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)

Serum IgG contains 4 subclasses, IgG1 (60-66%), IgG2 (20-30%), IgG3 (less than or equal to 5%) and IgG4. Individual subclasses vary with respect to their physicochemical and biological properties. IgG subclass concentrations in serum are age dependent. IgG1 and IgG3 reach near to adult levels around the age of 3, IgG2 and IgG4 after the age of 6. Antibodies of certain specificities generally belong to a certain isotype (subclass) due to the isotype restriction. Patients with subclass deficiencies often suffer from recurrent infections. Those with IgG2 deficiency coften occurring with IgA and IgG4 deficiency) develop recurrent infection of the upper and lower respiratory tract often caused by pyogenic microorganisms (Haemophilus, Pneumo-(occus). Since early initiation of IVIG substitution therapy has a beneficial effect on long term prognosis the importance of early diagnosis is apparent.
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PMID:[Clinico-immunologic aspects of IgG subclass deficiency]. 268 36

Serum IgG contains 4 subclasses, IgG1 (60-66%), IgG2 (20-30%), IgG3 (less than or equal to 5%) and IgG4. Individual subclasses vary with respect to their physicochemical and biological properties. IgG subclass concentrations in serum are age dependent. IgG1 and IgG3 reach near to adult levels around the age of 3, IgG2 and IgG4 after the age of 6. Antibodies of certain specificities generally belong to a certain isotype (subclass) due to the isotype restriction. Patients with subclass deficiencies often suffer from recurrent infections. Those with IgG2 deficiency (often occurring with IgA and IgG4 deficiency) develop recurrent infection of the upper and lower respiratory tract often caused by pyogenic microorganisms (Haemophilus, Pneumococcus). Since early initiation of IVIG substitution therapy has a beneficial effect on long term prognosis the importance of early diagnosis is apparent.
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PMID:[Clinico-immunologic aspects of IgG subclass deficiency]. 305 27

Serum immunoglobulins and IgG subclasses were measured in 30 children with recurrent infections. Seven patients had low IgG2 concentrations (less than 3SD below the geometric mean for age). Four of these seven patients had normal concentrations of IgG, IgA and IgM, and thus would have been considered immunologically normal by routine criteria. The seven children with IgG2 deficiency had more severe infections than the 23 children with normal IgG2. Five children had recurrent pneumonia or sinusitis, one had recurrent invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b infections, and one had severe pneumococcal meningitis. Their immunologic abnormalities were heterogeneous. Two children had isolated IgG2 deficiency, two had IgG2-IgG4 deficiency, one had IgG2-IgG4-IgA deficiency, one had IgG2-IgA deficiency, and one had severe IgG1-IgG2 deficiency with abnormal T cell function and thrombocytopenia. Thus IgG2 deficiency occurs frequently among children with recurrent infections, and is associated with a variety of clinical and immunologic abnormalities.
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PMID:Spectrum of IgG2 subclass deficiency in children with recurrent infections: prospective study. 370 8

Selective IgG subclass (IgGSc) deficiencies are frequently found in association with recurrent infections in childhood. IgG1 deficiency is the most severe and is associated with features typical of panhypogammaglobulinaemia. Immunoglobulin replacement therapy is usually required. IgG2 deficiency is associated with recurrent infections with encapsulated bacteria such as Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pneumoniae. IgG2 deficiency may be transient in children under five years of age and patients improve with antibiotics and immunisation. IgG3 and IgG4 deficiency are commonly found in children with recurrent infections and may indicate a disordered immune system since absence of these antibodies alone appears insufficient to cause symptoms. Children may also have selective IgGSc deficiencies in the absence of recurrent infections. This is explained by compensatory factors in other parts of the immune system. Measurement of IgGSc levels should be based on highly specific polyclonal antisera which show no IgGSc cross-reactivity. Most monoclonal antibodies are unsatisfactory since allotypes are detected variably, leading to excess reporting of IgGSc deficiencies and Mabs cannot be used for nephelometric or turbidimetric methods.
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PMID:IgG subclasses in childhood infections. 761 65

In order to define abnormalities of humoral immunity which determine susceptibility to respiratory tract infections in IgA-deficient adults, serum IgG subclass concentrations, and serum concentrations of pneumococcal antibodies and Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) antibodies sera from IgA-deficient adults with and without susceptibility to respiratory tract infections were compared. Infection susceptibility was not related to the degree of IgA deficiency, but was related to deficiency of IgG4 and, to a lesser extent, IgG2, as well as to low basal serum concentrations of pneumococcal polysaccharide antibodies. The combination of IgG2 and/or IgG4 deficiency and a non-protective basal serum concentration of antibody against two or more pneumococcal polysaccharides was present in the serum of six of 12 (50%) patients with severe infections, but only one of 44 (2%) patients without infections. Furthermore, the preservation of antibody responses against the most immunogenic pneumococcal polysaccharide type 3, but not against the less immunogenic types 7F, 9N and 14, in patients with severe infections suggested that abnormalities of pneumococcal polysaccharide antibody responses might include defects of affinity maturation.
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PMID:Severity of infections in IgA deficiency: correlation with decreased serum antibodies to pneumococcal polysaccharides and decreased serum IgG2 and/or IgG4. 769 22