Search results for "Virology"

showing 10 items of 2354 documents

Free and antibody-complexed antigen and antibody profile in apparently healthy HIV seropositive individuals and in AIDS patients.

1990

The pattern of free and antibody-complexed HIV antigen and the antibody profile were investigated retrospectively in 305 serum samples taken from 22 AIDS patients before and during the development of AIDS and from 40 apparently healthy seropositive individuals. Most AIDS patients were found positive for both free and complexed antigen and had high gp41 antibody titres but low or undetectable p24 antibody. Four different patterns of HIV antigenaemia were observed: 1) positive for both free and complexed antigen; 2) negative for free HIV antigen at first, but always positive for complexed antigen; 3) positive for free antigen without complexed antigen; and 4) negative for both free and comple…

AdultMaleAntigen-Antibody ComplexHIV AntigensHIV Core Protein p24Gene Products gagAntigen-Antibody ComplexBiologyHIV AntibodiesVirusImmune systemAcquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)AntigenHIV SeroprevalenceVirologyHIV SeropositivitymedicineHumansSubstance Abuse IntravenousAcquired Immunodeficiency SyndromeViral Core Proteinsmedicine.diseaseVirologyImmune complexHIV Envelope Protein gp41Infectious DiseasesItalyImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleViral diseaseAntibodyBiomarkersJournal of medical virology
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PREVALENCE OF ANTIBODIES ANTI-BARTONELLA HENSELAEIN WESTERN SICILY: CHILDREN, BLOOD DONORS, AND CATS

2011

To evaluate seroprevalence of B. henselae infection both in Sicilian children and healthy blood donors. Furthermore, circulation of Bartonella in the natural reservoir was also studied. Two hundred forty-three children, living in Sicily (Palermo), affected by various diseases, without clinical features suggesting B. henselae infection, together with 122 healthy blood donors were serologically investigated for IgG and IgM antibodies by indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT). One hundred twenty stray and 62 pet cats were also analyzed only for IgG. Among children 25.1% had IgG antibodies to B. henselae; 18.5% showed a titer 1:64, 2.4% 1:128, 2.4% 1:256, 0.8% 1:512, 0.4% 1:1024, and 0.4% 1:…

AdultMaleBartonellaAdolescentClinical BiochemistryImmunologyBlood DonorsYoung AdultmedicineAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergySeroprevalenceChildFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectSicilyDirect fluorescent antibodyAntigens BacterialBartonella henselaeBartonella henselaeCATSbiologyInfantCat-scratch diseaseMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseAntibodies BacterialVirologyMedical Laboratory TechnologyTiterImmunoglobulin MChild PreschoolImmunoglobulin GImmunologyCatsbiology.proteinFemaleAntibodyJournal of Immunoassay and Immunochemistry
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C4A deficiency and nonresponse to hepatitis B vaccination

2002

Hepatitis B vaccination failure has been linked to the presence of certain human leukocyte antigen class II alleles. However, the functional background of these associations has remained unclear. Complement component C 4 is encoded within the major histocompatibility complex and is essential for classical pathway activation.Healthy individuals (n=4269) were vaccinated in a prospective trial with Engerix B. Nonresponse was classified as anti-HBs10 U/l after the last vaccination. Seventy-three nonresponders (NR) (1.7%) were identified. For comparison 53 responders (R) (anti-HBs10 IU/l) were drawn randomly from the same cohort. C4 allotyping was carried out by high-voltage agarose gel electrop…

AdultMaleBiologyMajor histocompatibility complexClassical complement pathwaySeroepidemiologic StudiesHumansHepatitis B VaccinesProspective StudiesTreatment FailureHepatitis B AntibodiesSouthern blotGel electrophoresisB-LymphocytesHepatologyHaplotypeComplement C4aHLA-DR AntigensMiddle AgedHepatitis BVirologyComplement systemLogistic ModelsHaplotypesAgarose gel electrophoresisImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleVaccine failureGene DeletionHLA-DRB1 ChainsJournal of Hepatology
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Prevalence and genomic variability of transfusion transmitted virus in Italian cryptogenic chronic liver disease and healthy blood donors

