Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent studies of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) encephalitis have shown that in addition to well established white matter damage, the neocortex shows thinning, loss of large neurons and dendritic damage. In order to identify neuronal populations affected in HIV encephalitis and to determine how neuronal damage relates to the severity of HIV infection within the nervous system, we quantified parvalbumin (PV+) and neurofilament (NF+) immunoreactive neurons in the frontal cortex and hippocampus. We found that in the neocortex, the density of NF+ and PV+ neurons was independent of severity of HIV encephalitis, and therefore changes in these neuronal subsets did not account for previously reported neuronal loss. However, neuritic processes of PV+ neurons were fragmented, atrophic and in some cases distended. In contrast to the frontal cortex, there was a trend toward decreased density of PV+ neurons in the hippocampus which only reached significance in the CA3 layer where there was a 50-90% decrease in PV+ neurons. This decrease was closely correlated with the severity of HIV encephalitis. Double-label immunocytochemical analysis confirmed neuritic damage to interneurons. These results suggest that HIV encephalitis differentially involves specific subpopulations of neurons. Since direct HIV infection of neuronal cells was not detected, damage to PV+ cells and fibers may be indirectly mediated by cytokines released by HIV-infected microglia.
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PMID:Selective neuronal vulnerability in HIV encephalitis. 148 89

Clinical and pathological evidence of subcortical central nervous system (CNS) damage is observed commonly in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) encephalitis. Whether other CNS regions are also affected has not been well studied. We report neocortical damage in patients with HIV encephalitis. Using quantitative techniques, we demonstrate statistically significant thinning of the neocortex, with a loss of large cortical neurons. Qualitative and quantitative assessments of neocortical neuropil reveal a loss of synaptic density and vacuolation of dendritic processes. Failure to demonstrate an association of these changes with the presence of HIV antigens suggests that neocortical damage may be an indirect effect of HIV infection of the CNS.
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PMID:Neocortical damage during HIV infection. 190 52

A case of proximal subungual onychomycosis due to Microsporum canis in a 36-year-old woman is presented. The onychomycosis involved the left thumb and the little fingernails, with thinning of the nail plate and crumbling of the nail plate surface. A milky-white discoloration of the proximal portion of the left thumbnail was also evident. A 2-mm longitudinal nail biopsy showed a large number of fungal elements in the whole length of the nail plate. Fungal hyphae were more numerous in the ventral nail plate and produced detachment of the superficial nail plate. The nail bed was not invaded by fungal elements and was devoid of inflammatory changes. Proximal subungual onychomycosis is uncommon in immunocompetent individuals but has frequently been described in patients with AIDS. In our patient, in whom the proximal subungual onychomycosis was due to M. canis, there were no clinical or biochemical signs of immunodeficiency. Oral treatment with terbinafine, 250 mg/daily for 2 months, produced clinical and mycological cure.
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PMID:Proximal subungual onychomycosis due to Microsporum canis. 874 10

In human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1)-infected patients, a hypoperfusion is seen by SPECT analyses in different brain regions but a specific pattern for the predominance of a specific brain region has not been found. The vessels of the cerebral cortex of the frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) brains and control brains were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and lectin histochemistry. Immunohistochemistry was performed for collagen IV, laminin (basal lamina), and factor VIII (endothelial cell) and lectin histochemistry [Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA-I), Ulex europaeus agglutinin (UEA-I), wheatgerm agglutinin (WGA) and soybean agglutinin (SBA)] was used to study changes of glycoproteins in the endothelial cell membrane. Vessels were counted in the gray and white matter, and their staining intensity for the different antibodies and lectins was rated using a three-point scale. Immunoreactivity for collagen IV was reduced in AIDS brains, which may be related to thinning of the basal lamina of cerebral vessels, as has previously been shown by electron microscopy. Lectin histochemistry with SBA, UEA-I and WGA indicated loss of glycoproteins in the membrane of endothelial cells. The data from the present study show morphological changes of the endothelial cells and of the basal lamina in the brain of individuals with AIDS, and might represent the morphological sequelae of a disturbed blood-brain barrier, or may account for the hypoperfusion seen in SPECT analyses.
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PMID:Vascular changes in the cerebral cortex in HIV-1 infection. II. An immunohistochemical and lectinhistochemical investigation. 881 Nov 23

