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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
India has launched a liberalization of its economy with restructuring, privatization, and increased imports in order to achieve higher economic performance. This drive also affected the pharmaceutical industry and drug distribution, but in a negative manner. In the 1980s there were 9000 drug manufacturers that together produced up to 60,000 different preparations. In 1992, only 20,000 drugs were produced. The Voluntary Health Organization of India (VHAI) has fought for 10 years for a rational policy on medicines to halt the production of worthless or outright harmful products. For instance, anabolic steroids are sold as nutritional supplements to children, and the banned clioquinol is regularly used against diarrhea despite an international boycott. In recent years unscrupulous manufacturers have sold contaminated water as glucose for infusion bags and anti-D-immunoglobulin which was contaminated with
HIV
-infected blood. In northern India, a criminal organization bought up used cannulas from hospitals and repacked them for resale as new supplies. While a new medicine policy is formulated, there is a serious shortage of life-saving drugs such as insulin and rifampicin. In the last years, prices have exploded as some products have become six times more expensive. The whole national health system has undergone cost cuts to comply with an ultimatum from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund; otherwise, sorely needed dollar loans would not be forthcoming. Funds for fighting tuberculosis and
malaria
have been trimmed, although AIDS and family planning budgets have been increased. One-fourth of the state health expenditures go to combat AIDS, since about 1 million people are infected with
HIV
. The pharmaceutical industry has also been embroiled in a patent protection wrangle with American drug exporters who claim that Retrovir or AZT (developed by Burroughs Wellcome) was pirated by the Cipla firm, whereas Cipla countered that it was ferreted out from scientific journals.
...
PMID:[India: an expensive and dangerous drug]. 130 Jun 63
PCR was used to screen EBV-positive lymphomas from endemic and sporadic Burkitt's lymphoma patients, including EBV-positive lymphomas derived from patients with
HIV infection
. Only 10% of sporadic lymphomas from either North America (1/15) or South America (2/14) were associated with the type 2 EBV strain, whereas 50% (8/16) of lymphomas from equatorial Africa and 46% (10/22) of
HIV
-associated lymphomas were positive for the type 2 strain. These data, in conjunction with previous reports, suggest that the proportions of strain types in Burkitt's lymphoma reflect the proportions of strain types in peripheral lymphocytes, and not simply the prevailing regional strain. The increased association of the type 2 strain in lymphocytes and lymphomas from
HIV
-infected individuals and from Africa may be a result of intermittent (
malaria
) or continuous (HIU) compromise of immune function in these populations.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus genotypes in AIDS-associated lymphomas are similar to those in endemic Burkitt's lymphomas. 132 81
Tumor necrosis factor is a cytokine that participates in the mediation of numerous diseases associated with inflammation, cachexia, shock, and tissue injury. Early studies of the biology of TNF delineated its hormonal actions as well as its systemic toxicity. More recent investigations have drawn attention to its paracrine actions that predominate when it is produced locally in the brain or vital organs. For instance, when compartmentalized production of TNF occurs in the central nervous system it directly mediates fever, anorexia, and altered whole-body metabolism. Since these changes are mediated within the neural network they occur independently of simultaneously sampled serum TNF levels. These paracrine actions of TNF have implications for diseases associated with production of TNF in tissues (e.g.
HIV
cerebritis, multiple sclerosis, cerebral
malaria
and cancer), because they may differ markedly from the hormone like-actions associated with systemic release. Since TNF may be beneficial in some diseases yet injurious in others, both the hormonal and paracrine actions must be precisely defined in order to formulate novel treatment strategies based on either enhancing its useful effects, or suppressing toxicity.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor in metabolism of disease: hormonal actions versus local tissue effects. 134 May 27
CTL lines specific for two different proteins derived from the human pathogens, Plasmodium falciparum (
malaria
) circumsporozoite protein and
HIV
-1 reverse transcriptase, were obtained by immunizing mice with protein-pulsed syngeneic spleen cells. The lysis of the target cells was dependent on a class I MHC molecule and the accessory molecule CD8. Immunodominant epitopic peptides were identified previously in the two proteins using murine CTL derived after immunization with recombinant virus or sporozoites, or using CTL from
HIV
-1-infected patients. These peptides were also recognized by the CTL lines obtained after protein-pulsed spleen-cell immunization. A new CTL antigenic determinant was localized in
HIV
-1 reverse transcriptase to residues 514 to 528, a sequence that, if folded as an alpha-helix, would be strongly amphipathic. The determinant was tentatively narrowed, using overlapping peptides, to a core of at least nine residues, 515 to 523. This site was also recognized by CTL obtained by the two different methods of immunization. Therefore, extracellular proteins incubated with spleen cells can be processed and presented in vivo in the same way as intracellular proteins, resulting in recognition of the same epitopes in association with the same class I MHC molecules. The potential implications for vaccine development and for the understanding of class I-restricted Ag presentation are discussed.
