202 research outputs found
B Non-Hodgkin lymphoma in a haemophilia patient with idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia.
We report here a case of an HIV-uninfected, anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) positive haemophiliac, who was transfused with blood and intermediate purity factor VIII concentrates. Since 1988, a progressive decline in the CD4+ T-cell count was recorded, and in 1993 a B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL) was diagnosed. The morphological appearance of the tumor with features of intermediate/mantle zone lymphoma, and the absence of EBV sequences within the tumor, ruled out the occurrence of a typical "opportunistic" lymphoma. However it is possible that the blood product therapy and its infectious complications may have played a role on immune function impairment
Vulvar Carcinoma in a 12-year-old girl with vertically Acquired Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection
We report the first case of a girl with vertically acquired human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, who developed invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva at 12 years of age. Lesions resembling bowenoid papulosis covered the perianal area as well. She underwent a nonmutilating surgical excision of the infiltrating lesion. More than 3 years later, her clinical condition is excellent, although dysplastic, noninfiltrating multifocal lesions persist. This case highlights the need to perform careful periodic genital examinations in all HIV-infected children and adolescents born to HIV-positive mothers
Chromosome damage induced in cord blood T-lymphocytes infected in vitro by HTLV-I.
Experiments were carried out to investigate whether the human T-lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I), alone or in combination with a chemical mutagen such as mitomycin C (MMC), has the capacity to damage host chromosomes. Cord-blood T lymphocytes (CBL) were infected by co-cultivation with lethally irradiated HTLV-I-producing cells. Infected and immortalized CBL were then studied for frequencies of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE), chromosome breaks and micronuclei. HTLV-I-infected cells had statistically higher baseline SCE, chromosome aberrations and micronucleus values than the uninfected control CBL. While MMC treatment further augmented these values both in control and in infected lymphocytes, the latter did not show dose-related increases, most likely because of the more pronounced MMC-induced delaying effect on cell progression to mitosis. In view of similar previous observations in mouse lymphocytes carrying the Moloney murine leukemia virus, it is suggested that expression of a common retrovirus gene product, such as the pol endonuclease, might be responsible for the cytogenetic abnormalities observed. In addition to the IL-2 autocrine loop, the direct induction of chromosome damage by HTLV-I in target lymphocytes may be related to the pathogenesis of malignancies associated with HTLV-I infection
An investigation of the perceived consequences to employees of reducing employment related trip end choices in Cape Town
Includes bibliographical references.In South African, the bench mark for transport expenditure is 10 of monthly income. In the global South “transport poverty” is not a foreign concept considering that most individuals use more than 10 of their income on transport. The driver of these high transport costs is the positioning of economic activities relative to residential areas. Additionally, concerns over Peak Oil’s impact on fuel prices means transport will become even more unaffordable in the future. Through a literature review, this thesis understands the precariousness of transport costs and how they are exacerbated by long commuting distances between places of residence and job locations. This sets the foundation of this thesis and helps in understanding how city structures and travel behaviour are weaved together. This thesis addresses the issue of affordable transport by arguing that providing individuals with a large catchment area from which they can choose jobs is not always beneficial. It builds an argument by borrowing from the “too much” choice theory which posits that the availability of many options does not result in benefits and that there is a point of sufficiency when providing choice. It further argues that access to a larger catchment area in job search is accompanied by a decrease in utility. To test this hypothesis, a stated preference survey was carried among 400 individuals within the Cape Town area in the low and lower middle income groups. From various literatures, it is posited that these individuals have limited options in terms of transport flexibility, in that respect they are identified as the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and Peak oil
Immortalization of human T lymphocytes by HTLV-I: phenotypic characteristics of target cells and kinetics of virus integration and expression.
In-vitro infection of normal human lymphocytes with HTLV-I (human T-cell lymphotropic retrovirus type I) has been carried out to study the target cell specificity and the kinetics of infection. Cord blood (CBL) and adult peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) have been co-cultivated with irradiated HTLV-I donor cells (MT2 and C91PL lines). Established ('immortalized') HTLV-I positive cell lines were obtained only from CBL: in comparison with PBL, a less mature phenotype of T-cell subsets and a lower interferon-gamma production was evidenced in CBL. A progressive variation of differentiation antigen representation and of exogenous T-cell growth factor (TCGF, interleukin-2, IL-2) medium concentration was observed with increasing time from infection. The four established lines obtained showed a predominant T3+, T4+, T8-, Tac+ phenotype and a reduced TCGF requirement. Studies on kinetics of HTLV-I infection showed that p19 and p24 viral antigens became expressed after a lag phase of 5 weeks. DNA Southern blot analysis indicated that a shift from polyclonal to monoclonal pattern of proviral integration occurred with time of culture, both complete and defective copies being transmitted from donor to recipient cell
Prevalence of HIV infection in a cohort of patients with congenital coagulation defects of the prothrombin complex factors.
