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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This is the first report of aerosol interleukin 2 (IL-2) liposome administration to individuals with immune deficiency. Parenteral IL-2 therapy has shown beneficial effects in some patients with cancer, common variable
immunodeficiency
(CVID), and human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) but is problematic because of side effects including fever and
malaise
as well as local swelling (delayed type hypersensitivity like reaction) after each subcutaneous IL-2 injection. Provision of an IL-2:human albumin liposome formulation via the aerosol route had few side effects in a recent clinical trial in cancer patients. Details of good manufacturing practice (GMP) synthesis and analysis of IL-2 liposomes (N= 6 lots) made without albumin carrier protein and placebo liposomes (three lots) are presented. After centrifugation, IL-2 was closely associated with the liposome pellet (99%). Mean diameter of liposomes was 1.1 microm. Patient acceptance, safety, toxicity, and immune effects of IL-2 liposomes were studied in individuals with primary immune deficiency (N = 15) and subsequently, a larger cohort of patients with hepatitis C. Experience in the immune deficient patients is the subject of this report. Placebo liposomes (12 weeks) and IL-2 liposomes (12 weeks) were provided using a nebulizer. Aerosol placebo liposomes and IL-2 liposomes were well tolerated. No changes in chest X-ray or pulmonary function were seen. Since biologic activity of aerosol IL-2 liposomes has been seen in viral disease (hepatitis C), additional studies of aerosol IL-2 liposomes in individuals with hepatitis C and HIV are planned.
...
PMID:Interleukin-2 liposomes for primary immune deficiency using the aerosol route. 1181 36
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most prevalent of the primary immunodeficiencies, and is characterised by low IgG and IgA, and sometimes IgM. There is some evidence of genetic susceptibility, with 20% of patients having a dominantly inherited disorder with variable expression. It is a heterogeneous disorder with protean manifestations, and as a result diagnosis is often delayed until the second or third decade, with resultant irreversible organ damage, in particular bronchiectasis. Effective treatment is available with regular 3-4-weekly infusions of immunoglobulin. The mechanism of the
immunodeficiency
has not yet been fully elucidated. The majority of patients present with recurrent sinopulmonary infection, however, this is a multisystem disorder and thus presents to physicians in diverse specialties including dermatology. Other clinical features of the disorder include gastrointestinal problems, granulomatous inflammation, cutaneous features, unusual presentations of enteroviral and mycoplasma infection, an increased incidence of autoimmunity, and a predisposition to lymphoma and stomach cancer. Therefore a knowledge of the disorder and appropriate suspicion by all clinicians of the possibility of such rare problems and a consequent low threshold for performing relevant investigations is imperative in allowing early recognition and instituting effective treatment. We describe a case of CVID identified when the patient developed widespread skin infection, fever and
malaise
. This case is an important example of a possible presentation of CVID within the dermatology clinic and demonstrates that maintaining a high level of clinical suspicion is essential for the diagnosis of the rare primary immunodeficiencies.
...
PMID:A case of common variable immunodeficiency presenting with furunculosis. 1217 14
From March 1994 to January 2001, 15 courses of granulocyte transfusion (GTX) were administered to 13 neutropenic patients (6 male and 7 female patients; median age 7 years, range 3 months to 14 years) affected by: acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in 6 cases, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in 5, very severe aplastic anemia in 1, and familial erythrophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FEL) in 1. Infections were classified as microbiologically defined and clinically defined infections in 8 and 7 episodes, respectively. Before the GTX transfusions, broad-spectrum antibacterial and antifungal therapy had been administered for a median of 12 (range 5-28) and 8 days (range 2-50), respectively, with no improvement. G-CSF was administered prior to GTX in 9 episodes of infection, with a median of 9 days of treatment (range 4-30). Leukapheresis was obtained from 15 related donors (father, 10; mother, 3; sister, 1; aunt, 1) after s.c. stimulation with G-CSF, 300 micro g daily, starting from day -3 (where day 0 was the day of the first granulocyte collection) and continuing throughout the period of GTX treatment. The donors' median white blood cell (WBC) count at leukapheresis was 31.6 x 10(9)/l (range 12-56), and the median yield was 31.39 x 10(9) WBC (range 2.96-64.73 x 10(9)), with a proportion of PMN of 90-95%. Overall, 70 GTX were administered, with a median of 4 GTX per episode of infection (range 2-11). The combination of GTX with antimicrobial therapy led to complete or partial recovery in 6 and in 3 of 15 episodes (60%), respectively. Priming of the donor with G-CSF was well tolerated, the most common side-effects being bone pain,
malaise
and paresthesia. All donors are alive and well after a median of 4.5 years (range 0.8-7.7) from donation. We conclude that GTX is potentially useful when the severity of the infection and the host's
immunodeficiency
make any other antimicrobial treatment ineffectual. Long-term safety data on the stimulation of donors with G-CSF have been reassuring to date. Further controlled studies are needed to assess the exact role of GTX in the outcome of neutropenic patients with severe infection and any criteria for patient selection and the timing of GTX administration.
