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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The worldwide incidence of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) including the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) continues to increase and represents a major public health problem especially in the developing world causing
infertility
and ectopic pregnancy. Prevention of the spread of STDs, along with early detection and appropriate therapy has the potential to minimize the reproductive tract damage of these infections and simultaneously improve the health of women in all areas of the world.
...
PMID:Sexually transmitted diseases: global importance. 925 73
Apoptosis research has accelerated with the discovery of genes within a common cell death pathway and evidence for their inter-relationship. Breakthroughs include insights into the mechanism of action of the Bcl-2 family, caspases and their targets, and death receptor complexes. Deregulation of apoptosis is evident in tumors and viral infection, as well as in autoimmune disease,
immunodeficiency
, neurodegeneration, and
infertility
.
...
PMID:Errors of homeostasis and deregulated apoptosis. 938 73
Most of the genes involved in the pathogenesis of the DNA replication and repair syndromes have now been cloned, and our understanding of the basis for the pleiotropic phenotype associated with many of these syndromes has rapidly and dramatically expanded. The elucidation of the specific interactions between proteins that comprise the transcription factor complex TFIIH raises the possibility that nucleotide excision repair, RNA polymerase II transcription, and cell cycle control are connected. Defects in the XPB, XPD, and XPG genes can result in three different syndromes, xeroderma pigmentosum, Cockayne syndrome, or trichothiodystrophy, depending on the specific mutation involved. The recent cloning of the genes involved in Bloom syndrome (BLM) and Werner syndrome (WRN) show that both are DNA and RNA helicases with homology to each other and to other DExH box helicases, yet the mechanism by which defects in these genes cause such different phenotypes is not yet understood. The ataxia-telangiectasia gene (ATM) is involved in a variety of signal transduction pathways that regulate the cellular response to normal proliferative stimuli as well as the response to DNA damage, and the disruption of these signal transduction pathways provides an explanation for ataxia-telangiectasia characteristics such as ionizing radiation sensitivity,
immunodeficiency
, and
infertility
. Although the first Fanconi anemia gene (FAC) was cloned over 5 years ago, and a second Fanconi anemia gene (FAA) was cloned in 1996, the biochemical function of Fanconi anemia proteins largely remains a mystery. The recent construction of mutant mouse strains for several of these diseases should help unlock the difficult puzzle of the pathogenesis of these syndromes.
...
PMID:Disorders of DNA replication and repair. 942 94
A prospective observational study over a 6-month period on women presenting with
infertility
was conducted at King Edward VIII Hospital (KEH), South Africa. The aim of the study was to establish the patient profile and investigations performed on women presenting with
infertility
. One hundred women were recruited. The mean age of the women was 31 years and 60% had secondary
infertility
. The mean duration of
infertility
was 7.2 years; 61% had histories suggestive of pelvic inflammatory disease and approximately half (49%), had had previous
infertility
investigations; 16% of the women were HIV (human
immunodeficiency
virus) antibody positive and 16% had positive syphilis serology. Tubal factors were identifiable in 77%, ovulatory factors in 21% and uterine factors in 21%. Male factor
infertility
was present in 21%. The study confirms that in developing countries, tubal factors are the commonest cause of
infertility
.
...
PMID:Infertility profile at King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban, South Africa. 970 Feb 83
The current annual population growth rate of 3.2% in Africa will double the population by the year 2025. The majority of this population is below 15 years of age, and Africa concurrently also has the highest incidence of
infertility
in the world. Sexual behaviour, which has been poorly studied in Africa, has a direct impact on reproductive health [including fertility,
infertility
and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)]. The multiple cultures and religions which characterize the African continent also affect reproductive health. Factors that have a significant effect on reproductive health in Africa include greater prevalence of extramarital/commercial sexual activity, polygamy, lower prevalence of contraceptives, reliance on traditional practices, high incidence of STDs and teenage pregnancies. High risk reproductive behaviours are predominantly displayed by adolescents, and the prevalence of STDs, including HIV (human
immunodeficiency
virus), is very high in this group. Pregnancy-related complications are the major cause of health-related problems in 15-19 year old girls. Maternal mortality rates in most countries remain high. Literacy rates affect these behaviours. It is apparent that changing the sexual behaviour of adolescents is one way of reversing the adverse trends, such as STD transmission, unwanted pregnancy and poor general reproductive health.
