Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026918 (Mycobacterium)
52,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Striking differences were observed between the visceral and cutaneous responses after tests with validated Kveim and normal spleen suspensions in a guinea pig model of granulomatous bowel disease. Five of six animals sensitised with BCG showed positive responses at the ileal Kveim test site whereas all six had negative cutaneous Kveim tests. Conversely, two of six animals sensitised with irradiated Mycobacterium leprae showed positive cutaneous Kveim tests and only one a positive response in the ascending colon. All six showed negative responses at the ileal Kveim test site. No positive visceral or cutaneous responses were observed in either group of animals after tests with normal spleen suspension. These findings are discussed in relation to the positive Kveim responses previously reported among patients with Crohn's disease, tuberculoid and lepromatous leprosy, and among seemingly healthy BCG vaccinated subjects. The findings provide further evidence in support of a possible mycobacterial aetiology for sarcoidosis and Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Observations on the Kveim reaction using an animal model of granulomatous bowel disease. 186 34

We examined 19 patients (17 men) with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and gastrointestinal symptoms to determine whether those symptoms were due to either a gastrointestinal tract infection or a defect in mucosal absorption because of an enteropathy. The erythrocyte folate and serum vitamin B12 levels were within normal limits in all of the patients. The serum ferritin level was elevated in 12. The xylose absorption test results were abnormal in 8 of the 13 patients able to complete the study. None of the duodenal aspirates yielded a pathogen. Light microscopy revealed nonspecific lymphocytic inflammation without infection in the stomach (in seven patients), the esophagus (in five), the duodenum (in two) and the rectum (in two). However, biopsy specimens were positive for Candida albicans in the esophagus (four patients), cytomegalovirus in the esophagus (one) and the rectum (two), Helicobacter pylori in the antrum (two), Treponema infection in the rectum (two) and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare in the small intestine (one). Only three patients had a normal series of biopsy specimens. All of the patients had similar ultrastructural changes at the epithelial-stromal junction of the antral glands and in the intestinal crypts. We conclude that abnormal biochemical and endoscopic findings are common in HIV-positive patients with gastrointestinal symptoms. Defects in carbohydrate absorption and ultrastructural changes may be responsible for some aspects of HIV enteropathy.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal function and structure in HIV-positive patients. 220 20

We have been able to isolate mycobacteria from intestinal specimens obtained by surgical resection or endoscopic biopsy from patients with Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and noninflammatory bowel diseases. Nineteen slow-growing (Runyon groups I and III) and 17 rapid-growing (Runyon group IV) mycobacterial isolates were obtained. Slow-growing mycobacteria were recovered from approximately one-third of intestinal biopsy specimens from Crohn's disease, one-quarter of ulcerative colitis biopsies, and 40% of biopsies from noninflammatory bowel disease patients. Isolates were most commonly members of the Mycobacterium avium-complex. One isolate (from an ulcerative colitis patient) was biochemically similar to the Mycobacterium strain previously associated with Crohn's disease, and one from a Crohn's disease patient was Mycobacterium kansasii. The rapid-growing organisms were members of the Mycobacterium fortuitum-complex. In addition to conventional mycobacteria, spheroplasts (cell wall-defective forms) were isolated from 12 patients with Crohn's disease (most often from surgically resected colon) and 3 patients with ulcerative colitis; none were isolated from non-inflammatory bowel disease patients. We have been unable to identify a consistent relationship between the presence, or the species, of Mycobacterium and Crohn's disease. Our results do not support the proposed role of a specific mycobacterium in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease. The cause of Crohn's disease remains unclear.
...
PMID:Mycobacteria and inflammatory bowel disease. Results of culture. 379 80

We used DNA-DNA hybridization to characterize a mycobacterial isolate, strain Linda, that was obtained from a patient with Crohn's disease and that has been reported to cause ileitis in experimental animals. We also investigated the association of this mycobacterium with Crohn's disease. Our results identified Mycobacterium strain Linda as a strain of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis, the etiologic agent of Johne's disease, a disease of ruminants that has some superficial resemblance to Crohn's disease. Sequences that hybridized with strain Linda DNA probes were detected in DNA extracted from human intestinal tissues from patients with Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and noninflammatory bowel disease. These hybridizing DNA sequences were more prevalent in the muscle layers than in the intestinal mucosa, making it unlikely that they represented DNA from bacterial contaminants in the intestinal lumen. Measurement of the melting temperatures of the DNA-DNA hybrids formed between strain Linda probes and tissue DNAs indicated that the related sequences detected were of mycobacterial origin but were not identical to each other or to strain Linda DNA. These results do not support the proposed specific relationship between Mycobacterium strain Linda and Crohn's disease. The possible etiologic role of mycobacteria in Crohn's disease is discussed.
...
PMID:Investigation of association of mycobacteria with inflammatory bowel disease by nucleic acid hybridization. 379 75