...
PMID:Immunization with soluble protein-pulsed spleen cells induces class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes that recognize immunodominant epitopic peptides from Plasmodium falciparum and HIV-1. 138 39
The children of 50 women positive for antibody to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and 42 children of antibody-negative mothers were examined for lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly at 3-month intervals during the 1st year of life. Lymphadenopathy was found to be significantly more frequent at 6 months (p less than 0.01), 9 months (p less than 0.001) and 12 months (p less than 0.01) in children who were subsequently shown to be infected with
HIV
-1. Hepatomegaly was seen more frequently (p less than 0.05) in the 1st year in
HIV
-1-infected children than in uninfected children. Splenomegaly was not more frequent in
HIV
-1-infected children in this area which is holoendemic for falciparum
malaria
.
...
PMID:Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly in the 1st year in children infected by HIV-1 in Zaire. 138 91
This manuscript describes the design of new vaccines based on synthetic peptides. To this end, we first analyze the structural basis of antigenic reactivity and specificity and the various types of epitopes that form the mosaics of macromolecular antigens, as well as the regulatory mechanisms involved in immune recognition. A distinction is made between sequential or continuous epitopes, and discontinuous or conformational ones, which are the majority of epitopes in globular proteins. In this context it is of particular interest to identify epitopes reacting with B cells and T cells, respectively, or with cytotoxic T cells, in association with the major histocompatibility cell-surface antigens, and the role of these interactions in protective immunity. Identification of such epitopes in proteins of viral, bacterial, or parasitic organisms led to the synthesis of peptides, which when used in conjunction with appropriate carriers and/or adjuvants induced neutralizing antibodies. Particular examples are described, including: bacterial epitopes and mainly those of toxins of diphtheria, cholera, and shigella, leading not only to neutralizing antibodies but also to protective immunity against the deleterious effects of the respective toxins; parasite epitopes, such as those leading to anti-
malaria
vaccine, based on either the sporozoite or the merozoite stage antigens; viral epitopes leading to protective immunity, with special emphasis on influenza virus where induction of CTL is crucial; and finally, synthetic peptide vaccines against
HIV
, which should lead to broad specificity protective immunity while avoiding the risks of a vaccine based on the infectious agent. The rapid recent progress in this field, as described in this review, increases the prospect of constructing successful synthetic peptide vaccines in the not too distant future.
...
PMID:Structural basis of antigenic specificity and design of new vaccines. 138 42
Reactivation of latent infection is the principal mechanism relating Toxoplasma gondii and Pneumocystis carinii to
HIV
. Less common is reactivation in Leishmania donovani, Trypanosoma cruzi, and microsporidian infections. An impaired primary immune response occurs in all these infections, and also with Cryptosporidium and Isospora belli. Association of
HIV infection
with gut parasites including Giardia lamblia and Entamoeba histolytica, and also with Trichomonas vaginalis infection is likely to be related to sexual modes of contact that favour both
HIV
and the parasite. The severity of
malaria
is not definitely associated with
HIV
, but Plasmodium falciparum infection may favour more rapid evolution of the
HIV infection
. Both
malaria
and trichomoniasis favour
HIV
transmission; the former by necessitating blood transfusion, and the latter by enhancing viral transmission during sexual contact.
...
