Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the course of a prospective study of the prevalence and incidence of infection with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and risk factors for the acquired immune deficiency syndrome among 961 homosexual men, 97 initially HIV antibody seronegative men reported a febrile period lasting at least three days. In 60 of these men serological evidence for an infection was found: influenza A or B virus (17 men), HIV (14), Epstein-Barr virus (seven), parainfluenza virus type I, 11 or Ill (five),
hepatitis A
virus (three), cytomegalovirus (three), adenovirus (two), respiratory syncytial virus (two), hepatitis B virus (one) and Toxoplasma gondii (one). Combined infections were found in five men. A total of 17 men seroconverted for HIV antibody. The clinical symptoms of acute HIV infection closely resembled those of influenza A or B infection. Skin rashes also occurred frequently in men with HIV infection. HIV antibody seroconversion gives rise to a number of different symptoms and primary HIV infection should be included in the differential diagnosis of prolonged febrile illness in those at risk of HIV infection.
...
PMID:Influenza-like syndrome in homosexual men: a prospective diagnostic study. 325 68
Orthotopic liver transplantation was done in 17 patients with fulminant hepatitis. The cause of the liver disease was infection with hepatitis B virus, or co-infection with hepatitis B virus and hepatitis D virus, or infection with
hepatitis A
virus in 6 patients; drug hepatotoxicity in 5; and indeterminate in 6. Grafts from incompatible blood groups, steatotic grafts, or reduced-size grafts were used in 5, 4, and 4 patients, respectively. Of the 17 patients, 5 died: 2 of early liver failure due to the poor quality of the graft, 1 presumably of accidentally transmitted acute infection with the human
immunodeficiency
virus, and 2 of decerebration occurring during or immediately after surgery. The 12 other patients were alive 2 to 15 months after transplantation.
...
PMID:Emergency liver transplantation for fulminant hepatitis. 330 49
Sera from 260 men from Denmark and elsewhere attending two Copenhagen sauna clubs for homosexual men during nine months of 1982-1983 were investigated for markers for syphilis,
hepatitis A
and B, and human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). Five per cent (12 men) had active syphilis, and another 35% (92) had a history of and/or serologic markers for syphilis. Ninety-four men (36%) were positive for antibodies to
hepatitis A
virus, ten (4%) were positive for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), and 153 (59%) were positive for antibodies to HBsAg. Antibodies to HIV were found in 45 (20%) of the 220 men investigated for this marker. Markers for
hepatitis A
and B and for syphilis were more frequent in the HIV antibody-positive individuals, but the association was significant only for markers for hepatitis B (relative risk = 2.0). Thus STD markers had little predictive value for seropositivity for antibodies to HIV. Among 37 men investigated more than once, a seroconversion rate of 3% per month for antibodies to HIV was found, but this estimate must be taken with reservation. The rate of seropositivity for antibodies to HIV among men from Denmark was 23%, and three (8%) of the 40 HIV-positive Danish men developed the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) during the four years following the initial investigation. This study shows that by 1982-1983 HIV had spread considerably in the Danish high-risk group, although there were only seven reported cases of AIDS in the country at that time.
...
PMID:Sexually transmitted diseases, antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus, and subsequent development of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Visitors of homosexual sauna clubs in Copenhagen: 1982-1983. 335 36
Serologic and immunologic studies were performed in 38 African and 60 US patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), 100 African and 100 US heterosexual men and women, and 100 US homosexual men to examine the potential role of infectious agents in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection. There were no significant differences in the prevalence of antibodies to cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus,
hepatitis A
and B viruses, herpes simplex virus, syphilis, and toxoplasmosis among the African and US patients with AIDS, African heterosexual controls, and US homosexual men. However, these four groups all demonstrated a significantly greater prevalence of antibodies to each of these infectious agents compared with US heterosexual men. Immunologic studies demonstrated a significant elevation of activated lymphocytes (HLA-DR and T3 positive) and immune complexes in both AIDS populations and African heterosexual and US homosexual populations, compared with the US heterosexual population. These data demonstrate that the immune systems of African heterosexuals, similar to those of US homosexual men, are in a chronically activated state associated with chronic viral and parasitic antigenic exposure, which may cause them to be particularly susceptible to HIV infection or disease progression.
...
PMID:Serologic and immunologic studies in patients with AIDS in North America and Africa. The potential role of infectious agents as cofactors in human immunodeficiency virus infection. 349 57
Chronic hepatitis occurring in patients with primary
immunodeficiency
disease is an uncommonly reported phenomenon. This study describes our experience with 3 patients with various immunologic abnormalities who developed chronic atypical lymphocytic infiltrates in the liver. There was a temporal relationship to Epstein-Barr virus infection in 2 cases and
hepatitis A
in 1. In view of the increased incidence of malignant lymphoma in several of the primary
immunodeficiency
states, these cases present a difficult diagnostic challenge. The recognition of the association of infiltration of the liver with small cleaved lymphocytes and a viral infection in an immunodeficient patient should alert the pathologist to the possibility that the infiltrate does not represent malignant lymphoma. These cases may be analogous to similar virus-associated lymphoproliferative disorders described in the acquired
immunodeficiency
of renal transplantation.
...
PMID:Immunodeficiency-disease-associated atypical chronic hepatitis: a clinicopathologic study. 609 85
The Council of Europe and the EEC Council of Ministers have strongly promoted self-sufficiency for plasma products on the basis of voluntary non-remunerated donors. Several European countries have a programme of self-sufficiency with plasma products, either with national fractionation plants (e.g. Belgium, Finland) or based on contract fractionation (e.g. Norway, Slovenia). Advantages of national self-sufficiency includes epidemiological factors, economical factors and also ethical and moral issues. Self-sufficiency is one of the basic conditions for reducing the hazard of transmission of infectious diseases. Norway has been self-sufficient with coagulation factors since 1981. Price mechanisms and market forces have been important factors in ensuring the necessary plasma volume, and fractionation methods rendering high yields of factor VIII are initially preferred. This policy has resulted in a low prevalence of antibodies against human
immunodeficiency
virus (6%), hepatitis B virus (28%) and hepatitis C virus (41%). No Norwegian haemophiliacs have been infected with
hepatitis A
through FVIII concentrates.
