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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Evidence is presented here that
tumor necrosis factor
/cachectin (TNF), is of crucial importance in the pathogenesis of cerebral
malaria
. First, the central lesion of CM, hemorrhagic necrosis of cerebral vessels, corresponds to lesions observed during other pathological conditions associated with high serum TNF levels, such as endotoxemic shock or administration of TNF. Second, in both mouse and human, there is a close correlation between high serum TNF levels and CM. At least in mouse, high TNF levels and CM depend upon T lymphocytes of the CD4+ phenotype. Third, passive immunization against mouse TNF significantly prolongs the survival of P. berghei-infected CBA/Ca mice, and prevents the development of neurologic signs. Treatment with the anti-TNF antibody also prevents hemorrhagic necrosis of brain vessels. Fourth, in the mouse model, a cytokine cascade including at least GM-CSF, IL-3 and IFN-gamma is required for the elevation of TNF level. This cascade appears to involve two components: (a) a quantitative component: increased accumulation of macrophages results from the concomitant release of IL-3 and GM-CSF, and (b) a qualitative component: macrophage number has not only to be raised, but macrophages need to be activated by IFN-gamma. Fifth, metabolic parameters of CM and its main lesion in both mouse and human, i.e. the hemorrhagic necrosis of small brain vessels, correspond to the known properties of TNF.
...
PMID:Tumor-necrosis factor and other cytokines in cerebral malaria: experimental and clinical data. 257 74
To investigate the role of
tumor necrosis factor
in Plasmodium falciparum infections, we measured serum concentrations of this cytokine in 65 Malawian children with severe falciparum
malaria
. Of these children (mean age, 5.3 years), 55 were unconscious and 10 had hypoglycemia at presentation. Although there was considerable overlap, the mean (+/- SEM) initial serum concentration of
tumor necrosis factor
was significantly higher in the 10 patients who died (709 +/- 312 pg per milliliter) than in the 55 who survived (184 +/- 32 pg per milliliter; P less than 0.02). The mortality rate increased with the concentration of
tumor necrosis factor
: at a level of less than 100 pg per milliliter, 1 of 24 patients died; at 100 to 500 pg per milliliter, 6 of 34 patients; and at more than 500 pg per milliliter, 3 of 7 patients. High concentrations of
tumor necrosis factor
were also associated with hypoglycemia (P less than 0.02), hyperparasitemia (P less than 0.002), age under three years (P less than 0.03), and severity of illness as measured by a prognostic index (P less than 0.0005). The highest serum concentrations of
tumor necrosis factor
were found in patients who died shortly after admission. The concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid were within the normal range in all patients. In serum samples obtained from 38 convalescent patients, the concentration of
tumor necrosis factor
declined to a mean of 16 +/- 3 pg per milliliter. We conclude that the level of
tumor necrosis factor
is frequently increased in patients with severe falciparum
malaria
, particularly in those with cerebral
malaria
or hypoglycemia. To determine whether it is important in the pathogenesis of the signs and symptoms of the disease requires further study.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor and disease severity in children with falciparum malaria. 265 27
Evidence is accumulating that the illness and pathology observed in
malaria
are not caused directly by parasite products, but by normal components of the immune response, mainly monokines such as
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
), produced in excess. These mediators are released from the host's monocytes and macrophages, apparently in response to stimulation by parasite products. Recombinant
TNF
, if injected into a range of animal species or into tumour patients, is demonstrably toxic, giving rise to changes typical of acute
malaria
, and several groups have detected circulating
TNF
in serum from patients acutely ill with
malaria
. The short serum clearance time of
TNF
and
TNF
tolerance have to be considered when interpreting such data. Current studies indicate that some malarial antigens, in the absence of lipopolysaccharide, can trigger release of
TNF
. This and other monokines could contribute to cerebral
malaria
in at least 2 ways: by increasing thrombospondin secretion, and hence favouring local sequestration of knob-bearing parasitized red cells, and, as has been demonstrated in clinical trials in tumour patients, by causing neurological symptoms directly. In addition, it seems that
TNF
does not act alone, but as part of an interdependent synergizing network of polypeptide mediators. These evidently act together to induce secretion of other cell products, such as platelet-activating factor, prostaglandins, reactive oxygen species and procoagulant activity, that actually cause illness, biochemical change and tissue damage. Understanding these processes should lead to a range of new therapeutic interventions.
