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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rosette formation with mouse erythrocytes and other cell-surface markers were examined on lymphocytes from patients with a variety of primary
immunodeficiency
and lymphoproliferative disorders. Mouse erythrocyte rosette-forming cells and lymphocytes with surface immunoglobulins were regularly absent in patients with Bruton type agammaglobulinaemia,
immunodeficiency
and thymoma syndrome and severe combined immunodeficiency disease. However, they were present in normal or low numbers in patients with common variable
immunodeficiency
, selective IgA deficiency and ataxis
telangiectasia
. Lymphocytes from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia Sezary syndrome and mycosis fungoides made no or few rosettes with mouse erythrocytes. Increased numbers of mouse erythrocyte rosette-forming cells were present in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and Waldenstrom's macroglobulinaemia. The significance of the mouse erythrocyte rosette as a B-cell marker in the analysis of primary
immunodeficiency
and lymphoproliferative disorders is discussed.
...
PMID:Rosette formation with mouse erythrocytes. III. Studies in patients with primary immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferative disorders. 106 59
Although an isolated clinical case report was published in 1926 and another in 1941, ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) was not established as a distinct entity until 1957, when it was first delineated clinicopathologically. Susceptibility to sinopulmonary infection was identified as the main cause of death and as the third major component of the syndrome; its heredofamilial nature was documented, and it was designated "ataxia-
telangiectasia
." In a later review of 101 published cases, lymphoreticular malignancy emerged as the second most frequent cause of death. Although the thymus was found to be absent in the first reported autopsy in 1957 and the serum IgA deficiency was first recorded in 1961, A-T was not established as an
immunodeficiency
disease until 1963. Thymic abnormality and dysgammaglobulinemia explain the 2 main causes of death, sinopulmonary and neoplastic, but the
immunodeficiency
is probably not the central defect. It does not appear to explain either of the 2 main clinical diagnostic keys, the ataxia and the
telangiectasia
, or any of the other seemingly unrealted multisystemic facets of this complex disorder. Some of our most provocative long-term clinical observations and recent pathologic findings in our series of 9 autopsies are discussed.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia: some historic, clinical and pathologic observations. 109 82
We report on a microcephalic, growth-retarded newborn girl without major anomalies who has chromosome instability in lymphocytes and fibroblasts. Frequent involvement of bands 7p13, 7q34, 14q11, and 14q32 suggested the diagnosis of ataxia telangiectasia (AT) or a related disorder. Supportive evidence was radioresistant DNA synthesis in fibroblasts and radiation hypersensitivity of short-term lymphocyte cultures. Follow-up for nearly 4 years showed largely normal development, and no signs of
telangiectasia
, ataxia, or
immunodeficiency
. Serum AFP levels turned from elevated at age 5 months to normal at age 2 years. We propose that our patient belongs to the expanding category of "AT-related" genetic disorders, probably to the Nijmegen breakage syndrome.
...
PMID:Chromosome instability and X-ray hypersensitivity in a microcephalic and growth-retarded child. 188 49
The physiologic mechanisms that influence plasma levels of von Willebrand factor (vWF) are poorly understood but include race, blood group, age, pregnancy, exercise, and adrenergic and neurohumoral stimuli. Inherited abnormalities in von Willebrand's disease (vWD) are associated with a defect of the vWF gene on chromosome 12, but in some cases, coexistence of impaired response of plasminogen activator and
telangiectasia
suggests the presence of a regulatory defect or more extensive endothelial perturbation. Three broad types of vWD are recognized; in addition, a platelet-type vWD (pseudo-vWD) is due to an abnormal platelet receptor for vWF. The prevalence of vWD, which is difficult to determine because of variations in severity even within a kindred, is reportedly as high as 1%. In a survey of European patients, the prevalence of treated vWD varied from 4.5 to 24 per million. Preliminary results of an international survey of vWD indicate that about 3% of treated patients have seroconversion to human
immunodeficiency
virus, 50% of whom have symptoms. Inhibitor of vWF occurs in type III vWD after treatment and is associated with the presence of gene deletions. Acquired vWD may complicate lymphoproliferative and autoimmune disorders, and proteolytic degradation of vWF complicates myeloproliferative disorders. The level of vWF is increased during pregnancy and in vascular and other disorders; it may be involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. High-molecular-weight multimers of vWF and a cofactor are thought to promote the formation of microthrombi in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and the hemolytic uremic syndrome. Thus, study of vWD has shed light on pathogenetic mechanisms in a wide range of disorders.