Gastrointestinal (GI) disease is frequent in all types of immunocompromised patients but occurs with greatest frequency in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Thus, much of this review deals with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related GI diseases. Gastrointestinal diseases in other immunocompromised patients are compared with those in patients with AIDS. Conditions unique to transplant recipients, such as graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs), are discussed separately. We have divided these GI diseases into four main categories: (1) HIV-related inflammatory conditions other than opportunistic infections (HIV-related enteropathy, proctocolitis, and CD8 lymphocytosis); (2) inflammatory conditions unrelated to HIV or opportunistic infections (neutropenic enterocolitis, regional enteritislike enteropathy, and GVHD); (3) opportunistic infections (illnesses caused by herpesvirus, cytomegalovirus, and miscellaneous other viruses; Mycobacterium, Candida, Histoplasma, Cryptococcus, Cryptosporidium, Microsporida, Isospora, Leishmania, Toxoplasma and Strongyloides organisms as well as Pneumocystitis carinii; and (4) neoplasias (Kaposi's sarcoma [KS], AIDS-related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma [NHL], HIV-related Hodgkin's disease [HD], PTLDs, and miscellaneous neoplasms). The prevalence, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, gross pathological findings, and microscopic features of each disease entity are discussed.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal disease in the immunocompromised patient. 795 57

The recent recovery of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis from tissues of patients with Crohn's disease has highlighted the possible etiologic role of this microorganism in the disease. However, the immunological evidence generated by various groups supporting this hypothesis is as yet inconclusive. A specific antibody response might be masked in these patients by the wide antigenic homologies prevailing within the genus Mycobacterium. The present study was undertaken with the purpose of exploring the humoral response to M. paratuberculosis in patients with Crohn's disease, by means of a cross-absorption procedure recently proposed for unveiling the presence of specific antibodies in bovine paratuberculosis. Antibodies IgG to M. paratuberculosis were investigated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 90 serum samples from 17 patients with Crohn's disease, 23 patients with ulcerative colitis an 14 with other bowel diseases. Samples from 86 subjects without bowel disease (healthy individuals and patients with tuberculosis, mycobacterioses and fungal diseases) were also included as controls. The specificity of these antibodies was explored by the absorption of sera with an ubiquitous Mycobacterium (M. phlei). The results were compared to those obtained by similar ELISA tests employing M. avium or M. tuberculosis as antigens. A faint humoral response to M. paratuberculosis and M. tuberculosis was detected in patients with Crohn's disease. Cross-absorption with M. phlei did not disclose a specific response nor was an increase in antibody levels detected in patients studied periodically. Sera from patients with ulcerative colitis and other bowel diseases also showed a slight reaction to mycobacteria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Humoral response to mycobacteria in patients with Crohn disease]. 799 45

Mycobacterium paratuberculosis is the causative agent of Johne's disease, a chronic enteritis in ruminants. It has also been implicated as a possible cause of Crohn's disease, an inflammatory bowel disease of unknown etiology. The mycobacterial 65K heat shock proteins (hsp-65K) are among the most extensively studied mycobacterial proteins, and their immunogenic characteristics have been suggested to be the basis for autoimmunization in chronic inflammatory diseases. In this context, we isolated and sequenced the hsp-65K-encoding gene from our M. paratuberculosis PTB65K genomic library. A high degree of identity was found between the open reading frame (ORF) of the PTB65K gene and those of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (89.6%), Mycobacterium leprae (86.6%), and Mycobacterium avium 18 (98.8%). The amino acid sequence alignment of the PTB65K protein with the hsp-65K homologs revealed that the M. tuberculosis and M. leprae proteins each differed by 36 amino acid residues and that the M. avium 18 protein differed by 8 residues. We also investigated the humoral immune responses of animals with Johne's disease and patients with Crohn's disease against the recombinant PTB65K antigen. Immunoblot analysis showed that sera from only 3 of 10 clinically ill and 5 of 25 subclinically ill cows reacted with PTB65K. In addition, sera from two of two sheep and one of two goats with clinical symptoms of Johne's disease also reacted with PTB65K; 0 samples from 10 normal cows reacted. In humans, sera from 7 of 13 patients with Crohn's disease, 3 of 4 with tuberculosis, 5 of 6 with leprosy, 5 of 12 with non-inflammatory bowel disease, and 0 of 4 with ulcerative colitis reacted with the recombinant PTB65K antigen. These results indicate that this PTB65K heat shock protein is uninformative when used for serodiagnosis of Johne's disease in animals. However, in humans, the high intensity of antibody reactions of some sera from Crohn's disease patients compared with that from noninflammatory bowel disease patients showed a positive correlation with mycobacterial diseases.
...
PMID:Nucleotide sequence analysis and seroreactivities of the 65K heat shock protein from Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. 857 25

