Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 21
-year-old man presented to our emergency department with a two-day complaint of painful swelling and protrusion of the tongue, odynophagia, dysphagia, and difficulty with speech. A nonfluctuant area of tongue swelling was identified; needle aspiration of this site produced 5 mL of pus, with considerable amelioration of symptoms. Culture of the aspirate subsequently grew
Hemophilus
parainfluenzae, the first such reported case of this pathogen in a glossal abscess. Glossal abscess is a rare clinical entity that may result in airway compromise and disseminated infection to other systems. The presence of a glossal abscess should be considered in all cases of tongue swelling.
...
PMID:Glossal abscess. 273 88
Respiratory autonomic beta-adrenergic receptor function was investigated in isolated tracheal spirals of guinea pigs receiving different diets. Comparison was made between control and
Haemophilus
influenzae treated animals; this latter group serving as animal model for atopy. The different semi-synthetic diets (35 energy%) varying in their linoleic acid contents (5.85, 11.25 and 22.05 en%), exerted profound effects on membrane fatty acid composition. No influence of these diets on either food intake or growth could be detected.
Isoprenaline
induced relaxation of guinea pig tracheal spirals was maximal in the dietary group receiving moderate linoleic acid (11.25 en%). Both the addition and the withdrawal of linoleic acid to this diet resulted in a significant impairment of beta-adrenergic receptor function, to the same extent as can be induced by
Haemophilus
influenzae. The results are discussed in view of current concepts for atopy.
...
PMID:Effects of dietary linoleic acid on beta-adrenergic responsiveness of the guinea pig respiratory system. 285 74
Bronchial hyperreactivity to histamine 4 days following vaccination with the human respiratory pathogen
Haemophilus
influenzae was tested in two in vivo and one in vitro models. Conscious vaccinated guinea pigs exposed to aerosolized histamine became asphyxial significantly faster than saline-treated controls. Also the bronchoconstriction in anaesthetized guinea pigs as a result of i.v. histamine was significantly potentiated in the H. influenzae pretreated group.
Isoprenaline
(30 micrograms/kg) partially inhibited the bronchoconstriction. The difference in histamine sensitivity between the two groups however remained. Protection against bronchoconstriction by atropine on the other hand was significantly enhanced in the vaccinated animals. This suggests a hyperreactivity of the parasympathetic, cholinergic pathways as a result of H. influenzae vaccination.
...
PMID:Bronchial hyperreactivity to histamine induced by Haemophilus influenzae vaccination. 633 51
The crystal structure of the iron-free (apo) form of the
Haemophilus
influenzae Fe(3+)-binding protein (hFbp) has been determined to 1.75 A resolution. Information from this structure complements that derived from the holo structure with respect to the delineation of the process of iron binding and release.
A 21
degrees rotation separates the two structural domains when the apo form is compared with the holo conformer, indicating that upon release of iron, the protein undergoes a change in conformation by bending about the central beta-sheet hinge. A surprising finding in the apo-hFbp structure was that the ternary binding site anion, observed in the crystals as phosphate, remained bound. In solution, apo-hFbp bound phosphate with an affinity K(d) of 2.3 x 10(-3) M. The presence of this ternary binding site anion appears to arrange the C-terminal iron-binding residues conducive to complementary binding to Fe(3+), while residues in the N-terminal binding domain must undergo induced fit to accommodate the Fe(3+) ligand. These observations suggest a binding process, the first step of which is the binding of a synergistic anion such as phosphate to the C-terminal domain. Next, iron binds to the preordered half-site on the C-terminal domain. Finally, the presence of iron organizes the N-terminal half-site and closes the interdomain hinge. The use of the synergistic anion and this iron binding process results in an extremely high affinity of the Fe(3+)-binding proteins for Fe(3+) (nFbp K'(eff) = 2.4 x 10(18) M(-1)). This high-affinity ligand binding process is unique among the family of bacterial periplasmic binding proteins and has interesting implications in the mechanism of iron removal from the Fe(3+)-binding proteins during FbpABC-mediated iron transport across the cytoplasmic membrane.
...
PMID:Crystallographic and biochemical analyses of the metal-free Haemophilus influenzae Fe3+-binding protein. 1174 38
The aim of the study was to assess the clinical features of Q fever pneumonia in Japan. Four cases of Q fever pneumonia (a female aged 21 and males aged 53, 74 and 87 years) who were diagnosed using the PanBio ELISA test kit, were assessed and their clinical features are described. The frequency of Q fever pneumonia among our cases of community-acquired pneumonia was 1.4% (4/284).
A 21
-year-old female had a typical case of the disease with (i) a history of owning a cat, (ii) onset with fever and dry cough, (iii) multiple soft infiltrative shadows on CXR, (iv) a normal white blood cell count, and (v) good response to clarithromycin. The pneumonias in the other three cases were considered mixed infections with bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Haemophilus
influenzae. Their clinical features included the following: (i) an elderly person with an underlying disease, (ii) onset with fever and purulent sputum, (iii) coarse crackles on auscultation, (iv) infiltrative shadows and pleural effusion on CXR, (v) increased white blood cells with elevated BUN and hyponatraemia, and (vi) modest responses to combined therapy with carbapenem and minocycline. Our observations suggest that two types of pneumonia caused by Coxiella burnetti exist; one with the usual features of atypical pneumonia, and the other presenting with the clinical features of bacterial pneumonia in the elderly due to mixed bacterial infection.
...
PMID:Clinical features of Q fever pneumonia. 1518 83
Although rare, serious adverse effects may be seen after vaccination. Especially, the whole-cell pertussis vaccine has been held responsible for neurological side effects, as the most important problem in vaccination. With the advancement in vaccination technologies, whole-cell pertussis vaccine has been replaced by acellular pertussis vaccine, and neurological side effects have been significantly reduced. Herein, we present a 2-month-old male infant who suffered from generalized tonic-clonic seizures many times, possibly due to acellular pertussis after pentavalent vaccination, including diphtheria, acellular pertussis, tetanus, inactive polio,
Haemophilus
influenzae type B, and conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (BCG, DaBT-
IPA
-Hib, CPV).
...
PMID:An infant who suffered seizures many times after pentavalent vaccination: A case report. 3247 6