...
PMID:von Willebrand factor: clinical features of inherited and acquired disorders. 207 62
Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is a primary
immunodeficiency syndrome
characterized by cerebellar ataxia, extrapyramidal signs, oculocutaneous
telangiectasia
, recurrent respiratory infections and development of malignancies. AT is a complex autosomal recessive disorder involving several systems other than lymphoid cells or the central nervous system. Such a diversity of abnormalities includes hypersensitivity of fibroblasts and lymphocytes to ionizing radiation (anomaly of DNA repair), non-random chromosomal rearrangements in lymphocytes, elevated serum level of alpha-fetoprotein, premature aging and endocrine disorders. A DNA processing or repair protein is the suspected common denominator in this pathology. Whatever the putative common underlying mechanism, AT patients have profound alterations of the humoral and cellular immune system whose mechanisms should be discussed in terms similar to those for other
immunodeficiency
diseases. The usual immunological abnormalities in this disease include decreased levels of CD 3 and CD 4 positive T lymphocytes, impaired delayed hypersensitivity, hypoplasia of thymus, decreased blast transformation in vitro in response to mitogen or antigenic stimulation, and decreased levels of serum IgA, IgE, and IgG 2 subclass. In this paper, the results of our recent studies on the defects of B cells in patients with AT were presented. (1) We found that the geometric means of IgA production in the supernatants of the lymphoblastoid cell lines established by EB virus, from all patients with AT, were significantly lower than those from healthy controls (P less than 0.01). (2) IgG subclasses of the patients' sera were also measured by ELISA, and IgG 4 was defective in four cases among six patients with AT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ataxia telangiectasia and characterization of its immunological disorders]. 215 3
Ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterised by progressive neurological degeneration, oculocutaneous
telangiectasia
,
immunodeficiency
and a high incidence of lymphoid tumours. A prerequisite to gaining a complete understanding of the basic defect that results in these features is the localization of the gene(s) involved. We report here a linkage analysis using seven polymorphic markers, which map to 11q22-23, on a sample of 35 consecutively obtained families from the British Isles showing this disorder. In a pairwise analysis, the strongest support for linkage was a lod score of 4.01 at zero recombination from Thy-1. This result supports a previous report showing linkage of the A-T gene to 11q22-23. We have also obtained evidence in a multipoint analysis for a more centromeric A-T-linked locus in the region between YNB 3.12/CJ52.208 and 2-7-1D6. This observation is also supported by inspection of the haplotypes of selected recombinants.
...
PMID:Analysis of 7 polymorphic markers at chromosome 11q22-23 in 35 ataxia telangiectasia families; further evidence of linkage. 237 52
Subpopulational composition of peripheral blood and bone marrow lymphocytes was studied in 17 children with different forms of
immunodeficiency
, combined with hematological shifts (agammaglobulinemia--6, mucocutaneous candidiasis--2, selective IgG-deficiency--2, hyper-IgM syndrome--3, cephalo-oculocutaneous
telangiectasia
(COCT)--2, general, variable
immunodeficiency
--2 patients; neutropenia was observed in all the patients, lymphopenia--in 13, anemia-in 6 patients. Surface markers were assayed by flow cytofluorometry with monoclonal antibodies OKT3, OKT4, OKT8, OKB7, produced by "Ortho diagnostics". Changes characteristic of certain forms of primary
immunodeficiency
have been revealed in the subpopulational composition of peripheral blood and bone marrow lymphocytes: decreased helper potential in patients with general variable
immunodeficiency
, T-lymphocyte deficiency in patients with COCT increased number of phenotype T3 cells and decreased amount of B-cell in agammaglobulinemia patients. Significant heterogeneity has been noted in the parameters of hemogram, myelogram and in the subpopulational composition of peripheral blood and bone marrow lymphocytes in each nosologic form, the group of patients with hyper-IgM syndrome has proved to be most heterogeneic. It has been suggested that the changes in the subpopulational composition of bone marrow lymphocytes may be responsible for primary
immunodeficiency
and disorders in hemopoiesis.
