Search results for "chronic"

showing 10 items of 3309 documents

Lipomatous Metaplasia. Two Chronic Infarcts in the Same Patient Detected by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance

2009

MetaplasiaPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHeart DiseasesLipomatous Metaplasiabusiness.industryMyocardiumMyocardial InfarctionGeneral MedicineMagnetic Resonance ImagingChronic DiseasemedicineHumansLipomatosisCardiac magnetic resonancebusinessRevista Española de Cardiología (English Edition)
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MiR-146b-5p regulates IL-23 receptor complex expression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells

2022

Abstract Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells express the interleukin-23 receptor (IL-23R) chain, but the expression of the complementary IL-12Rβ1 chain requires cell stimulation via surface CD40 molecules (and not via the B-cell receptor [BCR]). This stimulation induces the expression of a heterodimeric functional IL-23R complex and the secretion of IL-23, initiating an autocrine loop that drives leukemic cell expansion. Based on the observation in 224 untreated Binet stage A patients that the cases with the lowest miR-146b-5p concentrations had the shortest time to first treatment (TTFT), we hypothesized that miR-146b-5p could negatively regulate IL-12Rβ1 side chain expression and clo…

MiceMicroRNAsCD40 LigandAnimalsReceptors Antigen B-CellChronic lymphocytic leukemia interleukin-23 receptor (IL-23R) MiR-146bSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaRNA MessengerHematologySettore MED/08 - Anatomia PatologicaInterleukin-23Leukemia Lymphocytic Chronic B-CellBlood Advances
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Monocyte and lymphocyte apoptosis resistance in acute and chronic brucellosis and its possible implications in clinical management.

2003

This study evaluated the level of susceptibility of monocytes and lymphocytes to spontaneously induced and CH11-induced apoptosis in 16 patients with Brucella infection. The expression of some immunological and apoptotic markers was evaluated. Before therapy, monocytes showed a high level of resistance to spontaneously induced or CH11-induced apoptosis in all patients. In patients with acute infection, this resistance persisted for 10-20 days after treatment was initiated, then decreased; in chronically infected patients, it persisted after 45 days of treatment. Lymphocytes were also more resistant to CH 11-induced apoptosis. The level of activated CD8++ T lymphocytes was high in patients w…

Microbiology (medical)AdultAdolescentLymphocyteApoptosisBrucellaCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesMonocyteBrucellosisMonocytesBrucellosimedicineHumansLymphocytesfas ReceptorChildbiologybusiness.industryMonocyteAntibodies MonoclonalBrucellosisCD8-Positive T-LymphocyteT lymphocytebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseBrucellaInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureApoptosisChild PreschoolImmunologyAcute DiseaseChronic Diseasebiology.proteinLymphocyteAntibodybusinessCD8Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
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Evolutionary dynamics of the E1-E2 viral populations during combination therapy in non-responder patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus…

2012

Abstract Half of the patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 fail to respond to pegylated interferon alpha (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) therapy. This study assesses the effects of treatment on the evolution of the E1–E2 viral region in non-responder patients infected with HCV-1b. Twenty-three HCV-1b chronically infected patients were studied retrospectively, including 19 non-responders to PEG-IFN/RBV therapy (11 null-responders and 8 relapsers) in the study group, and 4 untreated patients in the control group. Genetic and phylogenetic analyses of the E1–E2 viral populations were performed at baseline and at the time of treatment failure to assess changes in ge…

Microbiology (medical)AdultMaleCombination therapyHepatitis C virusAdaptation BiologicalHepacivirusBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyAntiviral AgentsEvolution Molecularchemistry.chemical_compoundViral Envelope ProteinsPegylated interferonGenotypeGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetic variabilityTreatment FailureMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyAgedRetrospective StudiesGenetic diversityRibavirinGenetic VariationHepatitis C ChronicMiddle AgedViral LoadVirologyInfectious DiseaseschemistryAmino Acid SubstitutionViral evolutionImmunologyDrug Therapy CombinationFemalemedicine.drugInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Does Autoimmunity Play a Role in the Immunopathogenesis of Vasculitis Associated With Chronic Chagas Disease?

2021

Chagas disease (CD) is a chronic systemic vector-borne infection caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi. It has spread from Latin America through migration, becoming a global issue (Perez-Molina and Molina, 2018). Its prevalence is ∼7 million people worldwide, of whom 30-40% will develop severe chronic complications such as cardiomyopathy or megaviscerae, with a considerable impact on morbimortality (WHO, 2020; WHO, 2021). The parasite is transmitted after metacyclic trypomastigotes in the feces of a triatomine insect enter the host through the bite wound. They penetrate cells and transform into amastigotes, where they multiply by binary fission and differentiate again into circulating t…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseVasculitisOpinionTrypanosoma cruziImmunologyInflammationmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyAutoimmunityImmune systemCellular and Infection MicrobiologyImmunopathologymedicineHumansimmunopathologyChagas DiseaseVector (molecular biology)Trypanosoma cruzibiologybusiness.industryautoimmunitymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationQR1-502Infectious DiseasesChagasImmunologyChronic Diseasemedicine.symptombusinessVasculitisFrontiers in cellular and infection microbiology
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Sepsis due to Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae in a Patient with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Associated with Bronchopneumonia due to PSeudomonas aerugin…

2015

Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae infections can typically be attributed to exposure to animal products; thus, these infections are more common among farmers, butchers and veterinarians, among others. This article describes a case involving a 54-year-old man who had relative neutropenia subsequent to treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The patient developed E rhusiopathiae bacteremia with concomitant pneumonia. The author of this article suggests a likely route of infection, which is atypical considering the patient did not report exposure to animal products.

