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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The macaque immunodeficiency syndrome has many parallels to AIDS in humans. Affected monkeys develop profound, prolonged T lymphocyte dysfunction and die of lymphomas or opportunistic infections. We recently isolated a virus that we call SIV from four sick macaque monkeys. The morphology, growth characteristics, and antigenic properties of this virus indicate that it is related to the causative agent of human AIDS. The pathogenicity of this newly isolated virus was tested in macaque monkeys. Five of six died between 127 and 352 days following inoculation. The animals developed a wasting syndrome and died with adenovirus pancreatitis and/or pneumonia and primary retroviral encephalitis. Immunological abnormalities in these animals included a decrease in circulating T4+ lymphocytes and depressed peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferative response to pokeweed mitogen. The SIV monkey model holds great promise for testing antiviral agents and for the development of vaccines against AIDS.
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PMID:Simian models for AIDS. 348 63

SIVsmmPBJ 1.9 is an extremely virulent clone of the simian immunodeficiency virus SIVsmmPBj 14 that causes an acute lethal disease in pigtail macaques, with death occurring 6 to 8 days after infection. The disease is characterized by bloody mucoid diarrhea, lymphoid hyperplasia, and giant cell pneumonia. We have developed an in vitro model for the production of multinucleated giant cells (MGCs) in which peripheral blood monocytes rapidly fuse to form MGCs when cultured in lymphocyte-conditioned medium and antibody against class II MHC. We have tested the effect of SIVsmmPBj on monocytes in our MGC model system. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from normal healthy human subjects, when cultured in the presence of anti-class II MHC monoclonal antibody and SIVsmmPBj 1.9, but not either alone, resulted in the formation of MGCs within 4 days. Experiments using Transwell chambers indicated that such MGCs are formed by fusion of monocytes, not by virus-induced fusion of lymphocytes. SIVsmmPBj 1.9 is unique in inducing MGC formation in that other SIV and HIV isolates do not induce MGCs. Whereas SIVsmmPBj 1.9 grown in PBMCs was a potent inducer of MGCs in the presence of anti-class II MHC antibody, SIVsmmPBj 1.9 grown in CEMx174 failed to do so. Antibodies against IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha significantly inhibited SIVsmmPBj/anti-class II-induced formation of MGCs. These results indicate that cytokines released in response to SIVsmmPBj 1.9, in conjunction with antibodies to class II MHC, caused fusion of monocytes.
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PMID:Simian immunodeficiency virus SIVsmmPBj 1.9 induces multinucleated giant cell formation in human peripheral blood monocytes. 817 65

The primate polyomavirus SV40 is known to cause interstitial nephritis in primary infections and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) upon reactivation of a latent infection in SIV-infected macaques. We now describe a second central nervous system manifestation of SV40: a meningoencephalitis affecting cerebral gray matter, without demyelination, distinct from PML. Meningoencephalitis appears also to be a primary manifestation of SV40 infection and can be seen in conjunction with SV40-induced interstitial nephritis and pneumonitis. The difference in the lesions of meningoencephalitis and PML does not appear to be due to cellular tropism, as both oligodendrocytes and astrocytes are infected in PML and meningoencephalitis, as determined by in situ hybridization or immunohistochemistry for SV40 coupled with immunohistochemistry for cellular determinants. This is further supported by examination of SV40 nucleic acid sequences from the ori-enhancer and large-T-antigen regions, which reveals no tissue-or lesion-specific variation in SV40 sequences.
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PMID:Association of simian virus 40 with a central nervous system lesion distinct from progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in macaques with AIDS. 1002 2

Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia of HIV-infected individuals and SIV pneumonia of macaques are both characterized by diffuse infiltration of the lungs with lymphocytes, plasma cells, and macrophages. This study was undertaken to determine whether there are specific, macrophage-tropic genotypes that selectively replicate in the lung of macaques with SIV pneumonia, as in SIV encephalitis. Using a rapid, reproducible SIV/macaque model of AIDS, 11 pig-tailed macaques were intravenously inoculated with an immunosuppressive viral strain, SIV/DeltaB670, and a macrophage-tropic molecule clone, SIV/17E-Fr, and euthanized at 3 months postinoculation. All 11 macaques had severe (6 macaques) or moderate (5 macaques) pneumonia. To identify the viral genotypes that were replicating in the lung parenchyma, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of each macaque, RNA was isolated and the SIV env V1 region was amplified, cloned, and sequenced. Lung homogenates and BAL cells contained a more limited repertoire of viral genotypes than PBMC. SIV/17E-Fr was the major genotype in the lungs of 5 macaques and in BAL cells of 6 macaques. The remainder of the macaques had SIV/17E-Fr and the macrophage-tropic strains of SIV/DeltaB670 clones 2 and 12. In contrast, SIV/17E-Fr was the predominant strain in the PBMC of only 3 of 11 macaques. The viral strain that predominated in PBMC was rarely the strain that predominated in the lungs (only 3 of 11 macaques). The severity of pulmonary lesions did not correlate with the levels of viral RNA in lung homogenates or in plasma. However, when only SIV/17E-Fr was expressed in the lung, the viral load in the lung was significantly higher (P = 0.016) than when SIV/DeltaB670 was present alone or in combination with SIV/17E-Fr. These data suggest that SIV pneumonia is associated with selective replication of specific macrophage-tropic genotypes in the lung and that SIV/17E-Fr has a selective advantage for replication in the lung.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of SIV pneumonia: selective replication of viral genotypes in the lung. 1153 14

The goal of this study was to examine SIV- and Pneumocystis carinii-coinfected rhesus macaques as a model of P. carinii infection in HIV-seropositive humans. The influence of P. carinii infection on the cellular composition of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from SIV-infected and normal rhesus macaques was examined by flow cytometric analysis and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). BAL fluid from SIV- and P. carinii coinfected macaques showed a substantial T lymphocyte influx composed of more than 90% CD8+ T cells. These results are in contrast to BAL fluid from SIV-infected macaques with no detectable P. carinii-specific PCR product, where CD4+ T cells were present in significant numbers and the CD8+ T cell population was less than 70% of total CD3+ lymphocytes. We observed no significant differences in peripheral blood CD4+ or CD8+ T cell levels in the SIV-infected animals, regardless of P. carinii status, indicating that the CD8+ T cell infiltration in the lungs of the P. carinii-positive animals was likely the result of P. carinii infection. These results demonstrate that although peripheral blood CD4+ T cell levels are predictive of susceptibility to P. carinii infection in this model, the levels are not reflective of the T cell profile in the lung during SIV and P. carinii coinfection. The SIV- and P. carinii-coinfected macaques showed a spectrum of lung disease severity that was histologically similar to human P. carinii pneumonia (PCP). Interestingly, even mild P. carinii infection was sufficient to alter the normal CD4+/CD8+ T cell profiles in the lungs of SIV-infected rhesus macaques. These results are similar to immunologic findings in human AIDS-associated PCP and support the usefulness of this model in the study of immune responses to P. carinii.
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PMID:Alterations in T lymphocyte profiles of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from SIV- and Pneumocystis carinii-coinfected rhesus macaques. 1189 41

A study was conducted on 21 pig herds using one-site production system in the southeast region of Brazil to assess the relationships among serological results for primary pathogens involved in respiratory diseases (Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, App; Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae, Mhyo; and swine influenza virus, SIV), cough index, pneumonia index, pleuritis and herd characteristics. The prevalence of antibodies against Mhyo and SIV increased throughout the raising phases, with the highest prevalence in slaughtered pigs (> 40%), while pigs in 65% (14/21) of nurseries demonstrated marked seroprevalence of App that decreased until the day of slaughter. Pleuritis and pulmonary consolidations were recorded in 9.0 and 72.4%, respectively, of the 908 evaluated lungs. Histopathological analysis of the lung lesions revealed suppurative bronchopneumonia in almost half of the lungs (48.9%). Regression analyses were conducted to identify risk factors associated with the cough index; pleuritis; pulmonary consolidation; and App, Mhyo and SIV serological results. All-in-all-out management in nursery buildings reduced the seroprevalence of Mhyo in herds. App seroprevalence was associated with pleuritis, and the presence of cough episodes in growing pigs was associated with SIV seropositivity in nursery pigs.
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PMID:Antibodies against Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and influenza virus and their relationships with risk factors, clinical signs and lung lesions in pig farms with one-site production systems in Brazil. 3147 Feb 90