...
PMID:Current status of reproductive behaviour in Africa. 1033 65
Trichomonas vaginalis remains the most common sexually transmitted parasite in the world and is considered a major risk factor in the transmission of the human
immunodeficiency
virus. A PCR technique using primers targeting a specific region of the 18S rRNA gene of T. vaginalis was developed. The PCR test was standardized using 15 reference strains, giving a single product of 312 bp in all strains. No amplification was observed when DNA from related organisms or human DNA was used as a target. The test was evaluated on 372 vaginal swab specimens and 361 urine samples from women attending
infertility
and obstetric clinics at two separate hospitals in Lima, Peru. Compared to T. vaginalis culture, the overall sensitivity and specificity of PCR of vaginal swab samples was 100% and 98%, respectively. The PCR of urine samples was 100% sensitive and 99.7% specific compared to culture of vaginal swab, but the sensitivity drops to 83.3% when compared to PCR of vaginal swabs. All culture-positive samples were found to be positive by PCR in either urine or vaginal secretion. None of the PCR-negative samples were positive by culture. The origin of the amplification was confirmed by digestion of PCR products with HaeIII. This PCR assay, which is easy to perform and has a high sensitivity and specificity, should be useful for routine diagnosis of T. vaginalis infection.
...
PMID:18S ribosomal DNA-based PCR for diagnosis of Trichomonas vaginalis. 1087 64
Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections are a major cause of pelvic inflammatory disease,
infertility
, and ectopic pregnancy in women and facilitate the transmission of human
immunodeficiency
virus (1). To characterize the epidemiology of gonorrhea in the United States, CDC examined national surveillance data on gonorrhea cases reported to CDC through state health departments in 1998 and surveyed selected states with increases and decreases in gonorrhea rates since 1996. This report summarizes the results of this analysis, which indicate that following a 13-year decline, the number of gonorrhea cases in 1998 increased by 9% compared with 1997. Although changes in gonorrhea screening and surveillance practices may have contributed to the higher reported rates, reports from states suggest that true increases in gonorrhea cases also occurred in some populations.
...
PMID:Gonorrhea--United States, 1998. 1092 55
In 1999, 360,076 cases of gonorrhea were reported in the United States (1). Gonorrhea is a major cause of pelvic inflammatory disease, often leading to ectopic pregnancy and
infertility
, and it can facilitate human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) transmission (2). During the 1980s, resistance to penicillin and tetracycline among gonococcal isolates became widespread; as a result, CDC recommended that other antimicrobial agents be used to treat gonorrhea. This report summarizes investigations of an increase in fluoroquinolone-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Hawaii and of a cluster of N. gonorrhoeae infections with decreased susceptibility to azithromycin in Missouri.
...
PMID:Fluoroquinolone-resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Hawaii, 1999, and decreased susceptibility to azithromycin in N. gonorrhoeae, Missouri, 1999. 1101 33
The pandemic due to the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) is extensive in Sub-Saharan Africa and especially in Congo. Congo is a small country on the Atlantic coast and characterized by plentiful equatorial forests and low population density (essentially urban). In Congo, there is a high prevalence of HIV. The social and economic consequences of AIDS add to those of a recent civil war in 1997. There were fratricidal confrontations before and after this period. These confrontations have led to a massive exodus of the inhabitants of the capital, Brazzaville, to the forests and neighbouring cities, essentially towards Pointe-Noire. Pointe-Noire, chief place of the region of Kouilou, in the South of the country, is the second city of Congo and the economic Capital. It is undoubtedly for this reason that it has been globally saved. In this context, a sanitary policy of prevention of sexual risky behavior can appear as a challenge. While it supposes a better knowledge of the sexual activity of the young people, it cannot be dissociated from the analysis of the other factors. These factors can be of socio-economic political or cultural order. Thus the influence of cultural variables in the field of sexuality is certainly preponderant in African countries, where sexuality is taboo. Sexuality is a private matter (personal intimacy and the couple), but concerns also the family (in the sense of membership in an extended domestic group or in a system of relationship) in its aspects related to procreation and to the social field (power, alliances). Such individual behaviour can be lived as a questioning of the social order. In this article, the authors question the place of sexuality in