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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (
scoliosis
)
8,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To clarify the pathogenicity of Akabane virus for ovine embryos, pregnant ewes were inoculated intravenously with the virus. As a result, all of them were affected with viremia and showed an increase in neutralizing antibody 2 weeks after inoculation. The virus was recovered from many organs of embryos which were inoculated with it at 29--45 days of pregnancy and sacrificed 9--30 days later. In particular, some of these embryos which were sacrificed 15 days after inoculation were found suffering from systemic infection. A large quantity of virus was recovered from the organs all over the body of them. No virus, however was recovered from any organ of embryos which were inoculated with the virus at 81 days of pregnancy and sacrificed 30 days later. Abnormal changes were observed in neonatal lambs born from ewes inoculated with the virus at 30--50 days of pregnancy. They were especially severe when the virus was inoculated at 30 days of pregnancy. They consisted of ankylosis of the limbs,
scoliosis
, hydranencephaly, porencephaly, stillbirth with dwarfism, and death after birth with dwarfism and weakness. Nothing abnormal was found in any neonatal lambs born from ewes inoculated with the virus at 91--101 days of pregnancy. When embryos exceeded 64 days of intra-uterine life more than 29 days after virus inoculation, it was possible to detect immunoglobulin, IgM or IgG or both, and antibody from the serum. Attempts failed to detect either immunoglobulin from embryos less than 59 days of intrauterine life. No
IgA
was detected from the serum of any embryo. In almost all the neonatal lambs born from ewes inoculated with the virus at 28--101 days of pregnancy, neutralizing antibody was detected from the serum at the time of birth.
...
PMID:Congenital abnormalities in newborn lambs following Akabane virus infection in pregnant ewes. 53 48
A six-month-old British female, living in Glasgow was admitted in June 1986 with a four-day history of fever and lower limb weakness following immunisation with oral polio and triple (DTP) vaccines. Examination revealed paralysis of all limbs, facial muscles and right diaphragm,
scoliosis
, opsoclonus and ocular flutter. Poliovirus types 1, 2 and 3, isolated from her stool specimens were all vaccine-like strains. Her serial serum
IgA
levels were persistently low and salivary
IgA
was undetectable. This appears to be the first fully authenticated case of poliovaccine damage in Scotland. It is unclear whether the selective IgA deficiency contributed to her vulnerability. It is essential to investigate elaborately and process viral isolates in every suspected case of acute poliomyelitis so as to determine the dimension and ramifications of poliovaccine damage in the UK population which is known to be rather apprehensive about vaccine dangers.
...
PMID:Vaccine-induced polioencephalomyelitis in Scotland. 284 13
A 17-year-old female with Goltz's syndrome was examined because of visual acuity loss in her right eye. Ocular examination revealed microcornea, iris, choroid and optic disc coloboma in the right eye. There were several erthematous and hyperpigmented areas on the body. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the orbits and brain demonstrated right optic nerve hypoplasia and diffuse cortical and cerebellar atrophy. Skeletal manifestations were short stature,
scoliosis
, syndactyly, clinodactyly, and osteopathia striata. Dental defects included hypodontia, developmental defects, and malocclusion. There were multiple papillomatous lesions on the lids and perioral skin and the nose was asymmetric. Her mental development was apparently normal. She had left bifid ureter and renal pelvis, scant hair on the pubic and genital region, and poor breast development. Histopathologic examination of the biopsy taken from a characteristic skin lesion revealed attenuated epidermis, hypoplastic dermis, and subcutaneous fat close to epidermis. Immunofluorescence staining was negative for IgG, IgM,
IgA
, C3, C4, fibrin, and albumin. Ultrastructural examination showed that no viral particles were present. Prometaphase chromosome analysis revealed a normal 46, XX female karyotype. Cortical and cerebellar atrophy can occur in a patient with Goltz's syndrome.
...
PMID:Focal dermal hypoplasia (Goltz's syndrome). 936 12
The recent identification of tissue transglutaminase (tTG) as the autoantigen for celiac disease-associated anti-endomysial antibodies (EMA) has allowed the use of rapid immunoassay to detect the presence of autoantibodies, anti-tTG, in the serum of patients. In this study, we examined the prevalence of IgG or
IgA
anti-tTG in sera from patients with elevated levels of IgM rheumatoid factors, which are autoantibodies reactive with the Fc portion of IgG. We report here on four cases of anti-tTG positivity for patients with elevated IgM rheumatoid factor (RF) without evidence of celiac sprue. The study population consisted of 65 patients (26 men, 39 women; mean age, 49 years; range 4 - 92 years) with elevated RF (>20 U/ml ), and 23 healthy subjects (12 men, 11 women; mean age, 46 years; range, 21 - 54 years). IgG and
IgA
anti- tTG levels were detected using a commercially available ELISA kit (Immuno-Biological Laboratories, Germany). Out of 65 patients, one (1.5%) and three (4.6%) patients were positive for IgG and
IgA
anti-tTG antibodies, respectively, and this was a higher frequency than occurred in healthy subjects (0/23). The clinical features of the four cases positive for IgG or
IgA
anti-tTG were as follows: The first case (female, 63 yrs) positive for
IgA
anti-tTG antibody suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, type II diabetes mellitus, iron deficiency anemia and gastric indigestion without symptoms of malabsorption. She denied any gluten sensitivity on her diet. Her esophagogastroduodenoscopic biopsy showed mucosal atrophy with no elongated crypts or infiltration of inflammatory cells in the lamina propria. The remaining three cases positive for anti-tTG antibodies had interstitial pneumonia, a herniated lumbar disc, and mild
scoliosis
, respectively. They all denied any malabsorption symptoms or gluten sensitivity. Jejunal biopsy could not be performed in all four cases.
...
PMID:Tissue transglutaminase autoantibodies in patients with IgM rheumatoid factors. 1551 14