...
PMID:Granulocyte transfusions from G-CSF-stimulated donors for the treatment of severe infections in neutropenic pediatric patients with onco-hematological diseases. 1256 Sep 38
Immune abnormalities have been found in many patients receiving anti-epileptic drugs. However, the effects of carbamazepine are still conflicting. We report the case of a 31-year-old woman who began carbamazepine treatment because of idiopathic epilepsy of adulthood. After three years of treatment she developed arthralgias and
malaise
. Complete immunologic evaluation showed a total absence of immunoglobulin M with decreased levels of immunoglobulin A, positive antinuclear antibodies and monoclonal paraproteinemia type IgG-kappa. The possibility of B cell lymphoma or myeloma was ruled out. Skin testing was negative. Bone marrow examination was normal. After carbamazepine discontinuation, levels of IgA and IgM increased until reaching normal values over 3 years. The monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance also disappeared over this period. During this period of
immunodeficiency
, the patient did not complain of any infectious complications.
...
PMID:Carbamazepine induced transient monoclonal gammopathy and immunodeficiency. 1508 96
Ill
-health contributes to impoverishment, a process brought into sharper focus by the impact of the human
immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) epidemic. This paper reviews studies that have measured the economic costs and consequences of illness for households, focusing on malaria, tuberculosis (TB), and HIV/AIDS. It finds that in resource-poor settings illness imposed high and regressive cost burdens on patients and their families. Direct and indirect costs of illness for malaria were less than 10% of the household income, but still significant when combined with the costs of other illnesses. The costs of TB and HIV/AIDS were catastrophic for households (more than 10% of the income). Health service weaknesses in many countries, including low coverage, user charges, and poor quality of care, contributed to high costs. Poor households in developing countries with a member with TB or HIV/AIDS struggled to cope, highlighting the urgent need for a substantial increase in health sector investment to expand access to preventive and curative health services. Government and non-governmental interventions should also be broadened to encompass measures that reduce the substantial indirect costs associated with diseases such as malaria, TB, and HIV/AIDS.
...
PMID:The economic burden of illness for households in developing countries: a review of studies focusing on malaria, tuberculosis, and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 1533 31
Nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) have been associated with functional and structural mitochondrial abnormalities, leading to several adverse events, such as increased serum lactic acid levels and lactic acidosis. Mild-to-moderate, asymptomatic hyperlactataemia has been frequently reported in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients treated with NRTIs, with an estimated prevalence between 15% and 35%. On the contrary, symptomatic, severe hyperlactataemia and lactic acidosis are less common, with an incidence ranging from 1.7 to 25.2 cases per 1000 person-years of antiretroviral treatment, and are associated with a remarkable mortality rate, which varies from 30% to 60% in different studies. The clinical presentation of lactic acid syndrome is non-specific and includes asthenia,
malaise
, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, weight loss, tachypnoea, dyspnoea, liver steatosis and increased transaminase levels, and risk factors include previous or concurrent therapy with stavudine or didanosine. Management of symptomatic lactic acid alterations involves NRTI-therapy interruption and supportive care, while natural history of hyperlactataemia is still unknown, and it is uncertain whether asymptomatic patients with increased lactate concentrations are at increased risk of developing lactic acidosis.
...
