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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To date, the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has been identified in over 50 children in the US, including those with associated hemophilia, high-risk environmental factors (Haitian background, parental intravenous drug abuse, or prostitution), and blood transfusions. The evaluation of an infant or young child in whom AIDS is suspected requires exclusion of congenital disorders of immune function. A specific test is not currently available, but inclusion criteria for childhood AIDS have been developed. The diseases accepted as indicative of underlying cellular
immunodeficiency
children are the same as those used in defining AIDS in adults, with the exclusion of congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the 1st month of life or cytomegalovirus infection in the 1st 6 months of life. Specific conditions that must be excluded in children are primary
immunodeficiency
diseases (e.g., DiGeorge syndrome,
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
, ataxia-telangiectasia, neutrophil function abnormality) and secondary immuno-deficiency associated with immunosuppressive therapy, lymphoreticular malignancy, or starvation. Almost all young children with AIDS have hepatosplenomegaly, interstitial pneumonitis, and poor growth. The average age of 36 US child AIDS victims studied in detail was 5 months at presentation with findings suggestive of severe
immunodeficiency
. Mucocutaneous candidiasis was present in 75% of these 36 children, and Pneumocystis carinii and cytomegalovirus were each isolated from 30% of cases. Normal T4:T8 ratios occur in about 15% of pediatric AIDS cases. Laboratory evidence of polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia generally supports the AIDS diagnosis. Recurrent infection and malnutrition are major problems in the clinical management of child AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome in childhood. 298 8
Lymphomas occurred in 3 of 16 Japanese patients with ataxia telangiectasia (AT) and
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
(
WAS
). The patients had a persistently reactivated Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection with a remarkable decrease in virus-specific cellular immunity. In these patients, the B lymphocytes were more sensitive to EBV-induced events and to cellular proto-oncogene activation than seen in the healthy counterparts. This immunologic and genetic background was considered to explain the massive lymphoproliferation in these primary
immunodeficiency
disorders.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus infection and oncogenesis in primary immunodeficiency. 303 Mar 41
This first report of a Swiss registry includes 313 patients with primary
immunodeficiency
syndromes (PIDS) who were observed between January 1975 and January 1985. Diagnosis of specific PIDS was made according to WHO criteria. The most frequent disorders were IgA deficiency (33%) and common variable
immunodeficiency
(22%), followed by selective deficiency of other immunoglobulin isotypes (9%), severe combined immunodeficiency (9%), infantile sex-linked agammaglobulinemia (7%), and
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
(6%). Frequencies of other types of PIDS varied between 0.3 and 4%. Half of the patients were in the pediatric age group. Male patients predominated (63%). In addition to respiratory and urogenital tract infections, autoimmune disorders were observed in 14 patients with IgA deficiency or common variable
immunodeficiency
. IgA deficiency was, furthermore, associated with atopic and neurological disorders. A comparison with other national registries revealed some differences: the frequency of severe combined immunodeficiency was high (incidence, 24.3 cases per 10(6) live births), and that of ataxia teleangiectasia was particularly low (1.4 per 10(6) live births) in Switzerland. Frequencies of the three major PIDS groups of (i) predominantly antibody defects, (ii) predominantly cell-mediated defects, and (iii) PIDS associated with other major defects agreed with those reported in the other European studies.
...
PMID:Primary immunodeficiencies in Switzerland: first report of the national registry in adults and children. 306 52
Twenty-two cases out of a total of 683 patients (3.2%) with primary
immunodeficiency
diseases registered in the All-Japan
Immunodeficiency
Registry were reported to have developed malignant diseases. In the childhood patients with ataxia-telangiectasia the incidence of death due to malignancy was approximately 625 times higher than that of the normal Japanese childhood population. The incidence of lymphoproliferative disorders, such as malignant lymphoma, in Chediak-Higashi syndrome and the incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma and various carcinomas in ataxia-telangiectasia were both high, 37.5% and 13.7%, respectively. Only one case out of 45 with
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
was reported to have malignant lymphoma. The data obtained were compared with international statistics reported by the
Immunodeficiency
Cancer Registry.
...
PMID:Primary immunodeficiency diseases and malignancy in Japan. 308 18
The isolation of a novel arachidonic acid (Aa) metabolite from the supernatant of unstimulated human cord blood mononuclear leucocytes is reported. The metabolite, arbitrarily named 'compound 4' is neither a known lipoxygenase nor a cyclooxygenase product. 'Compound 4' was added to PHA-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear leucocytes (PBML) from healthy blood donors, from mothers at term and from patients with
immunodeficiency
. 'Compound 4' induced an increase in the 3H-TdR incorporation by the maternal PBML and by the PBML from patients with various immunodeficiencies such as
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
and common variable
immunodeficiency
, whereas it had no effect on the proliferation of PBML from blood donors.
...