...
PMID:Roles of tumour necrosis factor in the illness and pathology of malaria. 269 75
In this paper, the effects of recombinant human interleukin-1 (IL-1) on non-specific resistance to infection are reviewed. In experiments in neutropenic mice, a single injection of a low dose of IL-1 (8-800 ng) appears to protect against death from lethal Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Candida albicans infections. In non-neutropenic mice protection can also be obtained with such dosages of IL-1 in infection caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae or Listeria monocytogenes. Low dosages of IL-1 are also able to prevent lethal cerebral
malaria
in mice. No effect has been found in murine cytomegalovirus infection. With the exception of C. albicans infection and
malaria
, protection is only obtained if IL-1 is given before the infection. The mechanism of protection has not been elucidated; in the Pseudomonas and Klebsiella infection, it could be demonstrated that survival was not due to a direct antibacterial effect of IL-1, not due to the action of granulocytes or increased hematopoietic recovery and not due to activation of macrophages and increased bactericidal mechanisms. In the experimental Listeria infection however, animals treated with IL-1 had lower bacterial counts in their organs. Since the cytokines interleukin-6 (IL-6) and
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) are much less potent than IL-1 in these protection experiments, it is very unlikely that they are endogenous mediators of the protection induced by IL-1. The effect is not mediated via the cyclooxygenase pathway, since premedication with ibuprofen does not influence the protective effect of IL-1. Taking these data together, it is felt that IL-1 holds promise as a therapeutic agent in humans.
...
PMID:Options for the treatment of serious infections with interleukin-1. 270 46
Cell-mediated immunity to
malaria
may involve macrophages, the monokines that mediate endotoxicity, and reactive oxygen species. Since interferon-gamma activates macrophages to release reactive oxygen species, and
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha (TNF-alpha) helps both to mediate endotoxicity and to induce leukocytes to secrete reactive oxygen, we monitored the effects of administering recombinant forms of these cytokines on Plasmodium chabaudi adami infections in mice. We also fed infected mice a diet containing 0.75% butylated hydroxyanisole, a scavenger of free radicals. Infections were suppressed by daily i.p. injections of 5 x 10(4) U of recombinant mouse interferon-gamma from day -1 or by recombinant human TNF released from i.p. osmotic pumps at the rate of 6 x 10(3) U/hr. Degenerate intraerythrocytic parasites (crisis forms) were evident much sooner in the course of the suppressed infections, and parasitemias fell correspondingly earlier. The butylated hydroxyanisole diet, in contrast, enhanced the infections. In these mice crisis forms were seen later, and at higher parasitemias, than they normally occur. These observations are consistent with the concept that T cell-dependent, macrophage-derived mediators are central to the type of malarial immunity that kills parasites inside circulating red cells. They also suggest, but do not prove, that both TNF and reactive oxygen species are involved, and that the role of TNF may be more indirect, although no less important, than that of reactive forms of oxygen.
...
PMID:Inhibition of murine malaria (Plasmodium chabaudi) in vivo by recombinant interferon-gamma or tumor necrosis factor, and its enhancement by butylated hydroxyanisole. 311 10
The cause of fetal loss in
malaria
is not known. We report that a small (1.5-5.0 micrograms) intravenous dose of recombinant human
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) caused fetal death and abortion in 16 day pregnant mice that were carrying low densities of Plasmodium vinckei. In contrast, 50 micrograms human
TNF
did not cause fetal death or abortion in uninfected 16 day pregnant mice. Endogenous
TNF
, which was not detectable in plasma of low parasitemia animals, pregnant or not, was present (1.6 +/- 0.9 ng/ml) in samples from malarial pregnant mice when, on day 17, parasitemia was high and the first signs of impending abortion were evident. No
TNF
was detectable in the plasma of uninfected mice at day 17 of pregnancy. A small dose of
TNF
also caused fetal death in 16 day pregnant mice that had received an intravenous injection of Coxiella burneti extract 9-10 days earlier. Thus,
TNF
-induced abortion may occur in a range of infections in which systemic macrophage activation occurs and a trigger for
TNF
release is present.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor in malaria-induced abortion. 317 38
The concentrations of
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) produced by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (MNC) were measured using a radioimmunoassay (RIA) for human
