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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In two hemophilic brothers infected by the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), Burkitt's leukemia developed within 1 year. Both patients were treated by aggressive chemotherapy, and both are still in complete remission for 23 and 14 months, respectively. Sera from both brothers contained anti-HIV antibodies. However, DNA extracted from the tumor cells, when analyzed by Southern blot using a cloned HIV probe, did not reveal HIV-related sequences. Hybridization experiments with an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) probe revealed the presence of EBV-specific sequences in the tumors' DNA. In both patients' tumors rearranged c-myc genes were found. The rearrangements occurred in both genes 3' to the third exon of c-myc, thereby suggesting that a variant chromosomal translocation took place in both cases. Indeed, karyotype analysis of the malignant cells of one of the patients revealed the variant t(2:8) translocation. In contrast to the majority of
Burkitt's tumors
carrying this translocation, which are kappa light-chain producers, cells of our patient expressed lambda chains. Furthermore, in both cases the lymphoblasts carried IgG on the surface, again an unusual finding in
Burkitt's tumors
. Finally, because both patients had an identical HLA phenotype, the role of genetic factors in the development of such tumors should be considered.
...
PMID:Molecular analysis of Burkitt's leukemia in two hemophilic brothers with AIDS. 282 33
The records of 96 pediatric patients with aplastic anemia or a malignancy who underwent bone marrow transplantation between 1979 and 1986 at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia were reviewed for laboratory evidence of viral infections. The most common viral diseases identified were herpes simplex virus (HSV), cytomegalovirus and adenoviruses, which were found in 19 (20%), 17 (18) and 17 (18) patients, respectively. HSV was more common in patients with than without graft vs. host disease (GVHD) (9 of 30; 30% vs. 10 of 66; 15%), but the difference did not reach statistical significance. Late or prolonged isolation of HSV occurred in patients with chronic GVHD. Cytomegalovirus was significantly more common in patients with than without GVHD (10 of 30; 33% vs. 7 of 66; 11%). The presence of pretransplant antibody to cytomegalovirus or HSV was a good predictor of subsequent infection. Adenoviruses were isolated from all 3 patients with
Burkitt's lymphoma
. Adenovirus type 12, a serotype uncommon in man and known to be highly tumorigenic in young hamsters, was recovered from 4 patients. Adenoviruses were not notably more common in patients with GVHD (6 of 30; 20% vs. 11 of 66; 17%). Other viral infections demonstrated included 5 parainfluenza, 4 enteroviruses, 3 human
immunodeficiency
virus, 1 respiratory syncytial virus, 1 influenza B and 1 rhinovirus.
...
PMID:Viral infections in pediatric bone marrow transplant patients. 283 May 86
Antibody titers to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated early antigens (EA) and the viral capsid antigen (VCA) were determined by ELISA on 263 sera obtained from healthy donors, patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD), non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL), infectious mononucleosis (IM),
Burkitt's lymphoma
(BL), and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). As expected, most lymphoma patients showed markedly elevated anti-VCA IgG and anti-EA IgG antibody titers. Only one patient in the NHL group (n = 56) consisting of patients with lymphomas other than chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and hairy-cell leukemia (HCL), and 3 patients with HCL (n = 19) had high antibody titers of the IgA class to VCA and EA. Seventeen out of 48 patients (36%) with CLL had high IgA anti-VCA titers and 10 of these sera (21%) also contained IgA anti-EA. The geometric mean titer (GMT) of IgA anti-VCA was 2,510, the GMT of IgA anti-EA was 780. These antibody titers were about 10 times lower than the corresponding GMT of the NPC patients investigated in this study. The elevated IgG and IgA antibody titers to VCA and EA in CLL and HCL patients seem to reflect an
immunodeficiency
secondary to the malignant disease leading to reactivation of latent EBV infection. The possibility that at least some of these B-cell lymphomas are associated with EBV cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Increased incidence of IgA antibodies to the Epstein-Barr virus-associated viral capsid antigen and early antigens in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 301 85
Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is a primary
immunodeficiency syndrome