PMID:A novel arachidonic acid metabolite with stimulatory effect on PHA-induced mitogenesis of lymphocytes. 310 19
Biosynthesis was examined of sialophorin (formerly called gpL115) which is altered in the inherited
immunodeficiency
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
. Sialophorin is greater than 50% carbohydrate, primarily O-linked units of sialic acid, galactose, and galactosamine. Pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine and chase incubation established that sialophorin is synthesized in CEM lymphoblastoid cells as an Mr 62,000 precursor which is converted within 45 min to mature glycosylated sialophorin, a long-lived molecule. Experiments with tunicamycin and endoglycosidase H demonstrated that sialophorin contains N-linked carbohydrate (approximately two units per molecule) and is therefore an N,O-glycoprotein. Pulse-labeling of tunicamycin-treated CEM cells together with immunoprecipitation provided the means to isolate the [35S]-methionine-labeled polypeptide core of sialophorin and determine its molecular weight (58,000). This datum allowed us to express the previously established composition on a "per molecule" basis and determine that sialophorin molecules contain approximately 520 amino acid residues and greater than or equal to 100 O-linked carbohydrate units. A recent study showed that various blood cells express sialophorin and that there are two molecular forms: lymphocyte/monocyte sialophorin and platelet/neutrophil sialophorin. Biosynthesis of the two forms was compared by using sialophorin of CEM cells and sialophorin of MOLT-4 cells (another lymphoblastoid line) as models for lymphocyte/monocyte sialophorin and platelet/neutrophil sialophorin, respectively. The time course of biosynthesis and the content of N units were found to be identical for the two sialophorin species. [35S]Methionine-labeled polypeptide cores of CEM sialophorin and MOLT sialophorin were isolated and compared by electrophoresis, isoelectrofocusing, and a newly developed peptide mapping technique.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Biosynthesis of human sialophorins and analysis of the polypeptide core. 311 91
We have selected 11 patients with primary
immunodeficiency
disorders predominantly affecting T lymphocyte function (four with ataxia-telangiectasia (AT), four with common variable
immunodeficiency
(CVI) and one each with
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
, hyper-IgE syndrome and combined
immunodeficiency
) with defective gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) production in vitro. Induction with phytohaemagglutinin showed low interleukin 2 (IL-2) production concomitant with reduced IFN-gamma titres. However the addition of 10 U/ml of rIL-2 to cultures stimulated with staphylococcal enterotoxin B or galactose oxidase failed to restore IFN-gamma production in defective cases. IFN-gamma was titrated by both bioassay and immunoradiometric assay, ruling out the possible release of inactive or altered IFN-gamma molecules. Normal levels of IFN-gamma were found in patients of patients with AT, as well as in two AT and two CVI cases, demonstrating heterogeneity of defects within these syndromes. Soluble inhibitors or cellular suppression of IFN-gamma were not observed in mixing experiments. The possibility that defective interaction between accessory cells and T lymphocytes might account for the poor response to the inducing agents was ruled out as no IFN-gamma was produced using a calcium ionophore--which bypasses this step--in seven patients with absolute IFN-gamma deficiency.
...
PMID:Evidence that defective gamma interferon production in patients with primary immunodeficiencies is due to intrinsic incompetence of lymphocytes. 313 28
The
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
(
WAS
) is an X-linked recessive disease characterized by
immunodeficiency
and severe thrombocytopenia in affected males, but no demonstrable clinical abnormalities in carrier females. Through analysis of the methylation patterns of X-linked genes that display restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), we studied the pattern of X-chromosome inactivation in various cell populations from female relatives of patients with
WAS
. The peripheral blood T cells, granulocytes, and B cells of eight obligate
WAS
carriers were found to display specific patterns of X-chromosome inactivation clearly different from these of normal controls. Thus, carriers of
WAS
could be accurately identified using this analysis.
...
PMID:Carrier detection in the Wiskott Aldrich syndrome. 326 54
The peripheral blood leukocytes of 6 children with clinical data suggestive of primary cellular immunodeficiencies were studied in an attempt to define the cellular basis of these disorders. The phenotype and function of T and B cells were investigated. According to the clinical and laboratory features, the patients were classified as one case of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), two of ataxia-telangiectasia (AT), one of
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
(
WAS
), one of DiGeorge syndrome (DSG), and one of cellular
immunodeficiency
(CID). The laboratory investigations together with the clinical manifestations permitted a diagnosis of primary
immunodeficiency
diseases.
...
PMID:Primary immunodeficiency diseases: a presentation of 6 cases. 326 46
Primary lymphoma of the central nervous system (CNS), including reticulum cell sarcoma, microglioma, and histiocytic lymphoma, represents less than 1% of all primary brain tumors. In the last 10 years, this tumor has tripled in frequency in the nonimmunosuppressed population. By 1991, the tumor will be the most common neurological neoplasm by virtue of the increase in sporadic occurrence and in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) population. Three percent of AIDS patients will develop this tumor either prior to AIDS diagnosis or during their subsequent course. In addition to acquired immunosuppression, patients with inherited disorders (such as
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
, severe combined immunodeficiency, and X-linked
immunodeficiency
) and other acquired disorders of the immune system are predisposed to the development of CNS lymphoma. Immunological studies have suggested a role for Epstein-Barr virus in the production of this tumor. Although subtypes exist, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the CNS most commonly consists of histiocytic cells or large immunoblastic cells bearing B cell surface markers in close proximity to the lateral and third ventricles. Sixty percent of these deposits are multiple, and subarachnoid invasion is seen in one-quarter of patients. Vitreous involvement of the eye occurring prior to and during the course of CNS lymphoma has been noted in up to 25% of patients. The involvement of multiple areas of the neuraxis, the eye, and multiple intracranial sites often occurs in the absence of obvious systemic lymphoma. Therapeutic trials of brain radiation therapy are associated with median survivals of less than 1 year. Uniform complete responses of intracranial deposits are recorded following chemotherapy with high-dose intravenous methotrexate, CHOP (cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunomycin/doxorubicin, Oncovin (vincristine), and prednisone), high-dose cytosine arabinoside, and intra-arterial methotrexate with barrier modification.
...
PMID:Primary central nervous system lymphoma. 328 32
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