Microbiology (medical)Chronic lymphocytic leukemiaCase ReportBronchopneumoniaANIMAL EXPOSUREInfectious and parasitic diseasesRC109-216Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiaemedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMicrobiologySepsisSepsisMedicineEscherichia coliImmunocompromised hostbiologyErysipelothrix rhusiopathiaebusiness.industryPseudomonas aeruginosabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseQR1-502Infectious DiseasesConcomitantImmunologybusinessCanadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology
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POSSIBLE RELATION BETWEEN GUT MICROFLORA COMPOSITION AND ONCOGENIC RISK: IS STIMULATION OF INFLAMMATION THE ONE RING OF CONNECTION?

2012

Human intestinalmicrobiotais characterizedby highpopulationdensity, wide diversity and complexity of interactions. Dysbiosis, both qualitative and quantitative, might have serious health consequences including an increase in the number and/or alteration of bacteria colonizing the gastrointestinal tract, which could be referred as gut microflora imbalance (GMI). GMI is frequently found in patients suffering from irritable bowel syndrome; this is the reason why some authors believe that IBS is secondary to GMI. Interestingly, GMI is also found in about 25% of Crohn’s disease patients. Stimulation of inflammation by the ‘dangerous bacteria’, through specific activation of the intestinal immune…

Microbiology (medical)Gastrointestinal tractSettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaInflammationStimulationDiseaseBiologymedicine.diseaseCHRONIC INFLAMMATORY INTESTINAL DISEASES COLORECTAL CANCER COMMENSAL BACTERIA METABOLISM GUT MICROFLORA INTESTINAL STEM CELLS.Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleImmune systemImmunologymedicinemedicine.symptomStem cellDysbiosisIrritable bowel syndrome
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The Tsetse Fly Displays an Attenuated Immune Response to Its Secondary Symbiont, Sodalis glossinidius

2019

Sodalis glossinidius, a vertically transmitted facultative symbiont of the tsetse fly, is a bacterium in the early/intermediate state of its transition toward symbiosis, representing an important model for investigating how the insect host immune defense response is regulated to allow endosymbionts to establish a chronic infection within their hosts without being eliminated. In this study, we report on the establishment of a tsetse fly line devoid of S. glossinidius only, allowing us to experimentally investigate (i) the complex immunological interactions between a single bacterial species and its host, (ii) how the symbiont population is kept under control, and (iii) the impact of the symb…

Microbiology (medical)Glossinamedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationlcsh:QR1-502InsectMicrobiologylcsh:MicrobiologyMicrobiologyTranscriptometranscriptomics03 medical and health sciencesImmune systemimmune interactioneducationOriginal Research030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyInnate immune systembiology030306 microbiologyfungiSodalis glossinidiusTsetse flybiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionSodalis glossinidiusbiology.organism_classificationChronic infectionhost-symbiont crosstalkbacteriaFrontiers in Microbiology
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Q fever in Europe: current aspects of aetiology, epidemiology, human infection, diagnosis and therapy.

1987

Il s'agit d'une zoonose. Elle est en general asymptomatique bien que des decouvertes nouvelles aussi bien chez l'homme que chez l'animal mettent en evidence des syndromes cliniques associes en particulier des maladies chroniques graves

Microbiology (medical)Gynecologymedicine.medical_specialtyPathologybusiness.industryQ feverGeneral MedicineInfection diagnosismedicine.diseaseEuropeInfectious DiseasesCoxiellaGeneral practiceEpidemiologyAcute DiseaseBacterial VaccinesChronic DiseasemedicineEtiologyAnimalsHumansbusinessQ FeverInfection
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Detection of hepatitis B virus DNA by polymerase chain reaction in serum and liver of children with chronic hepatitis B negative for hepatitis B viru…

1992

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction in the serum of 87 and liver tissue of 40 children with chronic hepatitis B, negative for HBV DNA by dot blot and Southern blot hybridization, respectively. In sera HBV DNA could be detected in 73 hepatitis B surface antigen carriers; 14 were hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), 56 were anti-HBe-seropositive and 3 had neither HBeAg nor positive anti-HBe. In 14 anti-HBe-positive patients no HBV DNA could be found. Viral sequences in liver tissue were present in 33 specimens; 20 were HBeAg and 13 were anti-HBe-seropositive. All of the 7 negative children had anti-HBe. Our results confirm polymerase chain reaction to be a more sen…

Microbiology (medical)Hepatitis B virusAdolescentHepatitis B virus DNA polymeraseMolecular Sequence Datamedicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionHepatitis B virus PRE betaViruslaw.inventionlawMedicineHumansChildPolymerase chain reactionSouthern blotHepatitis B virusbiologyBase Sequencebusiness.industryvirus diseasesInfantNucleic Acid Hybridizationbiology.organism_classificationHepatitis BVirologydigestive system diseasesInfectious DiseasesHBeAgHepadnaviridaeLiverChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthChronic DiseaseDNA ViralbusinessThe Pediatric infectious disease journal
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