PMID:Protozoan infections and HIV-1 infection: a review. 139 92
WHO finds that the health services and the health systems in India have improved. For example, India has made considerable improvement in expansion of health services to rural areas (7-10% expansion) and to the poor. Further, allocation to the minimum needs program, according to the state sector plan, has risen from 42.6% to 50%. In addition, infant and maternal mortality rates have fallen. Improved immunization coverage, prenatal care services, diarrhea prevention,
malaria
control, and contraceptive use have all contributed to the reduction in infant and maternal deaths. Health and welfare programs have generally institutionalized the primary health care concept of community participation. Training for health workers, policymakers, and personnel from nongovernmental organizations has expanded. Nevertheless, life expectancy has essentially not changed. Besides, WHO notes that the disease patterns have not changed. Some regions of India have disease patterns of developed countries, however. India has the highest number of
malaria
cases in southeastern Asia (almost 71%) and the second highest number of women with anemia. The number of
HIV
-positive and AIDS cases is growing. More than 374 million people are at risk of lymphatic filariasis, and Japanese encephalitis has become entrenched in India. 5% of the population are positive for hepatitis viruses. 1% have iodine deficiency disorders.
...
PMID:WHO commends India. 145 31
As part of a population-based
malaria
surveillance program in late 1990, surveillance agents took blood samples from 979 people who had had a fever within the last 2 weeks and from 4044 healthy people during regular house-to-house visits in rural northern Natal/KwaZulu, South Africa, to determine
HIV
seroprevalence and risk factors of
HIV infection
. 60 (1.2%) people were
HIV
-1 seropositive. No one had HIV-2 infection. Febrile people had a 30% higher sex-adjusted relative risk (RR) of
HIV
-1 infection than healthy individuals, but this increase was insignificant. Women were at greater risk of
HIV
-1 infection than men (1.6% vs. 0.4%; age-adjusted RR = 3.8). In fact, this risk still existed when the researchers controlled for fever (RR = 3.75) and migrancy (RR = 3.2). The fall in the RR for women from 3.8 to 3.2 when controlled for migrancy suggested an underrepresentation of migrant male workers in the study sample. 2.3% of the women in their childbearing years (15-44) were
HIV
-1 seropositive, indicating an increased likelihood of transmission of
HIV
-1 to newborns. The youngest person afflicted with
HIV
-1 was a 12-year-old female and the oldest was a 66-year-old woman. No 10-to-19-year-old males tested
HIV
-1 positive, while 1.7% of the 10-to-19-year-old females did, suggesting that the young females had sex with older men. This may have indicated teenage prostitution and sexual abuse. 2.9% of the people who changed their place of residence within the last year (migrancy) had
HIV
-1 infection. For women it was linked to a 2.4 times higher RR (age-adjusted) of
HIV
-1 infection. For men, the age-adjusted RR was even greater (7.3). Even though
HIV
-1 seroprevalence was about 45% greater in areas crossed by the main national road than it was in other areas (1.3% vs. 0.9%), the difference was not significant. Since migrants were a key source of
HIV
-1 infection, improvement in social conditions, allowing families to live together and to settle in their communities, may reduce
HIV
-1 transmission.
...
PMID:Seroprevalence of HIV infection in rural South Africa. 149 37
Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) is a highly malignant B cell tumor characterized by three types of chromosomal translocation which constitutively activate the c-myc oncogene by juxtaposing it to Ig coding sequences. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection, hyperendemic
malaria
and
HIV
-caused immunosuppression are thought to contribute to the pathogenesis of the tumor. Cell lines derived from EBV carrying and EBV negative BLs often show altered MHC class I antigen expression. The defects include a lower expression of all HLA class I antigens compared to EBV transformed normal B-blasts, and selective down-regulation of certain HLA-A and HLA-C alleles. As a consequence BL cells are often resistant to cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) mediated destruction. Alleles selective down-regulations are found only in cell lines that maintain the tumor cell phenotype while shift towards a more activated 'B-blast like' phenotype is accompanied by HLA class I up-regulation. A similar pattern of HLA class I expression can be found in a subpopulation of germinal center B cells which express a 'BL like' phenotype. Our findings suggest that the HLA class I expression of BL cells reflects the characteristics of the normal B cell precursor and is probably not the result of immune selection.
...
PMID:Cell phenotype dependent expression of MHC class I antigens in Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines. 165 15
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