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)

Septic arthritis is rare in haemophiliacs. Four new cases who were also HIV positive are reported. In three, the knee was involved, and in the fourth the elbow. The organism was streptococcus pneumoniae and staphylococcus aureus in one patient each, and salmonella in two. Although all the patients were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive at the time of diagnosis, only two patients developed autoimmune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) after their septic arthritis. These two died later due to AIDS complications. Treatment was conservative in all cases with antibiotic therapy and prompt rehabilitation. The results were fair in two and good in two. Therefore nonoperative management is advocated before surgical drainage is considered. It seems likely that a positive HIV status is related to the appearance of septic arthritis in haemophiliacs.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis in HIV positive haemophiliacs. Four cases and a literature review. 142 49

The article includes a historical review of therapeutic procedures. Two patients with suppurative arthritis are described, one newborn child with delayed diagnosis resulting in necrosis of the femoral head and luxation. This child was in very good health all the time with no signs reflecting the severity of the infection; a fact which explains the failure to diagnose the condition. Immunodeficiency during the first year of life is probably responsible for the subdued clinical findings. Another patient, a 14 year-old boy, had a typical septic coxitis, which was treated early with arthrotomy and antibiotics with good result. Penicillinase-producing staphylococcus aureus was the causative organism in both patients. Osteomyelitis in the metaphysis was also present in the first patient. The most important factors affecting prognosis seem to be delayed diagnosis and arthrotomy. Associated osteomyelitis and penicillinase-producing staphylococcus aureus are also factors having an adverse influence on prognosis. The diagnostic aspects of transient synovitis and the pathogenetic correlation between this and Perthes' disease are discussed. In this field, ultrasonography and bone scintigraphy are essential for planning the strategy of therapy. The high risk of femoral head destruction is obvious.
...
PMID:[Coxitis in children]. 152 30

Three children with suppurative arthritis and osteomyelitis are described to emphasise that delayed or incorrect diagnosis may lead to serious cardiopulmonary complications. In two patients, bilateral bronchopneumonia developed with pneumatocoeles, pneumothorax and empyema. The other had cardiac failure from septic pericarditis. In one case, disarticulation of the knee was needed as a life-saving measure, and the other leg developed an infected pseudarthrosis of the tibia. The causative organism in each case was staphylococcus aureus and no evidence of immunodeficiency was demonstrated.
...
PMID:Complications of suppurative arthritis and osteomyelitis in children. 174 34

Eight cases of mother-to-child transmission of HIV-2 were documented by ELISA and Western blot in Gambia between January 1988-September 1989 from a hospital-based screening of 205 malnourished children, 864 subjects in a malaria study, 34 patients with probable immunodeficiency and 24 children of 17 HIV-2 seropositive mothers. AIDS was diagnosed by WHO clinical definition. Diagnosis of HIV-2 was made if sera were positive by ELISA and Western blot (LAV Blot2, Diagnostics Pasteur, Marnes-La-Coquette, France) and negative by Wellcozyme I competitive ELISA to HIV-a (Wellcome Diagnostics, Dartford, UK). The children ranged in age from 17 months-5 years, and in ponderal index from 50-90%. 6 had CD4 percentages or counts below the normal range. 7 of the 8 could only have been infected pre- or perinatally, while 1 had been transfused from her mother. The clinical features included 5 with diarrhea 1 month; 3 with Cryptosporidium, 3 with Candida, a pneumonia, an interstitial pneumonia by x-ray, a streptococcus abscess, a staphylococcus abscess, 1 infant with failure to thrive and 1 4-year old who was asymptomatic. This group of patients was more severely affected than a series reported from Guinea Bissau: their mothers also had advanced AIDS in comparison to asymptomatic mothers in the other series. While mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1 occurs in approximately 33% of children of HIV-1 seropositive mothers, these data cannot estimate the actual rate of transmission of HIV-2.
...
PMID:AIDS following mother-to-child transmission of HIV-2. 197 26

Small doses of long-term injection of herbicide linuron causes the appearance of secondary immunodeficiency. It is manifested in histological and ultrastructural determination of thymus, severe suppression of immunological indices. Epithelial nurse-cells damage takes place in thymus, the contacts between epithelial cells are destroyed, the reforming of microvessels (their endothelium) occurs which causes the deterioration of vessels penetration and the growth of connective tissue. Against this background a more rapid development of experimental staphylococcus abscesses is observed in animals, the reparation phase being absent.
...
PMID:[An immunological and morphological study of focal staphylococcal infection against a background of long-term exposure to the herbicide linuron]. 208 8

