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

While viral infections and their impact are well studied in domestic cats, only limited information is available on their occurrence in free-ranging lions. The goals of the present study were (i) to investigate the prevalence of antibodies to feline calicivirus (FCV), herpesvirus (FHV), coronavirus (FCoV), parvovirus (FPV), and immunodeficiency virus (FIV) and of feline leukemia virus (FeLV) antigen in 311 serum samples collected between 1984 and 1991 from lions inhabiting Tanzania's national parks and (ii) to evaluate the possible biological importance and the interrelationship of these viral infections. Antibodies to FCV, never reported previously in free-ranging lions, were detected in 70% of the sera. In addition, a much higher prevalence of antibodies to FCoV (57%) was found than was previously reported in Etosha National Park and Kruger National Park. Titers ranged from 25 to 400. FeLV antigen was not detectable in any of the serum samples. FCoV, FCV, FHV, and FIV were endemic in the Serengeti, while a transient elevation of FPV titers pointed to an outbreak of FPV infection between 1985 and 1987. Antibody titers to FPV and FCV were highly prevalent in the Serengeti (FPV, 75%; FCV, 67%) but not in Ngorongoro Crater (FPV, 27%; FCV, 2%). These differences could be explained by the different habitats and biological histories of the two populations and by the well-documented absence of immigration of lions from the Serengeti plains into Ngorongoro Crater after 1965. These observations indicate that, although the pathological potential of these viral infections seemed not to be very high in free-ranging lions, relocation of seropositive animals by humans to seronegative lion populations must be considered very carefully.
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PMID:Prevalence of antibodies to feline parvovirus, calicivirus, herpesvirus, coronavirus, and immunodeficiency virus and of feline leukemia virus antigen and the interrelationship of these viral infections in free-ranging lions in east Africa. 887 34

Parvovirus B19 infection may cause chronic anemia in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected hosts. Small-scale studies and case reports have suggested that parvovirus B19 infection is a significant cause of anemia in HIV-infected patients. We studied single serum samples from 317 consecutive HIV-infected patients with use of parvovirus B19-specific serology and polymerase chain reaction for detection of viral DNA. Anemia was noted in 176 patients (55.5%); 126 (39.9%) had < 0.10 x 10(9) CD4+ cells/L. In this study group, 191 (60.3%) of the patients were positive for parvovirus B19 IgG. Seroprevalence rates did not differ between patients with low and higher CD4+ cell counts or between anemic and nonanemic patients. Parvovirus B19 DNA was detected in none of the sera. In a control group of 226 healthy male blood donors, the seroprevalence of parvovirus B19 IgG was 68.1%; two IgG-positive sera also contained parvovirus B19 DNA. This study demonstrates that chronic parvovirus B19 infection should not be considered a frequent cause of anemia in HIV-infected individuals.
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PMID:Prevalence of parvovirus B19 infection in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 895 68

Due to the preparative regimen necessary, bone marrow transplantation (BMT) consistently results in severe immunodeficiency, often associated with anaemia, leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. Parvovirus B19 replicates in red blood cell precursors in the bone marrow and causes erythema infectiosum ('fifth disease'), anaemia, arthritis and foetal death. We assessed the significance of B19 infections as a cause of post-BMT complications. Over 900 serial serum samples from 201 allogeneic bone marrow recipients were studied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and by modern serodiagnostic methods. During the first 6 months after transplantation all BMT recipients remained B19 PCR-negative. Antibody screening for B19 infections was performed up to 36 months post-transplantation. Three cases of acute B19 infection were diagnosed during the second year post-BMT. To characterize the adoptively transferred immune system we measured subclasses and avidity of anti-VP1 IgG and epitope-type specificity (ETS) of anti-VP2 IgG, which allowed functional differentiation of primary and secondary B-cell responses long after BMT. The profile of the immune response was that of a primary infection in 1 and of reinfection in 2 of the 3 acute cases. Both types were clinically mild. Infection by human parvovirus B19 is not a frequent cause of post-BMT cytopenias. The findings with the new B19 antibody markers support the concept that the donated marrow determines the type of antiviral B-cell responses.
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PMID:Primary and secondary infections by human parvovirus B19 following bone marrow transplantation: characterization by PCR and B-cell molecular immunology. 918 47

Parvovirus B19 (B19) DNA was detected by dot blot hybridization in sera from 5 (17%) of 30 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients with hematocrits (HCT) of < or =24 and 4 (31%) of 13 HRV-infected patients with HCT of < or =20, suggesting that B19 is a reasonably common cause of severe anemia in HIV infection. The anemia promptly remitted after immunoglobulin therapy in 3 of 4 treated patients. The presence of IgM to B19, the clinical circumstance in which anemia developed, and the marrow morphology were poor predictors of chronic B19 infection. DNA hybridization studies of sera from 191 HIV-infected and 117 HIV-seronegative homosexual males attending a clinic in the Seattle area revealed that 1 (0.5%) and 2 (2%) samples, respectively, from the 2 groups contained B19. However, when assayed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), 5% of the serum samples from HIV-infected persons and 9% from uninfected persons contained B19, although each had an HCT of > or =40. The data argue that anemia results from chronic high-titer B19 infection. Although a negative PCR assay excludes this diagnosis, DNA hybridization may be the more specific serum test.
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PMID:Clinical relevance of parvovirus B19 as a cause of anemia in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 960 72

