic anemia]. 823 81
In Brazil, clinicians followed 32 transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia patients, 1-49 years old, at the Regional Blood Center and the Department of Hematology of University Hospital of the School of Medicine of Ribeirao Preto to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV),
HIV
-1, and HTLV-1. They also measured serum levels of ferritin and alanine aspartate transaminase (ALAT) to examine liver
iron
content and liver damage, respectively. 46.8% tested positive for antibodies to HCV, which was much higher than that of voluntary blood donors of the Regional Blood Center (1.4%) or of other countries. Yet it was about the same as that of multitransfused patients in the UK (23.2%), Italy (92.9%), and Saudi Arabia (33.3%). 3 of these 15 patients also tested positive for HBV markers. 15.5% tested positive only for HBV markers. 37.5% had no hepatitis markers. Hepatitis-positive people were older than those who tested negative for hepatitis (15.2 years vs. 8.5 years; p .05). The number of units of blood transfused and the levels of ferritin and ALAT were not statistically different between the 2 groups (192.1-336 vs. 135.2 and 36.6-52.3 U/l vs. 36.7 U/l, respectively). 75% of the HCV positive patients received more than 100 units of packed red blood cells while only 42% did in the HCV negative group. 2 people tested positive for
HIV
-1 1 of whom also tested positive for anti-HBs-Ag and the other for HCV antibodies. The
HIV
-1 cases had become infected before the blood bank began screening for
HIV
-1 in 1987. None of the patients receiving blood from the center became infected with
HIV
-1, yet 60% of hemophiliacs treated at the hospital were
HIV
-1 infected. No one tested positive for HTLV-1, even though all 32 patients had received more than 6250 units of blood not screened for HTLV-1. This reflected the low incidence of HTLV-1 in the general population (0.05%). No one was positive for HBs-Ag or HBe-Ag.
...
PMID:The frequency of blood-born viral infections in a population of multitransfused Brazilian patients. 827 57
After the development of monophasic combined oral contraceptives (COCs), containing a fixed dose of estrogen and progestogen, biphasic and triphasic COCs were introduced in the 1980s; in these the dose of ethinyl estradiol and progestogen changes during the pill cycle. In the so-called every day pills, the 21 pills of active steroid combination are followed by 7 inactive pills containing starch,
iron
, or bran. Method failures of OCs are among the lowest ranging from 0.2-1/100 woman-years. User failures can be as high as 6.2/100 women-years. The individual difference in peak plasma levels of estrogens in women taking identical OCs can be 10-fold. Conditions that affect the bioavailability of contraceptive steroids are: 1) drug interaction (vitamin C, drugs that induce liver enzymes, and antibiotics); 2) vomiting; 3) vegetarianism; 4) missing pills; and 5) malabsorption. Metabolic effects of COCs pertain to carbohydrate metabolism, lipid metabolism, hemostasis, and vitamins. Prescribing of COCs involves counseling clients about contraindications to COCs, starting routines, and the pill-free interval, as well as follow-up and monitoring, the problem of missing pills, and selection criteria for OC use. Medical conditions in which COC use requires special consideration are sickle cell disease, trophoblastic disease,
HIV disease
, gallstones, epilepsy, valvular heart disease, oligomenorrhea/amenorrhea, inflammatory bowel disease, and surgery. Side effects of COCs may include depression, nausea, vomiting, headaches, urinary tract infection, and lower genital tract infections. 6 months after stopping the OC 1% of users become amenorrheic. Many of the common causes of amenorrhea, such as weight loss amenorrhea and polycystic ovarian disease, may be treated with the COC until the couple desires to have a baby. The new progestogens desogestrel, norgestimate, and gestodene are highly selective compared to first and second generation progestogens.
...
PMID:Combined oral contraceptives: acceptability and effective use. 832 4
Dendritic cells (DC) were purified from human peripheral blood using a rapid and simple method based on magnetic depletion of phagocytes with carbonyl
iron
, followed by centrifugation of nonphagocytic cells on a Percoll density gradient and depletion of lymphocytes and macrophages/monocytes with a panel of MoAbs and immunomagnetic beads. Enriched DC were obtained with > 99% purity as judged by non-specific esterase (NSE) staining. After isolation, these cells, representing 0.4% of the starting mononuclear cell population, still function as potent antigen-presenting cells for purified T lymphocytes. The present results confirm the ability of human peripheral blood DC to present soluble antigens to T cells including microbial antigens and show, further, that DC are more potent soluble antigen-presenting cells than monocytes. The method was successfully applied to the purification of DC from the blood of
HIV
-infected individuals. We could not detect decreased numbers of DC in four individuals with early
HIV infection
and no replicating
HIV
was detected by in situ hybridization in the DC.
...
PMID:An improved enrichment method for functionally competent, highly purified peripheral blood dendritic cells and its application to HIV-infected blood samples. 838 23
The pathogenesis of anaemia associated with
human immunodeficiency virus infection
is still far from being understood. It cannot be explained by direct effects of the virus on the haematopoietic system. Recent data suggest a role for immune activation. In a cross-sectional study we compared blood cell counts, haemoglobin and erythropoietin levels of 63
HIV
-seropositive individuals with immune activation markers (interferon-gamma, serum and urine neopterin, and beta 2-microglobulin) and with parameters or
iron
metabolism (serum
iron
, transferrin, free
iron
binding capacity, ferritin). We found significant correlations between the concentrations of haemoglobin and the immune activation markers and erythropoietin concentrations. Additional significant correlations existed between the parameters of
iron
metabolism and haemoglobin levels, and ferritin correlated inversely with transferrin. In sum, low haemoglobin levels in patients were associated with enhanced cellular immune activation, as seen by increased interferon-gamma, neopterin and beta 2-microglobulin, and with changes of
iron
metabolism: low haemoglobin was associated with low transferrin and free
iron
binding capacity and high ferritin levels. Endogenous release of cytokines such as interferon-gamma-inhibiting erythropoiesis may be one underlying cause of anaemia in these patients.
...
PMID:Association between immune activation, changes of iron metabolism and anaemia in patients with HIV infection. 844 Mar 63
An important aspect of human immunodeficiency virus (
HIV
-1) infection is the regulation of its expression by nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappa B) through redox-controlled signal transduction pathways. In this study, we demonstrate that
iron
chelation by deferoxamine (DFO) protects against the cytotoxic and reactivating effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). These protective effects were observed both in lymphocytic (ACH-2) and promonocytic (U1) cells latently infected by
HIV
-1. Concomitantly, NF-kappa B activation by H2O2, when followed by gel retardation assay, was decreased in the DFO-treated U1 and ACH-2 cells. This latter DFO-mediated effect was specific, as DFO did not clearly affect AP-1 DNA-binding activity when studied after H2O2-induced stress. More importantly, DFO protected against the H2O2-induced activation of
HIV
-1 as evidenced by reverse transcriptase activity in the supernatant. DFO also protected against PMA-induced NF-kappa B activation as well as TNF-alpha-induced
HIV
-1 activation. Furthermore, DFO attenuated the p24 response in PBMC infected with
HIV
-1 and stimulated with IL-2. These different effects of DFO were obtained at DFO concentrations lower than 5 microM. Other chemically unrelated
iron
chelators also provided protection against cytotoxicity, NF-kappa B activation, and
HIV
-1 activation in U1 cells challenged with H2O2.
...
PMID:Iron chelation decreases NF-kappa B and HIV type 1 activation due to oxidative stress. 855 2
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