Lipodystrophies, characterized by reduction of subcutaneous fat over part or all of the body surface, are uncommon. Their causes are unknown. Recently, lipodystrophy has been reported in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients taking protease inhibitors, which have been recommended since 1996 as standard therapy for HIV disease in combination with nucleoside analogues. In these cases, lipodystrophy consists of an association of peripheral lipoatrophy with central adiposity. We report four HIV-infected men on protease inhibitors who developed a disfiguring lipodystrophy. In three of them, the protease inhibitor was administered for a mean duration of 21.5 months (range 19-23) with good immunological and virological responses. Patient 4 had been treated for 2 years with successive combinations of protease inhibitors with nucleoside analogues without success. The four patients progressively developed an increase in abdominal girth associated with fat wasting of the face and legs. Two of them had recurrent paronychia of the great toes. Triglyceride levels were moderately increased in all patients, and one had a slightly increased cholesterol level. One patient had elevated glucose and insulin plasma levels during a glucose tolerance test. In two patients, a deep biopsy taken from the thigh showed thinning of the subcutaneous fat without other morphological changes. Computed tomographic scans of the face and abdomen confirmed the loss of almost all subcutaneous fat of the cheek and temporal regions, and abdominal perivisceral fat accumulation. For patients 1-3, the protease inhibitor was replaced by a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor. Nine months later, dysmorphic changes had not regressed, but lipid abnormalities had returned to normal and the paronychia had disappeared.
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PMID:Lipodystrophy associated with protease inhibitors. 1073 57

Zidovudine (AZT) is currently used to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive women during pregnancy to prevent the prenatal transmission of HIV type 1 (HIV-1). However, AZT not only inhibits HIV replication but also affects the DNA polymerases of human cells; hence AZT is not recommended during the first trimester of pregnancy. The lung is a unique organ because it continues to grow and develop throughout fetal life. Using a human fetal lung organ culture system, we sought to determine the effect of AZT on morphogenesis and epithelial cytodifferentiation of developing alveoli. Lung tissues from three fetuses, 14-15 weeks gestational age, were grown in culture for 24 hours (day 0). AZT at a concentration of either 0.4, 4.0, 8.0, or 40.0 mumol/L was added on days 1, 5, and 10 of growth. The cultures were interrupted on days 6 and 15 and examined by light and electron microscopy for alveolar saccular development, interstitial thinning, and epithelial cell differentiation. On day 6 of growth the treated cultures demonstrated fewer alveolar saccules and a thicker, more cellular interstitium compared to the controls. After 15 days of growth the cultures treated with 0.4 mumol/L of AZT appeared structurally similar to the controls. The cultures treated with AZT concentrations of 4.0 to 40.0 mumol/L appeared unchanged from day 6, implying arrested maturation of the culture. However, epithelial cell differentiation was unaffected. We conclude that AZT at concentrations of 4.0 mumol/L and greater affects the structural development of the human fetal lung in vitro.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of zidovudine on human fetal lung development. 1136 85

Several small studies conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have shown that although progesterone appears to increase the likelihood of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) transmission in exposed monkeys, women using hormone contraceptives do not appear to have the same increased risk for HIV. The results, published in the May issue of Science, show little, if any, increase in the rate of HIV infection in women on Depo-Provera, an injectable contraception containing progestin, compared to those who were not taking it. Another study, conducted in Thailand, found similar results. However, this contrasts sharply with the results of a monkey study that found that rhesus monkeys given progesterone experienced significant thinning of the vaginal wall. Researchers are examining the effects of progesterone on the lining of the vagina. Researchers are finding some thinning, but not to a significant degree. The CDC continues to stress that only abstinence or the use of latex condoms can prevent the spread of AIDS.
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PMID:Progesterone-HIV link questioned by new studies. 1136 49

