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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 35-year-old man infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus presented with cervical myelopathy of 2 months duration. Clinical and radiographic evaluation revealed a discrete, subdural mass at C-6. At surgery, the mass proved to have a dural attachment and thus clinically, radiographically, and grossly, it resembled meningioma. Histopathological analysis revealed a leiomyosarcoma that stained diffusely for muscle-specific actin. Electron microscopy revealed basal lamina surrounding the tumor cells and intracytoplasmic bundles of myofilaments. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was demonstrated within tumor cell nuclei by in situ hybridization for EBER1 messenger RNA and immunohistochemical staining for EBNA2 protein. Epstein-Barr virus latent
membrane protein
(LMP1) was not detected. This is the first documentation of an EBV-associated smooth-muscle tumor of the dura, and the first demonstration that tumors in this location contain EBV in an unusual form of latency not seen in lymphoid cell lines. With increasing numbers of individuals being afflicted with long-term immunosuppression, EBV-associated dural leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma may be encountered more frequently in the future.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus-associated dural leiomyosarcoma in a man infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Case report. 912 7
Primary lymphomas of the gastrointestinal tract represent 9% of all non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and of these only 3% arise in the rectum or anus. In contrast to their rare occurrence in the general population, the incidence of anorectal lymphomas in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), particularly homosexual patients, may be as high as 26% as reported in our own series of AIDS-associated lymphomas. To determine the characteristics of this entity, we studied 15 cases of primary anorectal lymphoma in AIDS patients and compared them with four cases of anorectal lymphoma unrelated to AIDS. The cases in our study were also compared with the reports of rectal lymphoma in the medical literature over the past 30 years. In the present series, the AIDS patients were all male with a median age of 34 years, human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-positive, with homosexuality as the main risk factor. The four non-AIDS patients included a woman and had a median age of 66.5 years. Histologically, the anorectal lymphomas in AIDS patients were all high grade, predominantly immunoblastic, and polymorphous. In the non-AIDS patients, only two of four lymphomas were high grade, including one Burkitt type. All tumors were of B-cell phenotype. In the AIDS-associated anorectal lymphomas, the presence of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in a latent form was demonstrated by an abundance of Epstein-Barr-encoded RNA (EBER) in 14 of 15 cases and latent
membrane protein
(LMP) in four cases. All anorectal lymphomas unrelated to AIDS were negative for EBV. The unusual anorectal location of AIDS-associated lymphomas is explainable by the high incidence of preceding traumatic lesions and chronic infections in the area. As a result, EBV-carrying B cells may be attracted to the field providing the cell population that, under the conditions of immune deficiency, is able to give rise to high-grade lymphomas.
...
PMID:EBV-associated anorectal lymphomas in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 929 75
A 61-year-old man with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) sought care because of the onset of progressive dysphagia. He was found to have a perforated, fungating esophageal mass. The combined histologic and immunologic findings were diagnostic of Hodgkin's disease, nodular sclerosis type, lymphocyte-depleted variant, arising in the esophagus. The Reed-Sternberg cells and mononuclear variants were positive for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latent
membrane protein
(LMP1) and EBV RNA. Occasional small lymphoid cells were also positive for EBV RNA. Polymerase chain reaction studies demonstrated the presence of EBV type A without deletion of the EBV LMP1 gene. Other authors have reported an increased frequency of type B EBV and deletion of the EBV LMP1 gene in cases of human
immunodeficiency
virus-associated Hodgkin's disease. Hodgkin's disease arising in the esophagus is rare in immunocompetent patients. However, in the presence of AIDS, Hodgkin's disease should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with signs or symptoms of esophageal disease.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease of the esophagus. 935
Ovine lentiviruses (OvLV) resemble human
immunodeficiency
viruses in genomic organization, viral heterogeneity, and spectrum of cytophenotypic expression. To gain a better understanding of the relationship of North American OvLV isolates with other characterized OvLV strains, the complete DNA nucleotide sequence of the env region of a highly lytic (rapid/high) OvLV strain (85/34) was determined and compared with the sequence of amplicons within env of three other OvLV strains of varying cytophenotype and isolated from the same flock of sheep. LTR and pol regions also were compared among these strains. The env region of 85/34 was 986 codons in length and the reported nucleotide sequence showed features shared by other OvLV including heavy glycosylation and conserved and hypervariable regions within the surface
membrane protein
region. Phylogenetic analyses of regions within LTR, reverse transcriptase, and env grouped the four virus strains together and similar to the maedi-visna OvLV strains, including visna virus, South African ovine maedi visna virus, and EV1 (British OvLV isolate), but they were distinct from caprine arthritis encephalitis virus.
