Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 5-year-old girl with a history of recurrent infection and anaemia has no measurable purine nucleoside phosphorylase (N.P.) activity in her red blood-cells. Her serum-immunoglobulin levels are normal, as are her antibody responses to thymus dependent and independent antigens. However, she has severe lymphopenia, pronounced depression of lymphocyte response to mitogenic and allogeneic cell stimuli, and greatly decreased T-cell rosette formation. Her parents are second cousins; their red cells contain less than half the normal level of N.P. activity. They also share an unusual N.P. isozyme pattern indicative of molecular hybridisation between catalytically active and inactive subunits, which strongly supports the assumption that they are heterozygous and their daughter is homozygous for a "silent" allele at the N.P. gene locus. Inherited deficiency of adenosine deaminase, an enzyme catalysing a reaction only one metabolic step away from that of N.P., is known to cause immunodeficiency. It is therefore very likely that this patient's lack of demonstrable N.P. activity is responsible for her syndrome.
...
PMID:Nucleoside-phosphorylase deficiency in a child with severely defective T-cell immunity and normal B-cell immunity. 4 76

In a previously healthy 13-year-old girl with disseminated blastomycosis, immunodeficiency was considered because of lymphopenia and the slow response of her lung disease to therapy with amphotericin B. Cellular immunity was found to be profoundly impaired, with absent delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity to several common antigens, a decreased count of thymus-dependent lymphocytes in the peripheral blood and a greatly diminished in-vitro proliferative response of lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin (PHA). Humoral immunity was intact. Two additional types of therapy were assessed: subcutaneous injection of transfer factor was associated with an unsustained increase in lymphocyte counts and a positive cutaneous response to PHA but no clinical change; parenteral alimentation to ensure an adequate energy intake was associated with rapid clinical improvement, the development of delayed hypersensitivity to four additional antigens, and the return of lymphocyte counts and proliferative response to normal. These findings suggest that increased energy intake rather than transfer factor therapy was responsible for the child's recovery, and they emphasize the importance of adequate nutrition in the maintenance of intact cellular immunity.
...
PMID:Cellular immunity and nutrition in refractory disseminated blastomycosis. 9 21

A 30-year-old man with recurrent sinopulmonary infections, eventually fatal, was found to have common variable immunodeficiency. In addition to low serum immunoglobulin concentrations he also had lymphopenia and cell-mediated immunodeficiency as shown by cutaneous anergy and a poor lymphocyte response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) in vitro. However, intradermal injection of PHA produced a vigorous cutaneous response, showing that some cell-mediated responsiveness remained. The responsiveness of his lymphocytes to PHA was restored towards normal (confirmed by chromosome studies) by the addition of a small number of normal leukocytes to cultures; thus a reversible functional defect in his T-lymphocytes was revealed. Experiments indicated that the defect was cellular and not due to serum factors and it was concluded that normal leukocytes restored a missing factor to the patient's T-lymphocytes. Although counts of macrophage precursor cells in the bloodstream were low, thus contributing to the immunodeficiency, this could not have caused the reduced PHA response. Several relatives of this patient had lymphoma; two cousins had common variable immunodeficiency.
...
PMID:Reversible dysfunction of T-lymphocytes in common variable immunodeficiency. 14 Jul 58

Two cases of combined immunodeficiency with lymphopenia, thymic dysplasia, and defective immunoglobulin production are reported. Both show selective hypo-gammaglobulinemia (IgG and IgA respectively) and selective hyper-gammaglobulinemia (both IgE, IgA, and IgM respectively). The cases are classified, by correlation of clinical and histopathological data as a variant of Fireman's disease.
...
PMID:Combined immune deficiency syndromes with primary T-cell defect and partial B-cell reactive hyperactivity. Immunological and morphological analysis of two unusual cases. 15 Jan 19

Blood lymphocytes from nineteen patients with Hodgkin's disease were tested in vitro before and after treatment. The patients were retested in complete and unmaintained remission at least 15 months after termination of radiotherapy. All patients except two had been treated with total nodal irradiation. The lymphocyte-DNA synthesis induced by concanavalin A (Con A) and PPD was poor and the spontaneous DNA synthesis was increased in untreated patients. Most patients had a T lymphocytopenia before treatment. After irradiation the total lymphocyte counts were reduced drastically. The number of T lymphocytes was particularly low, though the number of B lymphocytes decreased as well. However, the lymphocyte response to Con A and PPD remained low and unchanged. The results may suggest a persisting immunodeficiency in Hodgkin's disease as reflected by the lymphocyte response to Con A and PPD.
...
PMID:Persisting lymphocyte deficiences during remission in Hodgkin's disease. 30 64