After a recent study showing that monkeys given progesterone are more likely to acquire simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), women's reproductive health experts are advising clinicians to stress the importance of condom use and calm worried women by pointing out that other studies are needed to understand the relationship between hormones and HIV risk. Researchers have learned that progestin causes a thinning of the vaginal wall--possibly an explanation for the increase in SIV infection in the monkey study. Because Depo-Provera and Norplant are long-acting progestin-based contraceptives, women using them to prevent pregnancy may be especially alarmed by reports of the monkey study. Women should be advised that using these contraceptives do protect them from pregnancy; women should assess the risk of contracting HIV or other sexually transmitted diseases; and women should modify their behavior to lower their risk.
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PMID:Advice for women seeking progesterone counseling. 1136 50

A recent National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded study indicating that rhesus monkeys implanted with long-acting progesterone pellets were more likely to become infected after vaginal exposure to simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) than their nontreated counterparts has raised concerns about the contribution of hormonal contraception to sexually transmitted disease (STD) risk. 14 of 18 monkeys treated with progesterone, compared with only 1 of 10 controls, developed SIV. Researchers speculated that progesterone-induced thinning of the vaginal epithelium provided a pathway for virus transmission. The NIH has emphasized that the possible increased SIV risk among animals does not necessarily imply a similar increased risk of HIV. Epidemiologic studies have failed to document any such link. Family Health International has stressed that the animal study findings are not sufficient to produce any change in the organization's position that oral contraceptives are a safe, effective family planning method. On the other hand, couples who require protection against both pregnancy and STDs must use two contraceptive methods, including latex condoms.
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PMID:Hormonal contraceptives and the risk of STDs. 1229 88

A 52-year-old black woman presented with a 5-year history of gradual swelling and slowed hair growth involving the vertex and both parietal regions of the scalp. Gradually, the swelling progressed to involve the entire scalp, only sparing a peripheral crown. She reported no history of trauma or medications. Slight pruritus of the involved area was the only accompanying symptom. There was no family history of a similar condition. Her past medical history included surgery for ovarian cysts, 10 years previously, and cholelithiasis. Physical examination revealed diffuse hair thinning and alopecia, more prominent along the vertex and parietal regions (Fig. 1a). There was no evidence of scalp inflammation, scaling, or increased hair fragility. The scalp was mildly tender on palpation and had a boggy, spongy consistency. The hairs which still remained in the involved areas were thin, short, and soft (Fig. 1b). The involved area was slightly hypopigmented when compared with adjacent noninvolved scalp. The rest of the physical examination was within normal limits. No abnormalities of the hair shaft were observed on microscopic examination of several plucked hairs. Laboratory investigations, including a complete blood cell count, blood chemistry, urinalysis, sedimentation rate, antinuclear antibodies, and serologic tests for syphilis, hepatitis B and C virus, and human immunodeficiency virus, were negative. A computed tomography scan of the skull demonstrated diffuse and regular thickening of subcutaneous fatty tissue of the scalp, disclosing a maximum scalp thickness of 15 mm at the vertex (Fig. 2). The biopsy from the vertex revealed a normal epidermis and dermis, with diffuse loss of hair follicles. The most striking feature consisted of a large increase in thickness of the subcutaneous fatty tissue (Fig. 3a). Pre-existing hair follicles were replaced by vertical fibrous tracts of lamellar fibroplasia with no inflammatory infiltrate (Fig. 3b). Adipocytes showed a normal size and shape, but the connective tissue septa, which are normally present separating the subcutaneous tissue into fat lobules, were lacking, and subcutaneous fatty tissue consisted of a continuous and diffuse sheet of mature adipocytes (Fig. 3c). Orcein stain revealed normal contents of elastic fibers with foci of condensation at the sites of disappeared pre-existing hair follicles (Fig. 3d). Colloidal iron and Alcian blue (pH 2.5) stains revealed no mucin deposits.
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PMID:Lipedematous alopecia: an uncommon clinicopathologic variant of nonscarring but permanent alopecia. 1847 57


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