TNF
. This was developed using a rabbit antiserum against human recombinant
TNF
(Hu rTNF), and Hu rTNF labeled with Na125I by a modification of the chloramine T method. This RIA does not detect human lymphotoxin, interleukin-1 alpha or beta, interleukin 2, interleukin 6, interferon alpha or gamma, granulocyte-macrophage-colony stimulating factor, and C5a des arg. A good correlation (r = 0.89) was found between the RIA and the cytolytic bioassay for
TNF
. The sensitivity of the RIA is between 3 and 78 pg/ml (median 11 pg/ml). The mean concentration of
TNF
in 24-h culture supernatants of human MNC exposed to different concentrations of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was found to increase in dose-dependent fashion and then level off between 50 and 100 ng/ml. The concentrations of IL-1 beta and alpha detected by specific RIAs in these supernatants were between 0.2 and 19 ng/ml and 0.04 and 1 ng/ml, respectively. The amount of
TNF
produced by human MNC in vitro was determined in a cohort of 50 normal volunteers. Without exogenous stimuli,
TNF
concentrations were almost always below the detection limit; with 0.5 ng/ml LPS, the median concentration of
TNF
was 2 ng/ml, and with PHA the median was 3.8 ng/ml. In cultures performed in the presence of indomethacin significantly (p less than 0.005) more
TNF
was produced. Using this RIA, we could detect
TNF
in the circulation of mice injected with Hu rTNF. When plasma samples of patients with febrile illnesses were added directly to the RIA,
TNF
was not detectable, with the exception of patients with
malaria
. These studies demonstrate the range and sensitivity of LPS-induced and mitogen-induced production of immunoreactive
TNF
by human MNC in vitro without interference of similar cytokines in bioassays.
...
PMID:Concentrations of immunoreactive human tumor necrosis factor alpha produced by human mononuclear cells in vitro. 325 88
Mouse and rabbit sera from animals treated with Mycobacterium bovis BCG and lipopolysaccharide contained
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) and induced
malaria
parasite crisis forms. However, neither purified mouse- nor recombinant DNA-produced human
TNF
induced crisis forms in cultured Plasmodium falciparum. Furthermore, rabbit polyclonal and mouse monoclonal antibodies against human
TNF
did not block the parasite inhibitory activity of human
malaria
crisis form factor serum from Sudan.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor does not induce Plasmodium falciparum crisis forms. 329 67
The authors have earlier proposed that
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) might contribute to the pathology of
malaria
. Here they report the outcome of injecting recombinant human
TNF
/cachectin into normal mice and others with low parasitemias (6-35%) of Plasmodium vinckei. The object was to see how precisely the pathologic features of the terminal stages of this infection could be produced, when parasitemias are 70-80%. Hypoglycemia, mid-zonal liver damage, and pulmonary accumulation of neutrophils in the pulmonary vasculature, all of which are seen in severe P vinckei infection, occurred within 4-12 hours after the mildly infected mice received
TNF
/cachectin. Uninfected mice were much less susceptible.
TNF
/cachectin also increases plasma lactate, a change seen in both the human and rodent diseases. From these findings and the recent literature on
TNF
/cachectin, including its detection in serum from malarial patients, it seems likely that excessive release of this monokine could account for certain of the unexplained pathologic features of human
malaria
.
...
PMID:Possible roles of tumor necrosis factor in the pathology of malaria. 366 78
A variety of known or suspected inducers of crisis form parasites in cultivated Plasmodium falciparum were examined. Sera from Sudanese residents of
malaria
-endemic areas, sera from American tuberculosis patients, and rabbit sera containing
tumor necrosis factor
were assayed in vitro for cytotoxic activities against P. falciparum and mouse L-M cell cultures. Inhibition was determined by measurement of incorporation of radiolabeled nucleic acid precursors. When compared to normal serum, parasites grown in the presence of a 1:4 dilution of rabbit sera containing
tumor necrosis factor
, TB patient sera, or Sudanese sera were metabolically inhibited 73%, 75%, and 95%, respectively. However, only the rabbit sera containing
tumor necrosis factor
were cytotoxic to L-M cells, inhibiting radiolabel incorporation by 80% at a 1:1,000 serum dilution. These findings suggest that
tumor necrosis factor
is apparently not responsible for the induction of parasite crisis forms by the inhibitory human sera tested. In addition, human gamma-interferon had no effect on parasite growth.
...
PMID:Comparison of inducers of crisis forms in Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. 392 59
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