characterized by oculocutaneous telangiectasia, ataxia, recurrent infection and development of malignancies. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a B-cell lymphocytotropic virus which causes infectious mononucleosis and is also highly associated with
Burkitt's lymphoma
, nasopharyngeal carcinoma and lymphoproliferative disorders in immunodeficient patients. 10 Japanese patients with AT were studied concerning the status of EBV infection by specific EBV serology, and reactivity of peripheral lymphocytes to EBV. All the AT patients had high EBV antibody titers of IgG to viral capsid antigen (VCA) and early antigen (EA), while low titers of IgG to EBV-associated nuclear antigen (EBNA), compared with age and sex matched healthy controls. However, significant differences were not apparent with antibodies to several other viruses between the AT patients and controls. These antibody characteristics were thought to be that an activated EBV infection occurred in AT patients. Then the lymphocytes were exposed to B95-8 strain EBV. There was no significant differences in EBNA induction frequency at 24 hours prior to cellular DNA synthesis, between the AT and controls. EBV-specific T cell killer function was very low as judged with the days of establishment of lymphoblastoid cells expressing EBNA on all cells after EBV exposure, when compared with the lymphocytes from controls. These AT lymphoblastoid cells easily expressed EA and VCA by cultivation at lower temperature of 33 degrees C, 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate treatment, 60Co irradiation and by P3HR-1 strain EBV infection. Malignant transformation with high colony forming efficiency in soft agarose and tumor formation in nude mice easily occurred with some of AT lymphoblastoid cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Studies on Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection and reactivity of peripheral B lymphocytes to EBV in patients with ataxia telangiectasia]. 301 55
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been associated with classic infectious mononucleosis,
Burkitt's lymphoma
, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and B-cell lymphomas in primary and secondary
immunodeficiency
disease. The availability of specific serologic diagnosis of EBV, rather than dependence on heterophile antibody positivity, has broadened the scope of EBV-associated diseases. A chronic neuroasthenia syndrome accompanied by antibody titers to the viral capsid antigen and early antigen of EBV, which are higher than found in asymptomatic individuals, is one such additional EBV-associated syndrome. This paper describes the clinical and laboratory responses to EBV that are present in this chronic syndrome. It then discusses management of these patients and the difficulties in establishing a cause-and-effect relationship between EBV and chronic neuroasthenia along with recommendations for future studies.
...
PMID:Chronic Epstein-Barr virus infection. 303 34
The enhancer-binding factor NF-kappa B, which is found only in cells that transcribe immunoglobulin light chain genes, has been purified from nuclear extracts of Namalwa cells (human
Burkitt lymphoma
cells) by sequence-specific DNA affinity chromatography. The purified NF-kappa B has been identified as a 51-kDa polypeptide by UV-crosslinking analysis. "Footprint" and methylation-interference analyses have shown that purified NF-kappa B has a binding activity specific for the kappa light chain enhancer sequence. The purified factor activated in vitro transcription of the human
immunodeficiency
virus type I promoter by binding to an upstream NF-kappa B-binding site.
...
PMID:Identification and purification of a human immunoglobulin-enhancer-binding protein (NF-kappa B) that activates transcription from a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 promoter in vitro. 313 60
Ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) is a primary genetic
immunodeficiency
disease predisposing to cancer. Approximately 40% of patients with AT develop malignancy, usually of the lymphoid system. Increased chromosome breakage in AT leads to rearrangements such as translocations and inversions. The preferred chromosome breakpoints in AT involve genes in the immune system: the immunoglobulin (Ig) gene loci in chromosome bands 2p12, 14q32, and 22q11 and the T cell receptor (TCR) gene loci in chromosome bands 7p13, 7q35, and 14q11. Identical chromosome breakpoints are observed in chromosome rearrangements in normal T cells,
Burkitt's lymphoma
, and adult T cell leukemia. Molecular analysis of these chromosome rearrangements reveals recombination between an oncogene and Ig or between Ig and TCR. In AT, chromosome rearrangements connect the immune system to lymphoid cancer.