2002

Abstract Background. Infection with transfusion transmitted virus, a new member of the Parvoviridae family, has been found in patients both with chronic and fulminant post-transfusion cryptogenic hepatitis. Aim. To evaluate the prevalence and clinical impact of transfusion transmitted virus infection in Italy. Patients and Methods. Studies were carried out on 256 patients and control subjects from three centres from Northern, Central and Southern Italy (92 nonA-nonC chronic hepatitis, 10 acute non fulminant cryptogenic hepatitis, 41 hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis and 113 blood donors). Serum transfusion transmitted virus was detected by nested polymerase chain reaction using tw…

AdultMaleBlood transfusionAdolescentmedicine.medical_treatmentHepatitis C virusBlood Donorsblood transfusionmedicine.disease_causeVirusTransfusion transmitted virusLiver diseasetransfusion transmitted virusmedicinePrevalenceHumansAgedHepatitis ChronicHepatitis B virusHepatitisTorque teno virusblood transfusion; cryptogenic chronic liver disease; transfusion transmitted virusHepatologybiologybusiness.industryGastroenterologyHepatitis CHepatitis C ChronicMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyDNA Virus InfectionsItalyImmunologyDNA ViralFemalebusinesscryptogenic chronic liver disease
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Balantidiasis in Aymara children from the northern Bolivian Altiplano.

1998

Balantidium coli infection was coprologically studied in 2,124 Aymara children 5-19 years of age from the schools of 22 communities of the northern Bolivian Altiplano over a five-year period. Infection with B. coli was found in 11 of the communities surveyed, with prevalences of 1.0-5.3% (overall prevalence=1.2%). The prevalences observed are some of the highest reported and did not differ significantly among the various age groups or between boys and girls. These prevalences, the apparent absence of symptoms or signs of illness due to this parasite in the schoolchildren surveyed at the time of stool sampling, and the consistency of stool samples of the infected students suggest that they a…

AdultMaleBoliviaAdolescentSwineAge groupsVirologymedicinePrevalenceAnimalsHumansBalantidiasisProtozoal diseaseChildBalantidium colibiologyBalantidiasisbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseInfectious DiseasesEl NiñoChild PreschoolParasitologyFemaleAsymptomatic carrierDemographyThe American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
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Prevalence of antibodies to human papillomaviruses in the general population of the Czech Republic.

1998

Sera from 450 individuals between the age of 1 and 80 years, representing the general population of the Czech Republic, were tested for the presence of antibodies to human-papillomavirus(HPV)-derived antigens. The following antigens were used: (i) HPV1 virions; (ii) HPV16, -18 and -33-virus-like particles (VLP); (iii) peptides derived from L2 open reading frames (ORFs) of HPV16 and HPV6/11; (iv) peptides derived from HPV16 E2, E4 and E7 ORFs of HPV16. The prevalence of antibodies reactive with the capsid-derived antigens was age-dependent, while no clear age dependence was observed in the distribution of antibodies to peptides derived from HPV16 early proteins. In individual sera, high corr…

AdultMaleCancer ResearchAdolescentvirusesPopulationUterine Cervical NeoplasmsIn Vitro TechniquesAntibodies ViralVirusSerologyOpen Reading FramesAntigenReference ValuesMedicineHumansORFSeducationChildAntigens ViralPapillomaviridaeAgedCzech Republiceducation.field_of_studybiologybusiness.industryAge Factorsvirus diseasesInfantMiddle AgedVirologyOpen reading frameOncologyChild PreschoolImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleViral diseaseAntibodybusinessInternational journal of cancer
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Antibodies against lytic and latent Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus antigens and lymphoma in the European EpiLymph case-control study.

2011

Background: Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus is associated with primary effusion lymphoma and multicentric Castleman's disease. Methods: Seropositivity to lytic and latent Kaposi's sarcoma herpes virus (KSHV) antigens were examined in 2083 lymphomas and 2013 controls from six European countries. Results: Antibodies against KSHV latent and lytic antigens were detectable in 4.5% and 3.4% of controls, respectively, and 3.6% of cases (P>0.05). The KSHV seropositivity was associated with splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL) (odds ratio (OR)=4.11, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.57–10.83) and multiple myeloma (OR=0.31, 95% CI=0.11–0.85). Conclusion: The KSHV is unlikely to contribute impo…

AdultMaleCancer ResearchAdolescentvirusesShort CommunicationserologylymphomaAntibodiesSerologyhuman herpes virus 8Young AdultHerpes virusAntigenhemic and lymphatic diseasesLymphoma Primary EffusionmedicineHumansChildKaposi's sarcomaAntigens ViralSarcoma KaposiAgedAged 80 and overbiologybusiness.industryCastleman DiseaseLymphoma Non-HodgkinCase-control studyInfant Newbornvirus diseasesInfantMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseVirologyLymphomaEuropeOncologyLytic cycleKaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virusCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolImmunologyHerpesvirus 8 Humanbiology.proteinFemaleepidemiologyAntibodybusinessBritish journal of cancer
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Effect of antiviral treatment and host susceptibility on positive selection in hepatitis C virus (HCV).