...
PMID:Self-sufficiency and blood transmitted diseases. 749 63
The inactivation of both transfusion-relevant and model viruses by modified pasteurization has been evaluated following the established guidelines of the European Union Committee for Proprietary Medical Products Ad Hoc Working Party on Biotechnology/Pharmacy. This heat treatment in solution for 10 h at 63 degrees C was introduced into the manufacturing process of OCTAVI, a very high purity factor VIII concentrate stabilized by von Willebrand factor. It could be demonstrated that both enveloped (human
immunodeficiency
virus, herpes simplex virus, pseudorabies virus) and non-enveloped viruses (poliovirus, coxsackievirus,
hepatitis A
virus) were inactivated by this heating step with an efficacy of greater than 4.5 log10 TCID50. The combination of the solvent/detergent step already used in the manufacture with this modified pasteurization leads to a double virus-inactivated factor VIII concentrate (OCTAVI SDPlus) with a viral safety distinctly superior to monoinactivated products.
...
PMID:Virus validation experiments on the production process of OCTAVI SDPlus. 749 68
Since some hepatitis viruses and the human
immunodeficiency
viruses share common modes of transmission, such as the sexual route, we undertook to investigate the prevalence of antibodies to these and other pathogens among 384 rural pregnant women. Our study was intended to form the basis of infection management policies in pregnancy. Antibodies and other markers of the
hepatitis A
, B, C, and D viruses (HAV, HBV, HCV, HDV), the human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) and Treponema pallidum were sought. We tested for antibodies to the viruses using the appropriate enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. HCV and HIV-1 infection were confirmed using standard immunoblotting techniques. Regarding HBV, we tested for the surface antigen (HBsAg), antibody to the surface antigen (anti-HBs) and antibody to the core antigen (anti-HBc). A non-specific test, the rapid plasma reagin test (RPR), was used for estimating Treponema pallidum (syphilis) infection. We found an overall prevalence of antibodies to HAV of 91.4%, to HCV of 6.8%, to HDV of 0%, and to HIV-1 of 3.5%. We found no IgM antibodies to HAV. The incidence of HBV markers was as follows: 5.4% for HBsAg, 61.3% for anti-HBs, and 84.6% for anti-HBc. RPR reactivity was found in 15.8% of the women. These results will be used to establish appropriate management and preventative policies for women attending the antenatal clinic. Prevention and appropriate early treatment of infections in these women will be considered.
...
PMID:Seroprevalence of hepatitis and HIV infection among rural pregnant women in Cameroon. 752 47
In a prospective study, 102 hospital patients with liver disease were evaluated in West Cameroon, Africa. Blood donors, pregnant women and patients without liver disease served as controls. A total of 757 individuals were tested for markers of
hepatitis A
, B, C and D and for immunological markers (autoantibodies, procollagen III, alpha-foetoprotein, CA50 antigen, alpha-1-antitrypsin and antibodies to human
immunodeficiency
virus types 1 and 2). One-third of the liver disease patients had focal lesions on ultrasound examination. Histologically, 20 cases of cirrhosis, 14 cases of chronic hepatitis, 15 hepatocellular carcinomas and 17 cases of acute hepatitis were detected. All hepatic patients and virtually all controls had had a previous
hepatitis A
virus infection. Over 85% of adult patients and controls had at least one marker of hepatitis B virus infection. Over 30% of patients with liver disease had markers of possible hepatitis B virus replication. Antihepatitis C virus antibody was present in 18% of hepatic patients and in 6% of controls. Hepatitis C virus infection seems to play an important role in the development of chronic liver pathology; 40% of cirrhotic patients had a combined hepatitis B and C virus infection. Serum autoantibodies were frequently found and were not correlated with the presence of autoimmune liver disease.
...
PMID:Liver pathology in rural south-west Cameroon. 757 Aug 83
From July through October 1991, an outbreak of
hepatitis A
virus (HAV) infection involving 26 hospital staff, inpatients and household contacts occurred in a pediatric hospital. All ill staff members had cared for one inpatient who had profuse diarrhea with gross fecal contamination of the environment, negative HAV serology and idiopathic
immunodeficiency
. HAV infection in this patient was later confirmed by polymerase chain reaction. Among hospital staff HAV attack rates were highest in nursing personnel (15%). A retrospective cohort study of nurses found that the risk of infection was greatest in those who handled the source patient's soiled bed pad (relative risk, 6.7; 95% confidence intervals, 1.6, 27.8), diaper (relative risk, 5.4; 95% confidence intervals, 0.8, 39.2) or gown (relative risk, 2.9; 95% confidence intervals, 1.1, 7.8). Glove use during these activities was not associated with a lower risk of infection, possibly because of gross environmental contamination or less use than reported. This situation was unusual because the patient was HAV-infected but had negative serology, probably because of
immunodeficiency
. In situations of potentially extensive environmental contamination, such as with a diapered or incontinent patient with suspected or confirmed
hepatitis A
, careful attention to frequent handwashing is an essential protective measure; in addition strict glove use whenever entering the patient's room should be followed to provide additional protection.
...
PMID:Nosocomial transmission of hepatitis A in a pediatric hospital traced to an anti-hepatitis A virus-negative patient with immunodeficiency. 760 5
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>