Twenty-seven patients suffering from congenital coagulation defects of the prothrombin complex factors were investigated: six had haemophilia B; 14, factor VII defect; four, factor X defect; and three, factor II defect. Nineteen patients (70.3%) had previously received plasma and/or clotting factors concentrates. Among these, markers of hepatitis B infection (HBV) were present in five cases (26.3%) and hepatitis C (HCV) antibodies were found in seven cases (36.8%). The HIV1 prevalence was similarly high. In fact, five patients (26.3%), previously infused with factor IX or prothrombin complex factors concentrates, developed HIV1 infection. No patient with factor VII deficiency became HIV1 positive, despite the administration of unheated factor VII concentrates and the consequent HBV and HCV contamination. In the HIV1 positive group, three patients showed a false positivity for HIV2 antibodies. Five years after seroconversion, three patients developed AIDS (stage IV) and died, one had persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (stage III), and one with post-hepatitis liver cirrhosis was asymptomatic (stage II) for HIV infection. The significant decrease in total white cells, T4 lymphocytes and platelet counts and increase of beta-2-microglobulin and neopterin levels confirmed the prognostic value of these markers for the progression of HIV1 disease. Only one HIV1 negative transfused patient developed anti-HTLV-I p19 antibodie
Association of p53 gene and protein alterations with metastases in colorectal cancer.
IF: 4,269
Abstract: Using monoclonal antibody PAb 1801, p53 protein was detected in the neoplastic cells of 39 (46.9%) of 83 colorectal carcinomas studied. Patients with p53+ tumors showed a higher incidence of lymph node and liver metastases (p = 0.035); in patients whose tumors were located in the rectosigmoid, p53 expression also correlated with a more advanced stage according to Dukes' classification (p = 0.015) as well as nodal (p = 0.006) and liver (p = 0.019) metastases. Following amplification of exons 5 to 8 of the p53 gene by means of the polymerase chain reaction technique, single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis disclosed an anomalous migration pattern in 23 of the 39 p53+ tumors and in four of the 35 p53 - tumors analyzed. Sequence analysis showed G:C --> A:T transitions in 63.6%, G:C --> T:A and G:C --> C:G trans versions in 18.2%, deletions and insertions in 13.6%, and A:T --> G:C transitions in 4.6% of the cases. Loss of heterozygosity was studied in the DNA of 79 patients; allelic loss was found in 29 (49.1%) of the 59 informative patients. Loss of heterozygosity was correlated with p53 overexpression (p = 0.0002) as well as with the presence of mutations as detected by single strand conformation polymorphism analysis (p = 0.0024)
A CD30-POSITIVE T-CELL LINE ESTABLISHED FROM AN AGGRESSIVE ANAPLASTIC LARGE-CELL LYMPHOMA, ORIGINALLY DIAGNOSED AS HODGKINS-DISEASE
Ten months following the diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease (HD), a 46-year-old woman presented cutaneous and leukemic involvement by CD30+ anaplastic large cells, from which a continuously growing, exogenous growth factor-independent T cell line was established. The cultured cells are phenotypically and genotypically T cell in type, negative for EBV, HTLV-I and HTLV-II viral sequences, and release soluble CD30 into the supernatant. Karyotype analysis disclosed several chromosomal abnormalities, but none on chromosome 5q. The involvement of the short arm of chromosome 17 prompted us to investigate the TP53 gene by means of the polymerase chain reaction single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis, but no alterations were found in exons 5-8
First case in Italy of fatal AIDS in a hemophiliac.
The first fatal case of AIDS in an hemophiliac observed in Italy is reported. The propositus is a 53-year-old hemophilia A patient who died on the 8th December, 1984. AIDS was documented clinically and in the laboratory by serum antibodies to HTLV-III detected by ELISA and Western blot assays. A progressive intellectual worsening of the patient due to diffuse cerebral atrophy was followed by CT scan, EEG and by evaluation of proper neurological signs and symptom
Vulvar carcinoma in a 12-year-old girl with vertically acquired human immunodeficiency virus infection
We report the first case of a girl with vertically acquired human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, who developed invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva at 12 years of age. Lesions resembling bowenoid papulosis covered the perianal area as well. She underwent a nonmutilating surgical excision of the infiltrating lesion. More than 3 years later, her clinical condition is excellent, although dysplastic, noninfiltrating multifocal lesions persist. This case highlights the need to perform careful periodic genital examinations in all HIV-infected children and adolescents born to HIV-positive mother
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