This study investigates apoptosis as a mechanism for CD4+ T-cell depletion in human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection. Although several recent studies have shown that T cells of HIV-infected individuals show enhanced susceptibility to cell death by apoptosis, the mechanisms responsible for apoptosis are largely unknown. By using a flow cytometric technique and by morphology, we have quantitated the percentage of cells undergoing apoptosis in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from HIV-seronegative donors and from HIV-infected asymptomatic patients. The PBMCs were cultured without any stimulus or with staphylococcus enterotoxin B, anti-T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha beta monoclonal antibody WT-31, or phytohemagglutinin for periods up to 6 days. In addition, we sought to determine whether cross-linking of CD4 followed by various modes of TCR stimulation in vitro could induce apoptosis in normal PBMCs. Here we show that (1) patient PMBCs undergo marked spontaneous apoptosis; (2) stimulation of T cells of patients as well as normal donors results in increased apoptosis; and (3) cross-linking of CD4 molecules is sufficient to induce apoptosis in CD4+ T cells if cross-linking is performed in unfractioned PBMCs, but not if CD4 molecules are cross-linked in purified T-cell preparations. These observations strongly suggest that accelerated cell death through apoptosis plays an important role in the pathogenesis of HIV-1 infection. At the same time, our observations implicate cross-linking of CD4 in vivo as a major contributor to this mechanism of accelerated cell death in HIV infection.
...
PMID:Accelerated apoptosis in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from human immunodeficiency virus type-1 infected patients and in CD4 cross-linked PBMCs from normal individuals. 790 37

The authors describe three patients in whom septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint (SCJ) occurred, drug addiction and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection representing the predisposing conditions. Infectious arthritis is well known in intravenous drug users, but it is rare in HIV positive patients, who are prone to bacterial infections from usual or unusual microorganisms. In one case, staphylococcus aureus methicillin sensitive was responsible for septic arthritis. In another case, SCJ infection was associated with pneumonitis.
...
PMID:Isolated sternoclavicular joint arthritis in heroin addicts and/or HIV positive patients: three cases. 825 48

80 measurements of the airway resistance of 20 patients did not yield any significant differences with or without using a bacterial filter (Pall PF 30) (p = 0.1213). Likewise, lung function tests conducted in 61 further patients did not reveal any relevant changes caused by introducing the filter, in respect of the lung function parameters VKin, FEV1, PEF, FEF25, FEF50, FEF75 and TLCO. In these studies the flow receptors were examined for contamination by bacteria. The introduction of the bacterial filter reduced the total count of identified germs from 108, 615 to 307, i.e. by 99.7 per cent, the greatest contamination being found in those parts that were close to the patient (57.6% with filter, 97.1% without filter). Germs of the resident flora of the mouth and pharynx were identified, and occasionally also potential infectious agents such as staphylococcus aureus and streptococcus pneumoniae. The use of a filter system results in a marked decrease in the exposition to germs in lung function tests, without exercising any adverse effect on the measurement data (cross-contamination risk: 0.00078%). This is also achieved--albeit to a lesser extent--by changing those parts of the flow receptor that are close to the patient (cross-contamination risk: 0.0841%). Hence, the use of a filter system appears particularly meaningful in patients with considerable immunodeficiency (advanced stages of HIV infection).
...
PMID:[Effect of a filter system on measurement data and bacterial contamination in lung function studies]. 830 22

A 29-year-old female intravenous drug abuser infected with the human immunodeficiency virus suffered recurrent, bilateral corneal infections over an 11-month period. Multiple infectious organisms were responsible, including capnocytophaga species, Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative staphylococcus, and a-streptococcus. One eye was eviscerated because of corneal perforation and loss of vision; the second eye has maintained good vision. Predisposing factors usually associated with corneal infections were absent. Treatment was complicated by extremely poor patient compliance, ongoing intravenous drug abuse, and concurrent multiple extraocular medical problems.
...
PMID:Recurrent corneal infections in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 850 Mar 41

Certain individuals with elevated levels of macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)1 alpha, MIP1 beta and RANTES expression appear to be resistant to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. In this work, we demonstrate that chemokines production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) are homeostatic parameters varying from one individual to another, and we define optimized experimental conditions to reproducibly assess these parameters. We also studied alpha- and gamma-interferons (IFN alpha and IFN gamma, respectively) which have been implicated in the pathogenesis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The kinetics of production of all these cytokines by fresh PBMCs were determined upon stimulation with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), staphylococcus enterotoxin b (SEB) and purified protein derivative (PPD). RANTES and MIP1 alpha are produced early in response to activation, followed by MIP1 beta, (alpha-interferon, gamma-interferon, alpha IFN, gamma-IFN alpha and IFN alpha and gamma. These results suggest that using our methodology, chemokines levels can be reliably determined, permitting the performance of accurate genetic studies using PBMCs from various cohorts (siblings or AIDS related cohorts).
...
PMID:Homeostasis of chemokines, interferon production and lymphocyte subsets: implications for AIDS pathogenesis. 924 20


1 2 3 Next >>