2007

Abstract We have conducted a large sequence study of the E1–E2 and NS5A regions of the HCV, subtypes 1a and b, both in patients previously treated with interferon, and untreated patients, who later responded, or not, to a combination therapy based on interferon plus ribavirin. We have examined the role played by the number of positively selected sites on disease progression and its relationship with several variables such as patients’ age, sex and their risk of acquiring the disease. We have detected three groups of patients that respond or not to combination therapy: responders of intermediate age, older non-responders and young non-responders, they possess an increasing average number of …

AdultMaleCancer ResearchCombination therapyHepatitis C virusMolecular Sequence DataDiseaseHepacivirusBiologyViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeAntiviral Agentschemistry.chemical_compoundViral Envelope ProteinsInterferonVirologyRibavirinmedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceSelection GeneticNS5AAgedHost (biology)Positive selectionRibavirinSequence Analysis DNAMiddle AgedHepatitis CInfectious DiseasesTreatment OutcomechemistryAmino Acid SubstitutionImmunologyRNA ViralFemaleInterferonsmedicine.drugVirus research
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Trends for genetic variation of Hepatitis C Virus quasispecies in Human Immunodeficiency virus-1 coinfected patients

2007

Chronic infection by Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) causes liver fibrosis, which is accelerated by unknown mechanisms in patients with HIV-1 coinfection. The evolution of HCV quasispecies in this setting of coinfection is not fully understood. To compare HCV quasispecies between HIV-HCV coinfection and HCV monoinfection, we sequenced 340 HCV clones from the HVR-1 and NS3 regions at two different time points in two groups of treatment-naive patients with HCV-1a infection: (1) HIV-HCV positive (n=6); and (2) HIV negative-HCV positive (n=3). In HCV/HIV coinfection, we found a trend for reduced HCV genetic complexity and diversity, and a trend towards reduced dN/dS ratios in the HVR-1 region, especial…

AdultMaleCancer ResearchHepatitis C virusHepacivirusMolecular Sequence DataSequence HomologyHIV InfectionsHepacivirusViral quasispeciesViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeArticleViral ProteinsAcquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)VirologymedicineCluster AnalysisHumansPhylogenyNS3biologyGenetic Variationvirus diseasesSequence Analysis DNAHepatitis CHepatitis C ChronicMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologydigestive system diseasesCD4 Lymphocyte CountChronic infectionInfectious DiseasesImmunologyCoinfectionRNA ViralVirus Research
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Identification and molecular characterization of CALM/AF10fusion products in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia

2000

The t(10;11)(p12-p13;q14-q21) observed in a subset of patients with either acute lymphoblastic leukemia or acute myeloid leukemia has been shown to result in the fusion of AF10 on chromosome 10 with CALM (also named CLTH) on chromosome 11. AF10 was originally identified as a fusion partner of MLL in the t(10;11)(p12-p13;q23) observed in myeloid leukemia. CALM is a newly isolated gene, cloned as the fusion partner of AF10 in the monocytoid cell line, U937. In order to understand the relationship between MLL, AF10, CALM and the leukemic process, fluorescence in situ hybridization and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction were used to study a series of nine leukemia patients with a t…

AdultMaleCancer ResearchMyeloidOncogene Proteins FusionChromosomal translocationBiologyImmunophenotypingImmunophenotypinghemic and lymphatic diseasesAcute lymphocytic leukemiamedicineHumansCloning MolecularChildneoplasmsIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceDNA PrimersABLBase Sequencemedicine.diagnostic_testReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionMyeloid leukemiaHematologyMiddle AgedPrecursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphomamedicine.diseaseVirologyLeukemiamedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyLeukemia MyeloidAcute DiseaseCancer researchFluorescence in situ hybridizationLeukemia
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