Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
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We researched the application of immunohistochemistry for the purpose of establishing forensic pathological diagnoses. In the present study, we examined the induction and expression of heat shock protein (HSP), oxygen regulated protein (ORP), inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), excitatory amino acid transporter 2 (EAAT2) and apolipoprotein E (apo E) in the human brain using forensic autopsy cases as our subjects. Hypoxic/ischemic brain damage. In cases of longer survival and with a history of hypoxic attacks, the proteins HSP and ORP were found in the parieto-occipital lobe and hippocampus. And we are able to observe a weak stain for EAAT2 in almost all asphyxia deaths. Traumatic brain injury (TBI). In traumatic brain injury (TBI), the prolonged induction of iNOS was demonstrated in the neutrophils, microglia/macrophage, and vascular smooth muscle cells in the traumatized brain. Apo E was identified with neurons in the traumatized cortical hemisphere from only a two-hour survival case to long survival cases. To the contrary, there was no positive apo E staining in the contralateral cortical hemisphere at all. In one one-hour survival case, a weak stain for EAAT2 was observed, but intensive expression of EAAT2 was observed from brief to one-day survival cases. Sudden infant death (SID). Numerous ferritin-positive cells were observed in the brain in the cases of pneumonia or myocarditis that we examined. To the contrary, the numbers of ferritin-positive cells were obviously decreased in the cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The transferrin-positive cells were in an inverse proportion to the ferritin positive cells in each SIDS case. Also, numerous ORP-150 positive cells were observed in the brain in cases of pneumonia and the SIDS group. In forensic practice, immunohistochemical investigation of these proteins can be a great value for diagnosing not only the cause of death but also the pathophysiological changes and the victims past history.
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PMID:[Application of immunohistochemistry for forensic pathological diagnosis: finding of human brain in forensic autopsy]. 1190 39

The oxygen regulated protein 150-kDa (ORP-150) is only induced in hypoxic conditions. We performed an immunohistochemical and morphometrical study on the expression of ORP-150 in the brains of sudden infant death (SID) victims. The cerebral cortexes of 18 infants were used for this study. Each tissue section was incubated with anti-ORP-150 polyclonal antibodies and the number of ORP-150 positive cells was counted. In the cluster analysis, the 18 cases were classified into three groups (A-C groups). Group A was composed of six sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) cases and its mean value of ORP-150 positive cells was 66.75+/-3.44, Group B (six severe respiratory infectious disease such as pneumonia and bronchitis including sepsis): 39.50+/-2.52 and Group C (five SIDS and one severe respiratory infectious disease): 16.00+/-2.92, respectively. These results might reflect chronic hypoxic condition before death, because ORP-150 is only induced when a hypoxic condition exist, but not acute hypoxia. And chronic hypoxic state is likely to be antecedent to SIDS. Therefore, immunohistochemical analysis of OPR-150 in the brain of SID cases may be very useful to differentiate between SIDS and acute asphyxia.
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PMID:The expression of a novel stress protein '150-kDa oxygen regulated protein' in sudden infant death. 1293 45