Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (Haemophilus)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among 586 children with asthma, 484 (82%) were found to have IgE-mediated ("extrinsic") asthma, and seventy-two (12%) non-IgE ("intrinsic") asthma. The remaining 30 patients (6%) were classified as "intermediate", as they had serum IgE within or above serum IgE levels of healthy children but no allergy to common allergens. During a three-year study period, the seventy-two patients with intrinsic asthma as opposed to 84 patients with extrinsic asthma had significantly more hyperinflation of the lungs, more episodes of acute hospital admissions due to asthma and/or pneumonia, more elevated serum IgG and IgM, and more cultures from secretions of lower airways of Haemophilus influenzae and pneumococci. Further, although treated with corticosteroids, eleven of the children with intrinsic asthma showed progressive disease, judged from fixed and/or declining forced vital capacity followed by signs of lung fibrosis on repeated pulmonary X-rays. It is emphasized that children with intrinsic asthma may represent an entity of childhood asthma, in some cases with severe progression of disease within a few years.
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PMID:Non-IgE-mediated asthma in children. 405 Apr 18

Bacterial colonisation of the airways is associated with increased risk of childhood asthma. Immunoglobulin (Ig)E against bacterial antigens has been reported in some asthmatics, suggesting a role for bacterial-specific type-2 immunity in disease pathogenesis. We aimed to investigate relationships between bacterial-specific IgE amongst teenagers and asthma susceptibility. We measured titres of IgE against Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus in 1,380 teenagers, and related these to asthma symptomatology and immunophenotypes. IgE titres against S. aureus-derived enterotoxins were highest amongst atopics and were associated with asthma risk. Surprisingly, IgE titres against H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae surface antigens were higher, not stratified by atopy and independently associated with decreased asthma risk. The positive association between type-2 immunity to S. aureus and asthma phenotypes probably reflects IgE-mediated effector cell activation via enterotoxin super antigens which are secreted in soluble form. The contrasting benign nature of type-2 immunity to H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae antigens may reflect their lower availability in soluble forms that can crosslink IgE receptors. We theorise that instead they may be processed by antigen presenting cells and presented to type-2 memory cells leading to mucosal secretion of interleukin (IL)-4/IL-13, a mechanism widely recognised in other tissues to attenuate T-helper-1 associated bacterial-induced inflammation.
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PMID:Th2-associated immunity to bacteria in teenagers and susceptibility to asthma. 2093 Jan 97

We aimed to explore the role of TLR4 (rs4986790) polymorphism in the nasopharyngeal (NP) bacterial colonization and its consequent impact on the development of childhood asthma. A semi-quantitative culture of NP swabs was performed on 473 children at 2 months of age and on 213 children at 13 months of age. TLR4 polymorphism was analyzed for 396 children. Children were followed from birth to the age of 7.5 years and the final outcome was physician-diagnosed asthma. The associations between TLR4 genotype, bacterial colonization, and asthma were analyzed. Children with TLR4 AG or GG genotype were more often colonized with Moraxella catarrhalis at 2 months of age (p = 0.009) and Haemophilus influenzae at 13 months of age (p = 0.018). Children who were colonized with H. influenzae at 13 months of age had a significantly higher risk of later development of asthma (p = 0.004). M. catarrhalis or H. Influenzae colonization at 2 months of age or TLR4 genotype Asp299Gly were not associated with the development of childhood asthma. TLR4 Asp299Gly polymorphism was associated with an increased risk of colonization of M. catarrhalis and H. influenzae in children. The colonization with H. influenzae at 13 months of age was associated with a higher risk of later development of childhood asthma.
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PMID:TLR4 Polymorphism, Nasopharyngeal Bacterial Colonization, and the Development of Childhood Asthma: A Prospective Birth-Cohort Study in Finnish Children. 3265 Apr 75