PMID:Hyperlactataemia and lactic acidosis in HIV-infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy. 1568 Oct 97
A 15-year-old, unmarried female presented to our dermatology department for an intensely pruritic skin rash that had appeared abruptly 3 days earlier. She had a remarkable medical history for a case of allergic rhinitis and several attacks of asthma in her early childhood. The condition waxed and waned initially but had improved in recent years. Physical examination revealed several erythematous plaques, papules studded with scattered pustules having diameters less than 0.3 mm. Conspicuous scratch marks had caused erythematous wheal-like indurations also studded with pustules in a linear distribution across the waist, forearms (Fig. 1), and back (Fig. 2). Discrete papulopustules were present on the face, nape and neck. The patient was otherwise healthy. There were no other symptoms such as fever,
malaise
, weakness, or lymphadenopathy Laboratory results were normal for hepatic and renal functions, serum electrolytes, glucose, protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (8 mm/h), and C-reactive protein (0.355 mg/l). A human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) antibody screen test was negative. Serum was positive for herpes simplex virus (HSV)-1 and HSV-2 IgG (in low titers), but negative for HSV-1 and HSV-2 IgM. White blood cell count revealed leukocytosis (11.2 x 10(3)/l), with a differential count of 68% neutrophils, 27% lymphocytes, and 8% eosinophils. Serum IgA, IgG, and IgM were within normal limits, but the IgE level was elevated (677 mg/dl). Cultures from peripheral blood and pustules were negative. A Tzank smear performed on the pustules showed no multinucleated giant cells. Fungal testing of skin scrapings from the initial lesion site gave negative results. Routine stool tests, including common pathogen and parasite screens, were negative, and urinalysis results were unremarkable. A biopsy specimen obtained from a skin pustule showed subcorneal eosinophilic and neutrophilic pustules in the follicular infundibulum with marked spongiosis of the follicular epithelium. (Fig. 3). There was a moderately dense superficial and deep perivascular mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate comprising eosinophils, neutrophils and lymphocytes. Migration of eosinophils and neutrophils through the vessel wall with variable luminal intramural fibrin deposition, histologically indicative of vasculopathy, was seen. There was concomitant slight perivascular dermal necrosis. (Fig. 4). Based on the clinical presentation and light microscopic findings on biopsy, a diagnosis of eosinophilic pustular folliculitis with pathergy was made. Systemic prednisolone 30 mg in divided doses was given. After 1 week of systemic corticosteroid therapy, the patient's condition was significantly improved and the patient was subsequently discharged. Two months later she had a relapse, upon which corticosteroid therapy was commenced leading to lesional resolution. The foci of eosinophilic folliculitis healed with areas of hyperpigmentation with variable scarring.
...
PMID:Pathergy in atypical eosinophilic pustular folliculitis. 1580 26
Although the overall incidence of tuberculosis has been declining in the United States, it remains an important public health concern, particularly among immigrants, homeless persons, and persons infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus. Patients who present with symptoms of active tuberculosis (e.g., cough, weight loss, or
malaise
with known exposure to the disease) should be evaluated. Three induced sputum samples for acid-fast bacillus smear and culture should be obtained from patients with findings of tuberculosis or suspicion for active disease. If the patient has manifestations of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, smears and cultures should be obtained from these sites. Most patients with active tuberculosis should be treated initially with isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol for eight weeks, followed by 18 weeks of treatment with isoniazid and rifampin if needed. Repeat cultures should be performed after the initial eight-week treatment.
...
PMID:Management of active tuberculosis. 1688 21
A 54-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of intermittent high fever, general
malaise
, cough and body weight loss after he had been examined and treated at the former hospital for 3 years without a definitive diagnosis and effective therapy. Bacterial examination on admission revealed Streptococcus pyogenes in peripheral blood, bone marrow aspirates and pleural effusion. Furthermore, Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) was detected in sputum, gastric juice, bone marrow liquid, pleural effusion by acid-fast bacillus culture or polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Biopsy of the neck lymph node showed multiple granulomas and the presence of acid-fast bacilli. Administration of ABPC/SBT and later CLDM resulted in disappearance of Streptococcus pyrogenes after 2 weeks. We suspected of generalized
immunodeficiency
that might underlie the severe bacteremia/osteomyelitis and disseminated MAC infection. We tested interferon (IFN)-gamma production of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of the patient after phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulation and found that these cells produced no or undetectable levels of IFN-gamma in the presence of autologous plasma while produced almost normal levels of IFN-gamma in the presence of healthy donor's plasma. Since this neutralizing activity was co-purified in the IgG fraction, the immunodeficient state of the patient seemed to be caused by autoantibody to IFN-gamma. As far as we know, this is the first report of a Japanese case of disseminated MAC infection presumably due to autoantibody to IFN-gamma.
...
PMID:Disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex infection in a patient with autoantibody to interferon-gamma. 1760 41
Herpes zoster is mainly a disease of the elderly. Its occurrence in younger age should be viewed with suspicion. A 9-year-old boy presented with herpes zoster ophthalmicus. He had a history of abdominal surgery one and half years back during which he had received blood transfusion. A year following the surgery he developed general
malaise
and fever with progressive weight loss. He was treated by local doctors. Subsequently he developed eruptions of blisters around right eye for a duration of 8 days, with which he presented to the department of ophthalmology, Pt JNM Medical College, Raipur. On investigations he was found to have infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus. Systemic acyclovir along with antiretroviral treatment was started, to which he showed favourable response.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection in a child presenting as herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 1782 93
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