Seventy-one previously untreated patients with non-Hodgkin lymphomas were studied with several readilyvailable tests of immune function: number of peripheral blood lymphocytes, serum immunoglobulins, and delayed hypersensitivity to six recall antigens. The results were correlated to histology (Rappaport classification), stage (Ann Arbor classification), the presence of symptoms, and survival. As a group, 38 patients with diffuse lymphomas exhibited marked impairment in reactivity to five of six antigens (p less than 0.03 to p less than 0.001). In addition, lymphopenia and reduced levels of serum IgA were found in association with diffuse histiocytic lymphoma. Among patients with diffuse lymphoma, lymphocyte number and skin test reactivity tended to be greater in those with localized disease or without constitutional symptoms, and survival was superior for patients free of symptoms (p less than 0.01). As a group, 33 patients with nodular lymphoma had normal numbers of lymphocytes, lower levels of serum IgG and IgA, and significant impairment of reactivity to two antigens (streptokinase-streptodornase and mumps; p less than 0.01); reactivity to three other antigens (Candida albicans, coccidiodin, and tuberculin) was normal. Survival for patients with nodular lymphoma was superior (p less than 0.01) compared to those with diffuse lymphomas. In summary, severe immunodeficiency was found in patients with diffuse lymphoma (particularly diffuse histiocytic lymphoma), and definite but much less severe immunodeficiency was characteristic of patients with nodular lymphoma.
...
PMID:Immunodeficiency in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphomas. 31 45

A six-year old boy who had suffered from the age of two with chronic diarrhea has been found to be severely retarded in statural growth. Examinations discovered marked lymphopenia with a T lymphocyte defect accompanied by absent IgA and IgE. In contrast with other cases described in literature, in this case the immunodeficiency was not accompanied by bone or cartilage alterations. The only factor apparently responsible for his lack of growth was the malabsorption.
...
PMID:Harmonic dwarfism, lymphopenia, deficit of IgA and IgE in a 6-year old boy. 61 Apr 13

A retrospective study aiming at detection of heterozygous carriers of blood adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency was carried out in nine families known to us because children had died of combined immunodeficiency (SCID). The trait was found in 3 of 9 parent couples, and in 14 other relatives. In two families one homozygous patient was identified. A total of 54 family members and 60 healthy control subjects were tested. Clinically, the patients were all characterized by marked lymphopenia, nearly normal immunoglobulin levels, and inability to produce antibodies. One homozygous patient recovered after transplantation of fetal liver and thymus and is immunologically normal 1.5 years afterwards.
...
PMID:Hereditary sever combined immunodeficiency and adenosine deaminase deficiency. 124 64

Cartilage-hair hypoplasia is an autosomal recessive osteo-chondrodysplasia which results in short stature, sparse hair and impaired cell-mediated immunity. In a study of 88 Finnish patients we found episodes of anaemia and/or macrocytosis during childhood in 86% of the patients. The reticulocyte index was always low in relation to anaemia. Bone marrow examination revealed decreased erythropoiesis in six of eight anaemic patients studied. Anaemia was most prevalent and severe during infancy. Spontaneous recovery occurred before adulthood in all patients except in three infants with fatal hypoplastic anaemia. Sixty-two percent of the patients had had lymphopenia and 24% neutropenia. Presence of anaemia significantly correlated to severity of immunodeficiency and growth failure and to presence of neutropenia. Disordered erythrogenesis is an integral feature of cartilage-hair hypoplasia and may, together with growth failure and immunodeficiency, reflect a generalized defect in cellular proliferation.
...
PMID:Anaemia and macrocytosis--unrecognized features in cartilage-hair hypoplasia. 129 Aug 47

Acemannan, a complex carbohydrate shown to stimulate interleukin-1, tumor necrosis factor alpha and prostaglandin E2 production by macrophages, has also demonstrated antiviral activity in vitro against human immunodeficiency virus, Newcastle disease virus and influenza virus. A pilot study was undertaken to determine acemannan's effect in 49 feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infected cats with clinical signs of disease (Stage 3, 4 or 5), 23 of which had severe lymphopenia. Cats received acemannan either by intravenous (Group 1) or subcutaneous (Group 2) injection once weekly for 12 weeks, or by daily oral (Group 3) administration for 12 weeks. Upon entry into the study, cats were randomly assigned to one of the three groups. Laboratory analyses were performed at the beginning of the study and at Weeks 6 and 12. Cats were allowed to continue with a predetermined maintenance regimen of acemannan after completing the 12-week study. Thirteen cats died during the course of treatment. Upon necropsy, the most frequent histopathologic findings were neoplastic, kidney and pancreatic disease. Friedman's two-way ANOVA test showed no significant differences in efficacy among groups administered acemannan by the different routes. Therefore, groups were combined and a signed-ranks test was used to determine changes over time. A significant increase was seen in lymphocyte counts (P < 0.001). Neutrophil counts decreased significantly (P = 0.007), as did incidence of sepsis (P = 0.008). When cats entering with lymphopenia were analyzed separately, a much greater increase in lymphocyte counts was noted (235%) compared with non-lymphopenic cats (42%). A survival rate of 75% was found for all three groups. Thirty-six of 49 animals are alive 5-19 months post-entry. These results suggest that acemannan therapy may be of significant benefit in FIV-infected cats exhibiting clinical signs of disease.
...
PMID:Pilot study of the effect of acemannan in cats infected with feline immunodeficiency virus. 133 96


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>