The aim of this study was to determine whether difficult-to-grow mycobacteria are present in human intestines. Intestinal tissue samples were subjected to both mycobacterial culture and a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. After detection by PCR, species identity was determined by hybridizing the amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments with species-specific oligonucleotides. Intestinal biopsies from 63 patients with noninflammatory bowel diseases (n = 22), Crohn's disease (n = 31), or ulcerative colitis (n = 10) were analyzed. Culture and PCR revealed mycobacteria in four (6%) and 25 (40%) samples, respectively. Samples positive by PCR were negative with all probes specific to nine common cultivable species but were positive with Mycobacterium genavense-specific probe in 68% of cases. Mycobacterial isolates were identified as Mycobacterium gordonae and Mycobacterium chelonae. Findings were similar in Crohn's disease samples compared to non-Chron's disease samples. This study shows that difficult-to-grow mycobacteria can be detected by PCR in large and similar proportions of inflamed intestinal tissue from patients with inflammatory bowel disease and intestinal tissue that appears normal from patients with noninflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:Detection of fastidious mycobacteria in human intestines by the polymerase chain reaction. 922 75

The updated results of current pathomorphological investigations in SIV-infected rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) are summarized. After experimental infection with several SIVmac251 subtypes and various vaccination trails, 147 rhesus monkeys were morphologically examined until now. The pathology of the gastrointestinal tract in SIV-infected animals resembled those of human cases with HIV and AIDS. Alterations were considered to be primary SIV-induced (SIV enteropathy, giant cell disease) or secondary caused by opportunistic agents. Typical secondary gastrointestinal opportunistic infectious agents were parasites (Cryptosporidium sp., Trichuris sp., Trichomonas sp., Spironucleus sp.), viruses (cytomegalovirus, adenovirus) and bacteria (Mycobacterium simiae). Five animals developed malignant lymphomas involving the intestinal tract. The present observations revealed that SIV infection of rhesus monkeys provide an excellent model for studies on the pathogenesis of HIV in man.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal pathology in rhesus monkeys with experimental SIV infection. 969 18

Nuclear medicine is an important tool in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with a variety of nonosseous infections. In the immunocompetent population labeled leukocyte imaging is the radionuclide procedure of choice, with Gallium imaging reserved for those situations in which the leukocyte study is nondiagnostic or cannot be performed. Fever of unknown origin is caused by infection in less than one-third of cases, and therefore the number of positive leukocyte studies will be relatively low. The negative leukocyte study is also useful, however, as it has been demonstrated that a negative study excludes, with a high degree of certainty, focal infection as the cause of an FUO. In the cardiovascular system, labeled leukocyte scintigraphy is very useful for diagnosing mycotic aneurysms and infected prosthetic vascular grafts, with a sensitivity of about 90%. The specificity of the study is somewhat more variable--false positive results have been described in perigraft hematomas, graft thrombosis, bleeding, and pseudoaneurysms. In the central nervous system, labeled leukocyte imaging can provide important information about the etiology of contrast enhancing brain lesions identified on computed tomography, i.e., distinguishing between neoplasm and infection. In the immunocompromised population, typified by the AIDS patient, Gallium scintigraphy is the radionuclide procedure of choice for diagnosing opportunistic diseases. In the thorax, a normal Gallium scan, in the setting of a negative chest X-ray, virtually excludes pulmonary disease. A negative Gallium scan in a patient with an abnormal chest X-ray and Kaposi's sarcoma study suggests that the patient's respiratory problems are related to Kaposi's sarcoma. Focal pulmonary parenchymal uptake is most often associated with bacterial pneumonia, although Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia can occasionally present in this fashion. Diffuse pulmonary parenchymal uptake of Gallium can be due to numerous causes, but in general, the more intense the uptake, the greater the likelihood that the patient has P. carinii pneumonia. Lymph node uptake is most often due to lymphoma or mycobacterial disease. In the abdomen, Gallium is also useful for detecting nodal disease. but is not reliable for detecting large bowel disease. Labeled leukocyte imaging should be performed when colitis is a concern. Both 18FDG PET and 201Tl SPECT imaging of the brain are useful for distinguishing between central nervous system lymphoma and toxoplasmosis in the HIV (+) patient. On both studies, lymphoma manifests as a focus of increased tracer uptake, whereas toxoplasmosis shows little or no uptake of either tracer.
...
PMID:Radionuclide imaging of nonosseous infection. 1023 Feb 81


1 2 3 4 Next >>