Search results for "Pathogen"

showing 10 items of 1657 documents

Pathogen safety of long-term treatments for bleeding disorders: (un)predictable risks and evolving threats.

2013

Substantial improvements in the safety of blood and plasma products for the management of bleeding disorders have been achieved in recent decades. This has led some clinicians to believe that the infectious threat is over and that inhibitor formation is the foremost complication of hemophilia therapy. On the contrary, elimination of all microbes from blood is difficult, potentially impossible, and there are always threats from emerging pathogens. The risk of infection transmission is also increasing due to greater exposure to products, increasing prophylaxis and high-dose regimens for immune tolerance, and longevity of hemophilia patients. Current products can be considered "reasonably safe…

medicine.medical_specialtyLong term treatmentContext (language use)Hemophilia AInfectionsEmerging infectionsSAFERHumans; Blood Coagulation Disorders; Hemophilia A; Blood Transfusion; InfectionmedicineHumansBlood TransfusionIntensive care medicinePathogenTransmission (medicine)business.industryRisk of infectionTransfusion ReactionHematologyBlood Coagulation Disordersmedicine.diseaseSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia e Microbiologia ClinicaThrombosisSurgeryHemostasisPlasma productsBlood safetyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessInfectionSeminars in thrombosis and hemostasis
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A case of guillain-barre syndrome in a patient with non small cell lung cancer treated with chemotherapy

2006

Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) is a demyelinating polyneuropathy of probable autoimmune pathogenesis characterized by rapidly progressive symmetric paralysis. In the literature some cases of GBS associated with anticancer chemotherapy are reported. We present a case of a 55-year old woman who complained of progressive motor deficit in four limbs, areflexia in lower limbs and facial nerve paralysis one week after beginning cisplatin-gemcitabine chemotherapy for metastatic lung cancer. The cerebrospinal fluid analysis showed a strong positive Pandy reaction with 435 mg/dl total protein. The electromyography and the electroneuronography established the diagnosis of inflammatory demyelinating po…

medicine.medical_specialtyLung Neoplasmsmedicine.medical_treatmentBone NeoplasmsGuillain-Barre SyndromeDeoxycytidineGastroenterologyPathogenesisCerebrospinal fluidCarcinoma Non-Small-Cell LungInternal medicineAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsElectroneuronographyParalysismedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Lung cancerPharmacologyChemotherapyGuillain-Barre syndromebusiness.industryGuillain-Barré Syndrome neuropathy chemotherapy toxicity lung cancerImmunoglobulins IntravenousMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseGemcitabineFacial nerveSurgeryInfectious DiseasesOncologyFemaleCisplatinmedicine.symptombusiness
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Neurotropism in newborn hamsters of plaque purified measles virus clones

1976

Three plaque purified measles virus clones displayed a different neurotropism in newborn hamsters.

medicine.medical_specialtyMesocricetusVirulencebiologyvirusesNeurotropismBrainGenetic VariationGeneral MedicineVirus Replicationbiology.organism_classificationVirologyCell LineMeasles virusMedical microbiologyAnimals NewbornCytopathogenic Effect ViralMeasles virusViral releaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)CricetinaeVirologymedicineAnimalsArchives of Virology
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Perturbed Glucose Metabolism: Insights into Multiple Sclerosis Pathogenesis

2014

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a complex debilitating disease of the central nervous system perceived to result from the autoimmune effect of T cells in damaging myelin sheath. However, the exact pathogenesis of the disease remains elusive. Initial studies describing the possibility of defective pyruvate metabolism in MS were performed in 1950s. The group observed elevated blood pyruvate level in both fasting and postprandial times in MS patients with relapse. Similarly, other investigators also reported increased fasting pyruvate level in this disease. These reports hint to a possible abnormality of pyruvate metabolism in MS patients. In addition, increase in levels of Krebs cycle acids like a…

medicine.medical_specialtyMini ReviewCentral nervous systemDiseaseCarbohydrate metabolismBioinformaticsmultiple sclerosislcsh:RC346-429PathogenesisInternal medicinebrain glucose metabolismmedicineneurodegenerative diseaseslcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous systemmitochondrial defectsbusiness.industryMultiple sclerosisand neurodegenerative diseasesmedicine.diseasecell-specific mechanismsReview articleCitric acid cycleMetabolic pathwaymedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyNeurologyNeurology (clinical)businessNeuroscienceFrontiers in Neurology
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Is the implementation of a microbiological surveillance screening beneficial in a neonatal intensive care unit?

