Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Prospective studies demonstrated variable phenotypic expression of the X-linked recessive lymphoproliferative syndrome (X.L.R.L.S.) in three brothers: (1) hypogammaglobulinaemia and subclinical Epstein-Barr-virus (E.B.V.) infection with antibody response to E.B.V.; (2) E.B.V. infection with defective immune response to E.B.V., fatal infectious mononucleosis (I.M.), and immunoblastic lymphoma; and (3) histiocytic lymphoma. Hypogammaglobulinaemia and measles pneumonitis had preceded infection with E.B.V. The diverse phenotypic expressions probably resulted from the varied immune response to E.B.V. Recombination of X chromosomes was documented by Xg-blood-group studies in a survivor. E.B.V. can induce fatal I.M. and malignant lymphoma in X.L.R.L.S., but an immune response to E.B.V. can be protective.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus infections in the X-linked recessive lymphoproliferative syndrome. 8 16

Live measles vaccine induced protective levels of antibody in 70% of children with protein-calorie-malnutrition (PCM) within 21 days and possibly in 90% by 42 days. The development of specific antibody was delayed and symptoms due to the vaccine more frequent (64%) in these children than in healthy children. Administration of measles vaccine may have predisposed to an associated fatal pneumonia in one malnourished child. Human measles hyperimmune globulin can maintain adequate antibody levels in most children with PCM (75%) for at least three to four weeks. Vaccination induced protective levels of measles antibody in 83% of healthy children under 10 months of age, which compared well with 86% of successful immunizations done at 10 months or later. There was wastage of vaccine in 40 to 70% of children who, despite a negative history of measles, had protective levels of antibody when admitted to the study. It is suggested that malnourished children in the community or the very young can be safely and effectively vaccinated against measles. But passive immunization is preferred in children with PCM severe enough to be admitted to hospital and thereby at increased risk of exposure to measles and other infections.
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PMID:Immunization against measles in children at risk for severe disease. 12 46

The course of disease of a patient with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and partial lipodystrophy is described. The case is further characterized by a deficiency of C3 and C3- activator, by normal values of C4, by evidence of the nephritogenic factor, by raised fibrin degradation products and by an unselective proteinuria. The course of the glomerulonephritis runs parallel to a pronounced susceptibility to infection (at first varicella, tonsillitis and measles, later pneumonia, meningitis, encephalitis and hepatitis). On account of a nephrotic syndrome and an initative impairment of the renal function, a cytostatic treatment was begun, which although raising the C3 level did not influence the further course of the disease. As the patient has a healthy identical twin sister without lipodystrophy, who shows no reduction in C3 and no nephritogenic factor, this case proves that these diseases are acquired and not genetically determined.
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PMID:Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis with partial lipodystrophy: discordant occurrence in identical twins. 12 86

Viral infections and clinical complications were studied during hemodialysis and after renal transplantation. Active cytomegalovirus infection developed in 96% of patients after renal transplantation; reactivation of herpes simplex, varicella-zoster, and Epstein-Barr viruses was found in 35%, 24%, and 0% of patients, respectively. Cytomegalovirus viremia developed in 42% of patients an average of two months after renal transplantation, lasted 1.75 (+/- 1.5) months (except in one patient with chronic viremia), and was followed by chronic viruria. Higher titers of infectious cytomegalovirus were found in the polymorphonuclear than in the mononuclear leukocyte fraction. Reactivation of a latent infection and, less likely, respiratory infection appear to be the most probable mechanisms of cytomegalovirus infection after renal transplantation. One to three months after transplant, cytomegalovirus infection may be related to fever, arthralgia, pneumonitis, and leukopenia; three to four months after transplant, the virus may be related to hepatitis; and 12-30 months after transplant, it may be related to retinitis in patients with chronic viremia. Although other causes of these complications are possible, herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus, varicella-zoster virus, measles virus, adenovirus, hepatitis B virus, and Toxoplasma gondii appear to be of lesser importance than cytomegalovirus in this respect.
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PMID:Epidemiology of cytomegalovirus infection after transplantation and immunosuppression. 17 15

Four children who developed severe lung disease after measles are described. One child died and three have been left with severe impairment of lung function. It is suggested that secondary infection with an adenovirus was responsible for causing the lung disease in these patients. The immune response to measles was abnormal. Measles virus may have rendered the children more susceptible to serious complications from infection with the adenovirus. The many deaths from 'measles pneumonia' in developing countries and the occasional occurence of post-measles bronchiectasis in this country may be due to secondary adenovirus infections. Further viral and serological studies are required to confirm this hypothesis.
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PMID:Crippling lung disease after measles and adenovirus infection. 18 95

