Database : HANSEN
Search on : ANTICORPOS [Subject descriptor]
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Id:19935
Author:Broek, Jacques van den; Chum, Hamza J; Swai, Ronald; O´Brien, Richard J.
Title:Association between leprosy and HIV infection Tanzania.
Source:Int. J. Lepr;65(2):203-210, Jun. 1997. tab, graf.
Abstract:SETTING: An epidemiological study of the interaction of leprosy and HIV infection in Tanzania. OBJECTIVE: To establish the prevalence of HIV infection among leprosy patients, and to measure the association of HIV and leprosy by comparing the HIV prevalence in leprosy patients and blood donors. DESIGN: Testing for HIV infection in consecutively diagnosed leprosy patients (new and relapsed after MDT) in all regions in Tanzania successively for a period of 3 to 6 months during 1991, 1992 and 1993. RESULTS: Out of the total estimated eligible leprosy patients, 697 patients (69%) entered the final analysis. The HIV prevalence among these leprosy patients was 12% (83/697) as compared to 6% (8960/ 158,971) in blood donors examined in Tanzania during the same period. There were no significant differences in HIV seroprevalence by age, sex, residence or type of disease. However, the adjusted odds ratio (OR) of the presence of a BCG scar was 1.9 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1-3.3] among HIV-positive leprosy cases compared to HIV-negative leprosy cases. Comparing leprosy cases with blood donors as controls, the logistic regression model, controlling for sex, age group and residence, showed the OR for HIV seropositivity among leprosy patients to be 2.5 (95% CI 2.0-3.2). This association existed in all strata, but was strongest in the 15-34-year age group. No difference of HIV status between multibacillary and paucibacillary leprosy could be shown to exist. The point estimate of the population attributable risk of HIV infection for leprosy was 7%. CONCLUSION: HIV infection is associated with leprosy and might reverse the epidemiological trend of the slow decline in case notification in Tanzania if HIV infection is increasing greatly. Previous BCG vaccination loses its protection against leprosy in the presence of HIV infection. A repeated study is recommended in order to validate these findings, whereby recording of the disability grading of the cases is necessary to adjust for delay in diagnosis. (AU)^ien.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/compl
Hanseníase/epidemiol
Anticorpos Anti-HIV/anal
Infecções por HIV/compl
Infecções por HIV/epidemiol
Limits:Humanos
Masculino
Feminino
Adolescente
Adulto
Location:BR191.1