2015

s of the 51st Workshop for Pediatric Research 51st Workshop for Pediatric Research Gottingen, Germany 16-17 April 2015 This supplement has not been sponsored. Meeting abstracts Background and aims Bacteria that cause nosocomial infections have often been found to colonize the patient's skin, respiratory tract or gastrointestinal tract previously. In 2012 and 2013, the German Commission for Hospital Hygiene and Infectious Disease Prevention recommended a microbiological screening of infants on neonatal intensive care units. Multidrug-resistant bacteria (MDR) that should be considered in empiric antibiotic therapy, bacteria that cause invasive infections and bacteria that may elicit epidemic …

medicine.medical_specialtyNeonatal intensive care unitbiologymedicine.drug_classbusiness.industryKlebsiella pneumoniaeeducationAntibioticsEnterobacterbiology.organism_classificationInfectious disease (medical specialty)Intensive careMeeting AbstractEpidemiologymedicineIntensive care medicinebusinessPathogenMolecular and Cellular Pediatrics
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Nitric oxide in the pathogenesis of vascular disease

2000

Nitric oxide (NO) is synthesized by at least three distinct isoforms of NO synthase (NOS). Their substrate and cofactor requirements are very similar. All three isoforms have some implications, physiological or pathophysiological, in the cardiovascular system. The endothelial NOS III is physiologically important for vascular homeostasis, keeping the vasculature dilated, protecting the intima from platelet aggregates and leukocyte adhesion, and preventing smooth muscle proliferation. Central and peripheral neuronal NOS I may also contribute to blood pressure regulation. Vascular disease associated with hypercholesterolaemia, diabetes, and hypertension is characterized by endothelial dysfunct…

medicine.medical_specialtyNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIIHypercholesterolemiaNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIVasodilationNitric OxideEndothelial NOSPathology and Forensic MedicineNitric oxidePathogenesischemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicineHumansMedicineEndothelial dysfunctionbiologybusiness.industryVascular diseasemedicine.diseaseNitric oxide synthaseEndothelial stem cellOxidative StressEndocrinologychemistryCardiovascular DiseasesHypertensionbiology.proteinEndothelium VascularNitric Oxide SynthasebusinessDiabetic AngiopathiesThe Journal of Pathology
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2017

Aim The absence of reliable single serum biomarkers for oral premalignant lesion (OPL) and oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) limits early diagnosis, monitoring of advanced disease, and prediction of prognosis. Methods In this prospective study, serum levels of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, MMP-3, MMP-13, insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, and IGF-binding protein (IGFBP)-3 were measured in 81 untreated OSCC patients, 49 healthy subjects, and 75 individuals with OPLs, and correlated with clinicopathological parameters. Results Serum levels of MMP-3 were significantly higher in OSCC patients compared to healthy subjects (p=0.004). Mean IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 levels in OSCC patients were sign…

medicine.medical_specialtyOPLSbusiness.industryGrowth factormedicine.medical_treatmentCancer030206 dentistryMatrix metalloproteinasemedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyPathogenesisstomatognathic diseases03 medical and health sciencesInsulin-like growth factor0302 clinical medicineOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisInternal medicinemedicinePharmacology (medical)businessProspective cohort studySurvival rateOncoTargets and Therapy
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Heart failure and anti tumor necrosis factor-alpha in systemic chronic inflammatory diseases.

2013

Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) antagonists have emerged as an effective therapy for patients with diseases as Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and other chronic systemic inflammatory diseases. In the last years, there has been a growing interest in the role that inflammatory cytokines, which sustain the pathogenesis of these diseases, plays in regulating cardiac structure and function, particularly in the progression of chronic heart failure. In fact there is an increase of anti-TNF alpha levels in advanced heart failure but the treatment with anti-TNF alpha has been shown to worsen the prognosis of heart failure in randomized controlled trials. Patients with rheumatoid arthr…

medicine.medical_specialtyPathologySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaAlpha (ethology)DiseaseGastroenterologyProinflammatory cytokinePathogenesisRisk FactorsInternal medicineInternal MedicinemedicineHumansHeart FailureInflammationCrohn's diseaseTumor Necrosis Factor-alphabusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseHeart failureRheumatoid arthritishearth failure.biologicsChronic DiseaseTumor necrosis factor alphabusiness
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Progressive stroke in pontine infarction

2009

Objective –  The pathogenesis of isolated pontine infarctions is still unclear, being attributed both to small or large vessel disease. The extension of infarcted tissue to the pons surface has been indicated as a possible marker of basilar branch atheromatous disease and some neuroimaging evidence confirms this finding. Methods –  On the basis of Kim’s et al., study, we performed a revision of the literature addressing this topic. Results –  Several authors confirm an association between basilar artery branch disease and isolated pontine infarction; moreover, the enlargement of pontine lesion seems to be associated with neurological worsening. We therefore performed a brief analysis of pos…

medicine.medical_specialtyPathologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMagnetic resonance imagingGeneral MedicineDiseaseBasilar Artery BranchPonsPathogenesisLesionNeurologyNeuroimagingInternal medicinecardiovascular systemCardiologymedicineNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessProspective cohort studyActa Neurologica Scandinavica
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Platelet Aggregation, Coagulation and Fibrinolysis at Rest and after Bicycle Ergometer Test in CHD

1980

Several observers have suggested that a dysfunction of dynamic balance between platelet aggregation, coagulation and fibrinolysis may be a factor in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. This dysfunction, presumably, is correlated with the atherosclerotic vascular lesions, that could reduce the parietal synthesis of heparan-sulphase, prostacyclin and plas minogen activator.

medicine.medical_specialtyPlatelet aggregationbusiness.industryActivator (genetics)medicine.medical_treatmentProstacyclinStable anginaPathogenesisCoagulationInternal medicineFibrinolysisCardiologymedicineBicycle ergometerbusinessmedicine.drug
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