Congo, particularly based on the work of anthropologists [2, 6, 7, 9]. Research in the field of sexuality at adolescence is rather recent in France and investigations that have been done in Congo these last ten years do not exist. Meetings and exchanges in 1998 with high-school pupils and schoolboys and girls of Pointe-Noire, have shown that they had a high level of knowledge (about contamination by HIV). On the other hand, this has also been associated with a number of beliefs, which are higher than in France: relating to the possibilities of interpersonal contagion by saliva (by kissing), food. but also a contagion by mosquito bites. Some of these pupils (essentially boys) have asked us about the greater risk of contagion when the male sexual partner presents an irritation or a wound in the penis. This recurring question seemingly concerns a point of knowledge. However a more attentive analysis lets us think that there could be various interpretations. First of all, if the penis is healthy, the risk is low, nearly absent. The concern about a friction or about a wound in the penis could be associated with the concept of forbidden sexual positions (similar to animal positions). Proscriptions are explained by their traumatic character for the feminine device and because they are able to induce an
infertility
or dystocia (difficult) childbirth. Other beliefs have connected the origin of AIDS with prohibited sexual practices, committed by foreigners, who passed on them secondarily to the natives of the country. They are clearly blamed in their contributions to the decline of customs and the corruption of tradition. However this unfavourable evolution is not longer only their privilege. Sexual superactivity and "sexual wandering" are also concerned. It is dialectic of the pure and the impure. The rejection or the stigmatisation of foreign values can allow the group to find its led astray identity. Condoms are well known by Congolese pupils, but there is mistrust of their use, notably for the "elders", guarantor for the moral order. This mistrust is probably connected with the beliefs of risks of
infertility
, infection or weakening of the virile force. Condoms are mechanical barriers, made by foreigners, to protect native people from foreign troubles, which foreigners generate. The investigation of chains of significant from the primary couple "nature/artificial (synthetic)" can establish a bait of understanding. The contraceptive action of condoms is a problem. Reproduction remains family business. Moreover, the place of the "morality", the official speech of condemnation from the Roman Catholic Church and the ambivalent positioning of certain Congolese religious congregations does not encourage condom use. Finally, one should not neglect their cost compared to the standard of living. The religious faith is a source of comfort for many Congolese. AIDS can be lived as a spiritual probation that certain traditional healers would have foreseen. Certain ideologies can be a source of intolerance for people who transgress "ways of life" (alcohol, tobacco, anal sexual intercourse.). The religious congregations have invaded the public space. The medical world and the political institutions cannot ignore them any more. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:[Approach to sexuality in an AIDS context in Congo]. 1131 31
Women with transfusion dependent thalassaemia suffer from failure of pubertal growth and delayed onset of menarche with amenorrhea, anovulation and
infertility
. With improved pediatric and hematological care is now possible, for patients with b thalassaemia, to achieve a pregnancy. Pre-pregnancy assessment included checks for hypothyroidism and diabetes, for hepatitis B and C, human
immunodeficiency
virus, Rubella, cardiac functions, liver functions by estimating aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, alkaline phospatase, and total plasma proteins. The frequency of blood transfusion needed to be increased in order to maintain the hemoglobin concentration above 10 g/dl. Desferroxamine must be stopped as soon as pregnancy is diagnosed continuing the administration of the folic acid supplements throughout pregnancy. Desferroxamine will be resumed after delivery. The safety of iron chelation with desferroxamine during the periconceptional period and pregnancy has not yet been established. Some animal studies have shown skeletal anomalies; other published studies report seven women with b thalassaemia major who became pregnant while taking desferroxamine: all the women had normal babies. The mode of delivery is usually vaginal, while Cesarean section is performed in those cases with pre-eclampsia, fetal distress, cephalopelvic dysproportion, slow progression of labor, as in women without thalassaemia. In conclusion, with the advent of regular blood transfusion associated with iron chelation therapy, pregnancy in b thalassaemia can be safe for mothers and their babies with appropriate care.
...
PMID:[Pregnancy in women with thalassaemia]. 1139 93
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