...
PMID:Envelope glycoprotein nucleotide sequence and genetic characterization of North American ovine lentiviruses. 937 17
We investigated the photoinactivation of virus infectivity by hypocrellin A and its mechanism. The titers of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1), both of which are enveloped viruses, were reduced upon illumination with hypocrellin A in a concentration-dependent manner, whereas canine parvovirus, a nonenveloped virus, was not killed. The removal of oxygen or addition of sodium azide or beta-carotene both inhibited VSV inactivation. Mannitol and superoxide dismutase had no effect on VSV inactivation. These results indicate that singlet oxygen was involved in the process of VSV inactivation. Of the three major VSV membrane proteins, peripheral
membrane protein
M was most damaged by the hypocrellin A phototreatment.
...
PMID:Photoinactivation of virus infectivity by hypocrellin A. 938 93
As a result of a systematic review of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract (GI) at the Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea and the Osaka University, Osaka, Japan, we found an extramedullary plasmacytoma in 5 of a total of 78 cases (6.4%) in Korea and 1 of 136 cases (0.7%) in Osaka, which represents an approximately 9-fold difference in frequency. The presence of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome was examined in paraffin-embedded specimens from the 5 cases with GI plasmacytoma from Korea together with 17 patients collected by a nationwide study in Japan. There were no clinical findings suggestive of the presence of
immunodeficiency
in these Korean and Japanese patients. There were no prominent differences in the age distribution or sex ratio between the patients of the two countries. Histologically, the proliferation of mature plasma cells was almost monomorphous with occasional bi- or multinucleated forms. The immunohistochemistry revealed a restricted cytoplasmic expression of immunoglobulin light chain, kappa type in 8 cases and lambda type in 14. A polymerase chain reaction of preserved DNA from 4 Korean and 16 Japanese patients found that only 2, both Korean, were positive for EBV of subtype A. The difference in the frequency of EBV positivity between Korean and Japanese cases was significant (p < 0.05). In situ hybridization revealed positive signals in the nucleus of the tumor cells. IHC revealed that the tumor cells in these two cases were positive for latent
membrane protein
-1 and EB nuclear antigen-2, showing latent infection of EBV. These findings suggest a close association of EBV and Korean GI plasmacytoma, and might partly explain the remarkable number of cases in this country.
...
PMID:Plasmacytoma of the gastrointestinal tract in Korea: higher incidence than in Japan and Epstein-Barr virus association. 942 72
Oral hairy leukoplakia (OHL) is a lesion frequently, although not exclusively, observed in patients infected by human
immunodeficiency
viruses (HIV). OHL is clinically characterized by bilateral, often elevated, white patches of the lateral borders and dorsum of the tongue. Histologically, there is profound acanthosis, sometimes with koilocytic changes, and a lack of a notable inflammatory infiltrate. The koilocytic changes are due to intense replication of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), while epithelial hyperplasia and acanthosis are likely to result from the combined action of the EBV-encoded proteins, latent
membrane protein
-1, and antiapoptotic BHRF1. How OHL is initiated and whether it develops after EBV reactivation from latency or superinfection remain unresolved; nevertheless, definitive diagnosis requires the demonstration of EBV replicating vegetatively in histological or cytological specimens. In patients with HIV infection, the development of OHL may herald severe HIV disease and the rapid onset of AIDS, but despite its title, OHL is not regarded as premalignant and is unlikely to give rise to oral squamous cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Oral hairy leukoplakia: clinicopathologic features, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and clinical significance. 943 84
Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus has been recognized as a cause of systemic illness in immunocompromised hosts, including relapsing bacteremia in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients. Acquired resistance to quinolone therapy, while reported for a variety of bacteria, including Campylobacter jejuni, has not been previously documented for C. fetus. Two cases of quinolone-resistant C. fetus bacteremia were detected in HIV-infected patients. Cloning and nucleotide sequencing of the C. fetus gyrA gene in the 2 resistant isolates demonstrated a G-to-T change that led to an Asp-to-Tyr amino acid substitution at a critical residue frequently associated with quinolone resistance. In addition, comparison of the pre- and posttreatment isolates from 1 patient documented outer
membrane protein
changes temporally linked with the development of resistance. Relapsing C. fetus infections in quinolone-treated HIV-infected patients may be associated with the acquisition of resistance to these agents, and this resistance may be multifactorial.