Adenovirus, measles virus and herpesvirus were found to be responsible for the serious non-bacterial bronchiolar and interstitial necrosis in post-measles pneumonia in underprivlieged non-White children less than 4 years of age in Cape Town. Secondary bacterial bronchopneumonia, possibly antibiotically suppressed, proved to be less important in accounting for the extensive lung damage in 18 fatal cases that were examined virologically and histologically.
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PMID:Virus peneumonia following measles: a virological and histological study of autopsy material. 18 94

401 cases of viral pneumonia diagnosed between January 1973 and August 1975 were investigated serologically by the complement-fixation test. The percentage distribution of the responsible pathogenic organism in this series of cases was as follows: influenza virus A 45.9%, Mycoplasma pneumoniae 19.5%, Coxsackie B viruses 9.2%, cytomegalovirus 7.5% and Chlamydia psittaci 8.5%. The remaining 9.4% cases were caused by adeno, parainfluenza, measles, influenza B, herpes simplex and respiratory syncytial viruses. Influenza virus was found mainly in elderly people (mean age 58.4 years), whilst pneumonia due to Mycoplasma occurred mainly in young adults (mean age 24.4 years). Infections with Coxsackie B viruses were almost entirely restriced to the warmer months; by contrast, the influenza virus was usually found in epidemic form and only during a few weeks in winter.
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PMID:[Aetiological studies on viral pneumonia (author's transl)]. 18 13

A review of autopsies of 107 young children with pneumonia showed that 15 children (14%) had adenovirus infections, the diagnosis being based on characteristic histopathological and ultrastructural features in the lungs. Eleven (73%) of the cases of adenovirus infection followed on measles infection, and it is suggested that some became infected with adenovirus after admission to hospital. A review of clinical aspects revealed no unique features. Histopathological examination of tissues showed a common picture of necrotising bronchopneumonia, with minor degrees of rental tubular damage, infiltrates of large mononuclear cells in spleen and nodes, and an absence of lymphoid germinal centres. On light microscopy, "rosette" and "smudge" cells were seen in these cases, and two patterns of virus particle distribution in infected cells were seen ultrastructurally. It is postulated that "smudge" cells contain numerous crystalline viral arrays.
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PMID:Fatal adenovirus pneumonia: Clinical and pathological features. 18 4

The present measles problem in the United States, an estimated 918,500 cases in 1977, is attributed to the failure of the 14-year vaccination program to immunize enough children to prevent continued circulation of the virus and recurrent outbreaks. A new strategy for rapidly overcoming this problem is recommended. There appears to be no current congenital rubella syndrome problem against which the rubella vaccination program in the United States is directed. However, the continued annual infection of an estimated two million children conceivably could again bring fourth a rubella virus with a greater capacity for producing congenital rubella syndrome, and a modification of the present program is recommended. About 80 to 90% of the annual 60-70 million cases of severe enough to confine the victim to bed influenza are not caused by the influenza viruses. Except for the few thousand additional deaths directly attributed to influenza A virus during the epidemic years, mortality rates for pneumonia, heart diseases, chronic bronchopulmonary diseases, and other former "high-risk" conditions have continued to decrease in recent years, and have not risen during the 12-month periods of epidemic years. A re-evaluation of the current influenza vaccination policy is recommended. Prospects for hepatitis B and varicella-zoster vaccines are discussed.
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PMID:Overview and horizons in prevention of some human infectious diseases by vaccination. 21 Jun 52

Virological investigations were carried out on 4 151 patients with respiratory disease hospitalized between May 1966 and April 1972. The groups examined were Black and White children and Black miners. Influenza viruses were more common among malnourished Black children and tended to cause more severe disease. This was also true of adenovirus and Herpesvirus hominis type 1 infections. Adenoviruses appear to be secondary invaders, frequently after a measles or influenza attack. A generalized epidemic of adenovirus type 7 occurred in 1967, the longest, coldest and most humid winter during the survey. The season of peak occurrence for respiratory syncytial (RS) virus is autumn, not winter as found elsewhere. The parainfluenza viruses differ from each other, types 1 and 2 being commoner in older children (12--48 months), mainly causing laryngotracheobronchitis (LTB), whereas type 3 is commoner in younger children (0--23 months), mainly causing pneumonia. The miners showed a preponderance of influenza A infections. The miners' origin from remote villages and high turnover rate create a situation where a given strain will persist at a moderate level for long periods, unlike in the general population where an outbreak lasts for only about 6--8 weeks. As opposed to other closed communities, adenovirus infections were rare. The reason for this is obscure.
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PMID:Respiratory viruses in hospital patients on the Witwatersrand. A 7-year study. 21 51


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