...
PMID:Chromosome changes connect immunodeficiency and cancer in ataxia-telangiectasia. 349 17
The development of Kaposi's sarcoma has been associated with either iatrogenic or disease-related
immunodeficiency
. This report describes a homosexual man who presented with
Burkitt's lymphoma
and later had pneumonitis, which was treated with a high dose of corticosteroids. Kaposi's sarcoma subsequently developed, and regressed completely when the chemotherapy and corticosteroid therapy were withdrawn. The evidence from the literature relating corticosteroid therapy to the development of Kaposi's sarcoma is discussed, as well as the possible multifactorial origin of the
immunodeficiency
in which setting this tumor occurs. The observations in this patient suggest that corticosteroids should be used with extreme caution in patients with acquired
immunodeficiency
and those at risk for its development.
...
PMID:Steroid-related development of Kaposi's sarcoma in a homosexual man with Burkitt's lymphoma. 394 43
A 6-year-old boy suffered from a severe lymphadenopathy, characterized histologically by a fulminant polyclonal immunoblast proliferation simulating malignant lymphoma with many immunoblasts resembling Reed-Sternberg cells. He had no history of infectious mononucleosis but Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection was evident from serological findings, and EBV-associated nuclear antigen (EBNA) was demonstrated in a high percentage of lymphocytes of blood and lymph nodes. An adequate humoral response to EBV ruled out the possibility of an X-linked recessive lymphoproliferative syndrome as the underlying cause of chronic EBV infection. A chromosomal defect in a subpopulation of lymphocytes was induced by interferon and might somehow be associated with a subtle
immunodeficiency
of our patient. After exacerbation of the disease chemotherapy was included in the treatment but the patient died 9 months after the onset of the disease. At autopsy the lymphoblastic cell proliferation had changed from that of immunoblasts to cells resembling the
Burkitt's lymphoma
cells. A change of the proliferating cell type was supported by means of cytochemical and immunological cell markers. The presence of EBV in these cells was demonstrated with the EBNA technique. It is concluded that our case may well support the hypothesis, that EBV may induce lymphoma-like polyclonal immunoblast proliferation in immunodeficient individuals, and that occasionally a monoclonal proliferation of the
Burkitt's lymphoma
type may supervene.
...
PMID:Histological and immunopathological studies in a case of chronic Epstein-Barr virus infection terminating in a Burkitt-like lymphoma. 625 16
The observation by Epstein and Barr (EB) of virus particles in
Burkitt lymphoma
cells in 1964 led 4 years later to the discovery that this virus was the long sought agent responsible for infectious mononucleosis. Pathophysiologically the EB virus specifically infects B lymphocytes of the immune system and induces perpetual multiplication of these cells if infection remains uncontrolled. The T lymphocytes, once sensitized against these virus infected cells, either kill them or suppress their continuous growth. During acute infectious mononucleosis, these stimulated T cells appear in the bloodstream as "atypical lymphocytes". If cell-mediated immunity is hampered by either congenital or acquired
immunodeficiency
the proliferative potential of EBV infected B lymphocytes may become uncontrolled and lead either to fulminant and lethal infectious mononucleosis or to polyclonal or monoclonal B cell proliferation. This later phenomenon appears to be the source of most of the lymphoma observed in transplant patients who are chronically immunosuppressed. Much remains to be understood of the mechanisms of EBV infections, which in some geographic areas lead to inapparent infections and in others to
Burkitt lymphoma
or nasopharyngeal carcinoma, while in temperate regions the clinical manifestations are those of infectious mononucleosis.
...
PMID:[The spectrum of infections caused by the Epstein-Barr virus]. 631 Jul 35
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