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Query: UNIPROT:P05231 (
interleukin-6
)
23,907
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Levels of
interleukin-6
and tumor necrosis factor alpha were measured in cerebrospinal fluids from patients with
meningitis
.
Interleukin-6
was increased in aseptic and bacterial meningitis, whereas tumor necrosis factor alpha was increased only in bacterial meningitis. We concluded that measurement of cytokines in cerebrospinal fluid may be useful for the rapid diagnosis of
meningitis
.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of cytokine measurement for detection of meningitis. 932 30
We measured the levels of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
), albumin, C-reactive protein (CRP) and alpha 2 macroglobulin (alpha 2M), all of which have different spectrums of molecular weight, in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum in 121 patients to evaluate damage to the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCB) in
meningitis
. There was an extraordinary high level of
IL-6
in the CSF when patients had bacterial or viral meningitis, but the level returned to a normal range within a week in almost all of these cases. There were no significant differences in CSF albumin levels among the different disease groups. The CRP level in CSF is considered to correlate with the serum level, and CSF CRP was higher in bacterial meningitis than in viral meningitis, however, CRP in CSF was increased in some of the infectious diseases without
meningitis
. The alpha 2M in CSF, which tends to be at extraordinarily high levels when there is damage to the BCB, correlated highly with CSF cell counts. CSF
IL-6
seemed to be a useful indicator to identify the acute active phase of
meningitis
. CRP and alpha 2M in CSF are considered to be useful to differentiate bacterial meningitis, bacterial infection without
meningitis
and viral meningitis. Extraordinarily high levels of alpha 2M, which has a high molecular weight, in CSF is indicative of BCB damage.
...
PMID:Levels of interleukin-6, CRP and alpha 2 macroglobulin in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum as indicator of blood-CSF barrier damage. 935 Mar 34
Streptococcus suis capsular type 2 is an important etiological agent of swine
meningitis
, and it is also a zoonotic agent. Since mononuclear phagocytes have been suggested to play a central role in the pathogenesis of
meningitis
, the objective of the present study was to evaluate the capacity of whole killed S. suis type 2 organisms to induce the release of the proinflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) by murine macrophages. Induction of cytokines was evaluated in the presence or absence of phorbol ester (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate [PMA]) costimulation. Results showed that S. suis type 2 stimulated the production of both cytokines in a concentration- and time-dependent fashion. Although large doses of bacteria were required for maximal cytokine release, titers were similar to those obtained with the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) positive control. An increase in cytokine release was observed with both S. suis and LPS with PMA costimulation. Experiments with cytochalasin-treated macrophages showed that the stimulation of cytokine production was phagocytosis independent. When macrophages were stimulated with an unencapsulated mutant, an increase in TNF production was observed, but the absence of the capsule had no effect on
IL-6
production. In fact, whereas purified capsular polysaccharide of S. suis failed to induce cytokine release, purified S. suis cell wall induced both TNF and, to a lesser extent,
IL-6
.
IL-6
secretion probably requires some distinct stimuli which differ from those of TNF. Finally, the S. suis putative virulence factors suilysin and extracellular protein EF showed no cytokine-stimulating activity. The ability of S. suis to trigger macrophages to produce proinflammatory cytokines may have an important role in the initiation and development of
meningitis
caused by this microorganism.
...
PMID:Heat-killed Streptococcus suis capsular type 2 strains stimulate tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-6 production by murine macrophages. 1045 11
Gram-positive Streptococcus pneumoniae is the major pathogen causing lethal
meningitis
in adults. We used pneumococcal cell walls (PCW) to investigate microglial consequences of a bacterial challenge and to determine the role of serum in the activation process. PCW caused the characteristic induction of an outwardly rectifying K+ channel (IK+(OR)), together with a concomitant suppression of the constitutively expressed inward rectifier K+ current, and evoked the release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha),
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
), IL-12, KC, macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP) 1alpha and MIP-2. Serum presence strongly facilitated the PCW effects, similarly as observed for lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from gram-negative Escherichia coli. The inflammatory cytokine, interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) induced the same electrophysiological changes, but independent of serum. Recombinant LPS binding protein (LBP) could partially replace serum activity in LPS stimulations. In contrast, neither LBP nor an antibody-mediated blockade of the LPS receptor, CD14 had significant influences on PCW-inducible changes. Cell surface interactions and cofactor involvement in microglial activation by gram-positive bacteria are thus distinct from the mechanisms employed by LPS. Moreover, tyrphostin AG126, a protein kinase inhibitor that prevents activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase, p42MAPK (ERK2), potently blocked the PCW-stimulated cytokine release while having only a limited effect on LPS-inducible cytokines. In contrast, AG126 did not influence IK+(OR) inductions. This indicates that PCW recruits more than 1 intracellular signaling pathway to trigger the various responses and that different bacterial agents signal through both common and individual routes during microglial activation.
...