...
PMID:[Phenotyping of blood and bone marrow lymphocytes in children with primary immunologic deficiency]. 237 47
This report describes twin girls with typical features of ataxia-telangiectasia, including increased alpha-fetoprotein, radio-resistant DNA synthesis, characteristic chromosome abnormality, and
immunodeficiency
. They have, in addition, microcephaly and mental retardation. Complementation studies were performed utilizing Sendai virus--mediated fusion of fibroblast cell lines. Complementation was observed with patients in ataxia-telangiectasia complementation groups A, C, and E but not with the cell line from a patient with the Nijmegen breakage syndrome, in which patients have microcephaly, radio-resistant DNA synthesis, chromosome aberrations, and
immunodeficiency
but lack ataxia and
telangiectasia
. These data suggest that the Nijmegen breakage syndrome and the patients described here are not genetically distinct entities but form a spectrum of one disorder.
...
PMID:ATFresno: a phenotype linking ataxia-telangiectasia with the Nijmegen breakage syndrome. 249 Nov 81
Sixty-eight human fibroblast cell strains were assayed for radioresistant DNA synthesis (RDS), which is defined here as the absence of a steep component of inhibition of DNA synthesis in a dose-response curve when rate of DNA synthesis is plotted against radiation doses from 0 to 20 Gy or more. Twenty-seven strains from patients who were previously diagnosed to have ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) were positive for this feature. Among the cell strains that did not show RDS were two from AT obligate heterozygotes (i.e., the parents of AT patients), two from patients with Alzheimer disease, two from patients with Friedreich ataxia, one from a patient with Bloom syndrome, one from a patient with Down syndrome, and six from patients with various immunodeficiencies. Four strains demonstrated RDS that was less pronounced than in most AT cells: one was from a patient with Nijmegen breakage syndrome, one was from a patient without ataxia but with choreiform movement disorder,
telangiectasia
, and elevated concentrations of alpha-fetoprotein in the blood, and two were from AT patients. RDS therefore is not a necessary trait of human genetic diseases that involve radiosensitivity or
immunodeficiency
. Although recent reports suggest that some AT patients do not exhibit RDS, we found RDS in all the AT cells we tested.
...
PMID:Radioresistant DNA synthesis and human genetic diseases. 272 85
We report on five independent families with a chromosome instability disorder that earlier had been called the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS). These families, two from the Netherlands and three from Czechoslovakia, had a total of eight patients, five of whom are still alive. The main clinical manifestations were microcephaly, short stature, a "bird-like" face, immunological defects involving both the humoral and cellular system. In four of the five living patients it has been possible to study the chromosomes of cultured lymphocytes. The basic karyotype in these patients were normal, but in 17% to 35% of the metaphases rearrangements were found, preferentially involving chromosomes 7 and/or 14 at the sites 7p13, 7q34, and 14q11. The chromosomes of all five living patients were very sensitive to ionizing radiation. In addition, the DNA synthesis in their cultured lymphocytes and fibroblasts was more resistant to X-rays than in cells from controls. The NBS shares a number of important features with ataxia telangiectasia (AT). Both syndromes are characterized by the occurrence of typical rearrangements of chromosomes 7 and/or 14, cellular and chromosomal hypersensitivity to X-irradiation, radioresistance of DNA replication and
immunodeficiency
. However, there are also obvious differences: NBS patients have microcephaly but neither ataxia nor
telangiectasia
, and in contrast to the situation in AT the alpha-fetoprotein level in their serum is normal.
...
PMID:Further delineation of the Nijmegen breakage syndrome. 278 40
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