...
PMID:Development of quinolone-resistant Campylobacter fetus bacteremia in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients. 953 67
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated lymphoproliferative diseases are a frequent occurrence in immunodeficient patients. Most commonly seen are polymorphic B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders and malignant B-cell lymphomas. Classical Hodgkin's disease (HD), however, is rare in these patients. In the present study, we attempted to characterize cases resembling HD in patients with a variety of underlying
immunodeficiency
states using clinical aspects, immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and polymerase chain reaction. All of the six cases that we investigated presented clinically with B symptoms and a short, devastating course. Histologically, they showed a lymphocytic depletion and multiple cells that resembled HD and Reed-Sternberg cells. Many of those were atypical blast cells that stained positively for B-cell surface antigens, such as CD20 and CD79a, whereas others were of the typical HD and Reed-Sternberg phenotype. Another frequent finding, especially in the extranodal sites, was a perivascular arrangement of large blast cells intermingled with small lymphoid cells. All of the cases were EBV-associated (proved latent
membrane protein
-1 immunohistochemical analysis, EBV-encoded RNA in situ hybridization, and polymerase chain reaction for subtypes A and B), with a frequent coinfection of type A and B. This was in contrast to ordinary HD, which is characterized by single infection of only one strain, i.e., the subtype A in Western countries. Three cases showed clonal B-cell populations, at least at terminal stages of the disease. We describe a lymphoproliferative disorder in immunodeficient patients with features of HD that, in some respects, resembles an EBV-driven lymphoproliferative disorder seen in cases of fatal infectious mononucleosis. We conclude that clinical and pathologic features of these disorders might cause some problems for histologic differential diagnosis and might represent a separate entity of their own in immunodeficient patients.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease-like lymphoproliferative disorders in patients with different underlying immunodeficiency states. 957 79
Pyothorax-associated lymphoma (PAL) is a newly-described entity developing several decades after artificial pneumothorax treatment for pulmonary or pleural tuberculosis. It is known to be associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) with constant expression of the two latent membrane proteins: latent
membrane protein
(LMP)-1 and EBV-associated nuclear antigen (EBNA)-2. We are reporting three new cases of PAL. All of the tumours were of B-cell lineage and classified as large-cell diffuse lymphomas according to the International Working Formulation for the Classification of Lymphomas. The EBV genome was detected in two of the cases with LMP-1 and EBNA-2 expression. No EBV could be detected in the third case suggesting that different mechanisms may be involved in the pathogenesis of the disease. Body cavity-based high grade lymphomas (BCBL) represent a new disease, developing mainly in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infected patients: the tumoural cells often contain both human herpes virus (HHV)-8 (or Kaposi's sarcoma herpes virus) and EBV genomes, suggesting that these viruses might co-operate in the pathogenesis of the disease. The pleural location and the association of EBV have led to speculation that PAL could also be related to HHV-8 infection. However, no HHV-8 genome could be detected in any of the 14 tested cases already reported in the literature nor in the two cases we studied (one EBV-positive and one EBV-negative), suggesting that PAL and BCBL are two different entities.
...
PMID:Pyothorax-associated lymphoma: relationship with Epstein-Barr virus, human herpes virus-8 and body cavity-based high grade lymphomas. 959 37
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