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)

Toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis is an important opportunistic retinal infection in immunodeficiency and elderly patients. The diagnosis of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis is based primarily on characteristic ocular findings, with supportive serological evidence. It may present as diffuse necrotizing retinitis instead of a focal lesion. We report the original case of a 74-year-old woman who presented with blurred vision in her left eye lasting 3 months. In her medical history, the patient described a tuberculous infection evolving for some months, as well as agranulocytosis treated with Rifadine. Fundus examination revealed diffuse necrotizing retinitis, mainly at the nasal quadrant, with marked vitreitis in the left eye. Clinical recognition of atypical presentations is critical for timely antiparasitic drug therapy. This case initially was misdiagnosed as acute retinal necrosis syndrome. The correct diagnosis was confirmed by response to polymerase chain reaction studies of an intraocular specimen and histopathological analysis. The extensive necrotizing retinitis was nonhemorrhagic but associated with retinal detachment. Significant visual loss accompanied the infection. Toxoplasmosis should be considered as a cause of diffuse necrotizing retinitis in elderly and immunosuppressive patients. Older patients may be more susceptible to severe ocular Toxoplasma infections because of age-related decline in cell-mediated immunity and chronic underlying diseases.
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PMID:[Toxoplasma gondii and necrotizing retinitis: a case report]. 1458 27

Toxoplasma gondii is an intracellular parasite with a significant impact on human health, especially in cases where individuals are immunocompromised (e.g., due to human immunodeficiency virus/AIDS). In Europe and North America, only a few clonal genotypes appear to be responsible for the vast majority of Toxoplasma infections, and these clonotypes have been intensely studied to identify strain-specific phenotypes that may play a role in the manifestation of more-severe disease. To identify and genetically map strain-specific differences in gene expression, we have carried out expression quantitative trait locus analysis on Toxoplasma gene expression phenotypes by using spotted cDNA microarrays. This led to the identification of 16 Toxoplasma genes that had significant and mappable strain-specific variation in hybridization intensity. While the analysis should identify both cis- and trans-mapping hybridization profiles, we identified only loci with strain-specific hybridization differences that are most likely due to differences in the locus itself (i.e., cis mapping). Interestingly, a larger number of these cis-mapping genes than would be expected by chance encode either confirmed or predicted secreted proteins, many of which are known to localize to the specialized secretory organelles characteristic of members of the phylum Apicomplexa. For six of the cis-mapping loci, we determined if the strain-specific hybridization differences were due to true transcriptional differences or rather to strain-specific differences in hybridization efficiency because of extreme polymorphism and/or deletion, and we found examples of both scenarios.
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PMID:Expression quantitative trait locus mapping of toxoplasma genes reveals multiple mechanisms for strain-specific differences in gene expression. 1855 83