PMID:Microglial activation by components of gram-positive and -negative bacteria: distinct and common routes to the induction of ion channels and cytokines. 1051 31
Cryptococcosis is an hematogenously disseminated meningoencephalitis during which the relationship between the disease severity and the immune response remains unclear. We thus analyzed, by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, proinflammatory (tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-alpha] and
interleukin-6
[IL-6]) and anti-inflammatory (IL-10) cytokine levels in plasma at the time of diagnosis in 51 AIDS patients with culture-proven cryptococcosis. We used a murine model to determine the correlation between cytokine levels and fungal burden in blood and tissues and the kinetics of the immune response and of the formation of cerebral lesions. In AIDS patients, plasma TNF-alpha and IL-10, but not IL-6, levels were significantly higher in the case of fungemia or disseminated infection than in their absence, whereas the presence of
meningitis
had no influence on these levels. In mice, none of these cytokines were detected within the first day after inoculation. Later on, TNF-alpha and IL-10, but not IL-6, levels in plasma correlated significantly with the fungal burden in the blood and spleen but not the brain. In the brain, cytokine levels were low compared to those in other compartments, and tissue lesions and a degree of infection similar to those observed in humans were seen, further suggesting the relevance of this experimental model. Thus, AIDS patients with cryptococcosis produce an immune response that reflects the dissemination but not the meningeal involvement. This murine model of disseminated cryptococcosis can be used to investigate the pathophysiology of cryptococcosis and new therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Cytokine profiles of AIDS patients are similar to those of mice with disseminated Cryptococcus neoformans infection. 1056 43
An infant with neonatal severe Citrobacter koseri (formerly Citrobacter diversus) meningoencephalitis developed necrosis with multicystic regression of both hemispheres. The ventriculitis persisted over months in spite of antibiotic therapy. The treatment succeeded with cefotaxime in a high dose (300 mg/kg/day) without surgical intervention. The infant had been previously treated with cefotaxime (200 mg/kg/day) over 5 weeks. High levels of CSF
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) permitted to attribute persisting CSF pleocytosis in spite of sterile CSF cultures to chronic infection and not to reminiscence of brain necrosis. This report reveals two main points. On the one hand, the importance of therapy monitoring with
IL-6
in CSF for the consequent treatment of Citrobacter
meningitis
and on the other hand, high-dose cefotaxime (300 mg/kg/day) treatment of Citrobacter ventriculitis, which succeeded without surgical intervention.
...
PMID:CSF interleukin-6 in neonatal Citrobacter ventriculitis after meningitis. 1096 34
This study assessed the effects of 2 different inhibitors of NF-kappaB activation on central nervous system complications and clinical symptoms in an advanced stage of experimental pneumococcal
meningitis
: the calpain inhibitor I N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal (ALLN), which interferes with IkappaB proteolysis, and BAY 11-7085, which inhibits IkappaB phosphorylation. Pneumococcal meningitis was associated with an increase in NF-kappaB activity, as determined by immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis of rat brains 24 h after infection. Treatment with ALLN or BAY 11-7085 improved the clinical scores of infected rats, compared with those of untreated infected rats. This beneficial effect was parallelled by a significant reduction of the increase in intracranial pressure, blood-brain barrier permeability (as measured by the Evans blue-extravasation technique), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis, CSF
interleukin-6
levels, and impairment of cerebrovascular CO(2) reactivity and autoregulation. Thus, pharmacologic interference with NF-kappaB activation might be a possible target for adjunctive therapy in bacterial meningitis.
...
PMID:Pharmacologic interference with NF-kappaB activation attenuates central nervous system complications in experimental Pneumococcal meningitis. 1102 66
Interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum were measured in two immuno-competent children with herpes zoster
meningitis
, who had vesicles, fever, headache and vomiting before admission. The causative agent was identified as varicella zoster virus (VZV) by detecting an increased antibody index in the serum and specific DNA (by polymerase chain reaction) in the CSF. Both patients fully recovered after treatment with acyclovir. The CSF
IL-6
levels were high (260.1 pg/ml, 106.1 pg/ml) at the acute stage and thereafter showed a rapid recovery. The serum
IL-6
levels were normal. The increased
IL-6
level in the CSF may reflect intrathecal inflammatory response following invasion of VZV into the central nervous system.
...
PMID:[Interleukin-6 in the cerebrospinal fluid of two patients with herpes zoster meningitis]. 1139 72
Toll-like receptor-2 (TLR2) mediates host responses to gram-positive bacterial wall components. TLR2 function was investigated in a murine Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis model in wild-type (wt) and TLR2-deficient (TLR2(-/-)) mice. TLR2(-/-) mice showed earlier time of death than wt mice (P<.02). Plasma
interleukin-6
levels and bacterial numbers in blood and peripheral organs were similar for both strains. With ceftriaxone therapy, none of the wt but 27% of the TLR2(-/-) mice died (P<.04). Beyond 3 hours after infection, TLR2(-/-) mice had higher bacterial loads in brain than did wt mice, as assessed with luciferase-tagged S. pneumoniae by means of a Xenogen-CCD (charge-coupled device) camera. After 24 h, tumor necrosis factor activity was higher in cerebrospinal fluid of TLR2(-/-) than wt mice (P<.05) and was related to increased blood-brain barrier permeability (Evans blue staining, P<.02). In conclusion, the lack of TLR2 was associated with earlier death from
meningitis
, which was not due to sepsis but to reduced brain bacterial clearing, followed by increased intrathecal inflammation.
...
PMID:Toll-like receptor 2-deficient mice are highly susceptible to Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis because of reduced bacterial clearing and enhanced inflammation. 1219 14
We examined whether or not NF-kappaB, a factor that regulates expression of the genes that code for pro-inflammatory cytokines, is activated in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cells to investigate the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines by CSF cells in patients with
meningitis
. Western blotting demonstrated that NF-kappaB was more activated in CSF cells of patients with bacterial meningitis than in those of patients with aseptic meningitis. NF-kappaB was hardly activated in carcinomatous meningitis. The NF-kappaB activation in CSF cells of patients with
meningitis
tended to be correlated with the CSF
interleukin-6
concentration. Our data suggested that CSF cells produce pro-inflammatory cytokines through NF-kappaB activation in
meningitis
, and that increased NF-kappaB activation in CSF cells indicate infectious meningitis rather than carcinomatous meningitis.
...
PMID:NF-kappaB activation in cerebrospinal fluid cells from patients with meningitis. 1239 10
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