Human parvovirus B19, which infects and lyses erythroid precursors, can cause severe anemia in patients with immunodeficiency. The incidence of parvovirus infection in adult acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients is unknown. Eighty-one archival formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) bone marrow biopsies from 73 AIDS adults were immunostained with monoclonal R92F6 against B19 VP1 and VP2 capsid proteins using streptavidin peroxidase and streptavidin alkaline phosphatase techniques. In addition, the same tissues were hybridized in situ with a digoxigenin-labeled parvovirus B19 DNA probe. Five FFPE bone marrows, from 3 HIV-negative patients with positive immunoglobulin M (IgM) serology for parvovirus B19, and 1 parvovirus B19-infected fetal liver were positive controls. By immunoperoxidase, all tissues were negative with R92F6 except the fetal liver, which exhibited strong positivity predominantly in viral inclusions. With immunoalkaline phosphatase, all positive controls were immunoreactive with R92F6; however, the AIDS marrows were negative. With in situ hybridization (ISH), all positive controls and 7 of 81 (8.6%) of AIDS marrows were positive for B19 parvovirus DNA. We conclude that ISH is more sensitive than R92F6 immunohistochemistry in parvovirus B19 detection. A small but significant number of bone marrows from AIDS adults shows evidence of human parvovirus B19 infection.
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PMID:Human parvovirus B19 in bone marrows from adults with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a comparative study using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. 922 41

Adeno associated virus (AAV) is a non-pathogenic dependent parvovirus with a broad host range, capable of high levels of transduction and stable integration into the host cell genome. We have investigated the potential for using AAV as a vector for gene transfer into glial cells of the human fetal nervous system. Recombinant AAV vectors expression either the reporter gene beta-galactosidase or a human CD4 receptor were able to transduce both primary glial cells of the human fetal nervous system and an SV40 immortalized human fetal glial cell line (SVG). No difference in transduction efficiency was observed between the primary cells and the cell line which in both cases was as high as 95%. Stable transfectants of the glial cell line expressing the CD4 receptor were selected. An SVG/CD4 expressing line was then established. The presence of the CD4 receptor was confirmed by immunohistochemistry, Westerm immuno-blotting and flow cytometric analysis. The CD4 receptor was shown to be functional by infection of the SVG/CD4 cell line with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Upon infection, the SVG/CD4 cells produced 20-fold higher levels of the HIV intracellular core antigen P24 than the CD4 negative parental cells and in addition formed syncytia. The use of AAV vectors should prove useful in biological investigations of human glial cells and offers promise as a means of ex vivo and in vivo gene delivery.
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PMID:Efficient gene transfer into primary and immortalized human fetal glial cells using adeno-associated virus vectors: establishment of a glial cell line with a functional CD4 receptor. 937 53

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.
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PMID:Photoinactivation of virus infectivity by hypocrellin A. 938 93

To detect and characterize parvovirus B19 infection during the course of progressive immune deficiency from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), ten subjects enrolled in the Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study were followed for 6.4 to 15 years from HIV seroconversion through extreme immune deficiency. Four to five sera or plasma samples from each subject, collected at predetermined CD4+ lymphocyte levels, were tested for immunoglobulin G (IgG) and M (IgM) B19 antibodies and DNA. All 42 samples were positive for B19 IgG antibodies, and three were weakly positive for IgM antibodies. Only one sample, collected coincident with HIV seroconversion, was unequivocally positive for B19 DNA. No persistent hematologic adverse effects of B19 infection were observed. Thus, although B19 IgG antibodies are highly prevalent among HIV-infected persons with hemophilia or related disorders, B19 viremia and its hematologic consequences were not detected, even with severe depletion of CD4+ lymphocytes. If primary B19 infection occurs after immune deficiency, however, the consequences may be more adverse.
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PMID:Parvovirus B19 quiescence during the course of human immunodeficiency virus infection in persons with hemophilia. 939 87

In a prospective study to determine the prevalence of parvovirus B19 in adult patients positive for the human immunodeficiency virus, a series of 55 consecutively presenting patients was tested for antibodies to parvovirus B19 and parvovirus B19 DNA. Specific IgG antibodies were detected in 96% of cases; specific IgM antibodies were present in 10%. Viral DNA was not detected in any of the sera analysed by polymerase chain reaction. Anemia could not be correlated with the presence of either IgG or IgM antibodies to parvovirus B19. Thus, no evidence of acute or chronic parvovirus B19 infection was found in the 55 patients. These findings suggest that active parvovirus B19 infection is uncommon in HIV-infected patients.
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PMID:Low prevalence of active parvovirus B19 infection in HIV-infected patients. 940 50

Recently it has become urgent to establish a risk control system against emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. Many of the emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases such as AIDS and viral hepatitis, are induced by viral infection via blood. The main causative agents of blood-born viral infection are hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), human T cell leukemia virus type1 (HTLV1), cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and human parvovirus B19. They play the main role in viral hospital infections. The risk of them being transmitted by the transfusion of screened blood is very low, but it is always possible that infection may occur in a window period even after extensive blood screening tests. EBV has been recognized as a less serious infectious agent than CMV. Nowadays, biotechnology has revealed the broad spectrum of EBV related diseases as chronic active EBV infection, compromised lymphoma, gastric carcinoma and other lymphoproliferative disorders. There would be some immunocompromised cases needed monitoring after transfusion/transplantation as same as CMV infection. Double infection or co-infection of EBV and CMV are shown to be occasional. The most important tasks for risk control of hospital acquired infectious diseases are to prevent second drug related AIDS and prion infection due to the transplantation of dura mata derived from patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and to prevent of needle stick infections. Therefore it is necessary to establish a network communication between clinical laboratories, institutes and public health organizations for more rapid and adequate care with rapid diagnosis by molecular analysis.
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PMID:[The blood-born viral infections]. 952 33


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