Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024312 (
lymphopenia
)
4,859
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Early hematologic changes were studied over a 14 day period in three groups of six rhesus macaques intravenously infected with pathogenic and nonpathogenic isolates of SIVmac. Abnormalities in blood included a mild blood loss anemia, sporadic
lymphopenia
, and variable CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocyte numbers. Prominent bone marrow findings in macaques inoculated with pathogenic uncloned SIVmac and molecularly cloned pathogenic SIVmac-239 were hypercellularity, myeloid and megakaryocytic hyperplasia, and lymphoid aggregates. Infrequent mild morphologic abnormalities were present in macaques infected with a nonpathogenic molecular clone, SIVmac-1A11.
J Med
Primatol
PMID:Early hematologic changes in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) infected with pathogenic and nonpathogenic isolates of SIVmac. 810 92
Following exposure of the rectal or vaginal mucosa to cell-free SIVsmmPBj14, four male and two female pig-tailed macaques developed a characteristic acute disease, including mucoid diarrhea,
lymphopenia
, and anorexia. Two macaques infected by the rectal route died within 14 days, and one female died of an AIDS-like disease at five months after inoculation. The three other animals have survived more than nine months, but all are exhibiting lymphadenopathy, thrombocytopenia, and progressive declines in percentages and numbers of CD4+ lymphocytes.
J Med
Primatol
1995 May
PMID:AIDS-like disease following mucosal infection of pig-tailed macaques with SIVsmmPBj14. 875 Oct 48
Induced immunosuppression is required for a number of studies using rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). This report describes the clinical outcome and safety of a dose-finding experiment that determined doses of cyclophosphamide and prednisone that could be used to induce a state of immunosuppression in rhesus monkeys. After determining the optimum dose of immunosuppressive agents, the protocol was then used on animals participating in infectious disease and gene therapy studies. Splenectomy was performed in some animals to increase the severity of immunosuppression. The onset, duration, and severity of
lymphopenia
and leukopenia were consistent in all animals. In most animals, physical examination findings and clinical serum chemistry profiles demonstrated only transient abnormalities. With proper clinical monitoring, combination treatment with cyclophosphamide and prednisone is an effective and safe method for inducing immunosuppression in rhesus monkeys.
J Med
Primatol
1999 Dec
PMID:Clinical outcome of a protocol to produce immunosuppression in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta): application to infectious disease and gene therapy studies. 1073 7
Primary infection of rhesus macaques with pathogenic strains of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) leads to rapid and dynamic changes in both viral load and T cell counts in the peripheral blood. We have performed a sequential analysis of peripheral blood CD4 and CD8 T cells in five macaques during the 8 weeks following SIVmac251 infection. We observed a transient
lymphopenia
of both CD4 and CD8 T cells during the first 2 weeks, followed by a rebound. The primary phase of infection was associated with changes in the T cells expressing CD25, CD69, or HLA-DR and with a priming of the peripheral blood CD4 and CD8 T cells for a process of apoptosis in vitro that was enhanced by CD95 (Fas) ligation, and was detected in two macaques as early as 7 days after infection. Despite the small numbers of animals studied, the importance of the early transient CD4 and CD8 T
lymphopenia
was positively correlated with the viral load. No correlation was found, however, between the level of activation markers expressed or of priming for apoptosis in peripheral blood T cells and the viral load. Our findings suggest the possibility that the early activation and priming for apoptosis of CD4 and CD8 T cells may involve indirect, host-related, mechanisms, or alternatively, that the T cells that remain in the peripheral blood during primary infection do not adequately reflect the viral-mediated changes in T cell activation and death that may occur in the lymphoid organs throughout the body.
J Med
Primatol
2000 Aug
PMID:Early changes in peripheral blood T cells during primary infection of rhesus macaques with a pathogenic SIV. 1108 74