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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mechanisms involved in modulation of the immune response in persons with chronic Onchocerca volvulus infection are poorly understood. In this study in vitro reactivity of PBMC to O.
volvulus
antigen (Ovag), streptolysin O (SL-O) and the mitogen PHA was tested in 62 infected individuals (INF), 17 persons living in the endemic area with exposure to the infection, but with no detectable infection (END), and 7 healthy controls (CTRL) in Liberia, West Africa. Mean blastogenic responses to Ovag were minimal and did not differ between the groups. There was, however, heterogenous reactivity to Ovag in the INF and END. For example, individuals with a history of therapy, and half of those less than 17 yr old who were tested, showed high responses. No significant differences in the response to SL-O or PHA were detected between the groups. IL-2 production in response to Ovag was minimal in the majority of infected subjects. Exogenous IL-2 was found to cause a significant increase in mean responses to Ovag and SL-O in INF and END only. Similarly, Ovag did not stimulate IL-1 production in most INF, whereas stimulation with
LPS
led to significantly greater production of IL-1. Depletion of plastic and nylon wool adherent cells did not increase responses to parasite-related antigen in INF, END or CTRL; however, responses to SL-O were augmented in INF, an effect that was also observed in CTRL. Finally, depletion of CD8 or CD16 cells in INF by C lysis did not increase blastogenic responses. These results indicate that cell-mediated immunity to parasite-related Ag as reflected in lymphocyte responses in vitro is diminished in infected individuals, and that this may be caused by defects in T cell activation.
...
PMID:Cell-mediated immune responses in human infection with Onchocerca volvulus. 325 94
Filariasis is a major public health problem throughout many regions of the tropics. The disease is caused by several species of filarial nematode including Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi, the agents of lymphatic filariasis, and Onchocerca
volvulus
, the cause of 'riverblindness'. Disease caused by these worms varies depending on the tissue location of the parasite, and is associated with episodes of acute and chronic inflammation. These pathologies, including elephantiasis and blindness, rank among the most disabling in the world. Studies aimed at characterizing the molecular nature of the inflammatory stimuli derived from filarial nematodes uncovered a long forgotten secret, their symbiont Wolbachia.
LPS
-like molecules from these intracellular bacteria are responsible for potent inflammatory responses from macrophages and in animal models of filarial disease. Wolbachia has also been associated with severe inflammatory reactions to filarial chemotherapy, being released into the blood following the death of the parasite. Recent studies in animal models even implicate Wolbachia in the onset of lymphodema and blindness. Taken together these studies suggest a major role for Wolbachia in the pathogenesis of filarial disease. It may be possible, through the use of antibiotic therapy, to clear worms of their bacteria, in the hope that this will prevent the onset and development of filarial pathology.
...
PMID:A new insight into the pathogenesis of filarial disease. 1204 32