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Id:19745
Author:Ghaswala, Percy S; Mistry, Nerges F; Antia, Noschir H.
Title:Serum antibodies for normals and leprosy patients show equal binding to peripheral nerve.
Source:Int J Lep;57(3):690-692, sept. 1989. ^bgraf.
Descriptors:Anticorpos/imunol
Hanseníase/imunol
Hanseníase/fisiopatol
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n3/v57n3cor02.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19741
Author:Khanolkar, Saroj R; Mackenzie, Charles D; Lucas, Subastein B; Hussen, Armal; Girdhar, Bhawneshwar K; Katoch, Kiran; Mcadam, Keith PWJ.
Title:Identification fo Mycobacterium leprae antigens in tissues of leprosy patients using monoclonal antibodies.
Source:Int J Lep;57(3):652-658, sept. 1989. ^btab, ^bilus.
Abstract:Five monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) directed against antigens of Mycobacterium leprae were tested for their ability to bind to components of tissue sections prepared from biopsies taken from patients with various forms of leprosy. Immunoperoxidase was the most successful marker system used, although immunofluorescence and alkaline phosphatase were also successful in certain cases. Positivity was high with all five antibodies successfully staining those sections containing a bacterial index of 3+ or more; sections with 0 bacterial counts also had areas staining positively with two of the MAbs. The positive staining in the tissues was confined to areas infiltrated by inflammatory cells; however it was not identifiable as being associated with individual bacteria. These findings suggest that immunostaining with specific monoclonal antibodies can help to identify leprosy in diagnostic samples in which acid-fast bacilli are not identifiable by standard histochemical means. Immunohistochemical techniques are likely to be valuable in studies of the distribution of M. leprae antigens and their association with individual tissue elements^ien.
Descriptors:Mycobacterium leprae/genet
Mycobacterium leprae/imunol
Anticorpos Monoclonais/genet
Anticorpos Monoclonais/imunol
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n3/v57n3a09.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19738
Author:Yandava, Chandri Naidu; Bhutani, Lalit K; Sharma, AK; Nath, Indira.
Title:Lymphoproliferation and in vitro antibody synthesis in leprosy patients.
Source:Int J Lep;57(3):633-640, sept. 1989. .
Abstract:An in vitro system to assess B-cell function in leprosy patients is described. In vitro lymphoproliferation and antibody synthesis by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in response to pokeweed mitogen (PWM) and Formalin-treated Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I (FSA) from 31 leprosy patients and 13 healthy controls were studied. DNA synthesis was induced by both PWM and FSA in PBMC from all of the leprosy patients and control subjects. Lepromatous leprosy (LL) patients' cells showed higher responses to both PWM and FSA. However, these increases were not statistically significant. The levels of secreted IgM, IgG, or IgA were examined in the 7-day culture supernatants of PBMC cultured with or without PWM or FSA using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Wide individual variations were observed in in vitro antibody synthesis. IgM secretion in PBMC from normal subjects and various groups of leprosy patients in response to PWM and FSA was comparable. In vitro IgG secretion in response to PWM was the highest in cells from LL patients; it was significantly decreased in cells from tuberculoid leprosy (TT) patients (p less than 0.01). The levels in cells from borderline leprosy (BB) patients were intermediate in response to the same mitogen. Cells from leprosy patients as a group showed a higher spontaneous secretion of IgA in comparison with cells from normal subjects. Overall, the in vitro Ig secretion by PBMC in different patient groups appears to reproduce the spectrum of antibody levels observed in patients in vivo. Thus, the present in vitro culture system may help to delineate the mechanisms of B-cell dysregulation in leprosy^ien.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/imunol
Hanseníase/fisiopatol
Anticorpos/imunol
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n3/v57n3a06.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19731
Author:Vilalva, Fernanda Castro Jobim
Title:Determinação dos níveis séricos de MBL, dos anticorpos anti-PGL-I e dos alelos HLA de classe I e classe II em pacientes com hanseníase^ipt Determination of MBL and anti-PGL-I serum levels and HLA ClassI and II in patients with leprosy-
Source:Bauru; s.n; 2010. 81 p. ilus, tab.
Abstract:A hanseníase é uma doença infecto-contagiosa e endêmica, constitui grave problema de saúde pública por causar incapacidade física permanente. A doença caracteriza-se por apresentar um amplo espectro de manifestações clínicas que correspondem a distintos padrões de resposta imunológica diante do mesmo agente etiológico, o Mycobacterium leprae. Métodos sorológicos têm sido desenvolvidos com a finalidade de auxiliar no diagnóstico precoce e estados reacionais, no monitoramento da eficácia da quimioterapia e no estudo da epidemiologia da hanseníase. Este estudo teve como objetivos: avaliar os níveis séricos de Lectina Ligada a Manose (MBL) e dos anticorpos anti-PGL-I em poacientes com hanseníase, em atividades, atendidos no Instituto Lauro de Souza Lima, SP, com ou sem o tratamento de poliquimioterapia e nos estados reacionais tipo 1 e 2; correlacionar os resultados dos nívceis séricos de MBL, e dos anticorpos anti-PGL-I com o índice baciloscópico (IB); avaliar a freqüência dos alelos HLA de classe I e II (locus A, B, DR e DQ) neste grupo de pacientes. Para a avaliação do anticorpo anti-PGL-I e da MBL foram estudados 69 pacientes sendo 21 do gênero feminino e 48 do gênero masculino, com idade variando de 11 a 72 anos. Quanto a classificação clínica, 12 eram tuberculóides (HT), 23 vichovianos (HV) e 34 dimorfos [18 dimorfos-tuberculóides (HDT), 09 dimorfos-dimorfos (HDD) e 07 dimorfos-virchovianos (HDV)]. Entre os pacientes avaliados, 38 apresentaram reações, sendo 20 reação tipo 1 e 18 reação tipo 2. Quanto ao esquema de tratamento, 43 pacientes eram multibacilares (MB) e 26 paucibacilares (PB). Neste estudo foram avaliados marcadores labaratoriais séricos MBL e anti-PGL-I pelo método imunoenzimático (ELISA) e os antígenos de histocompatibilidade pelo método Reverse Line blot. Os resultados dos níveis de anti-PGL-I forma mais altos nos pacientes MB comparados aos PB e mostraram uma forte associação com a carga bacilar. Com relação à MBL, nossos achados sugerem... (AU)^ipt.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/quimioter
Anticorpos/imunol
Antígenos HLA/imunol
Lectinas/imunol
Location:BR191.1; WC335.504, V71a


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Id:19694
Author:Saha, Kunal; Chattopadhya, Debasis; Kashyup, Arvind; Agarwal, Uma; Chakrabarty, Asit K.
Title:Correspondence: Enhanced Response of Serum IgG Class of Anti-PGL-I Antibodies in Leprosy Patients During Onset and Following Clinical Remission of Type 1 and Type 2 Reactions.
Source:Int. J. Lepr;63(1):105-109, 1995. ^btab, ^bgraf.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/imunol
Hanseníase/fisiopatol
Anticorpos/imunol
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1995/pdf/v63n1/v63n1cor07.pdf / en
Location:BR191.1


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Id:19657
Author:Beers, Stella van; Hatta, Mohammed; Klatser, Paul R.
Title:Seroprevalence rates of antibodies to phenolic glycolipid-I among school children as an indicator of leprosy endemicity.
Source:Int. J. Lepr;67(3):243-249, Sept., 1999. tab.
Abstract:In order to study whether the seroprevalence of antibodies to phenolic glycolipid-I (PGL-I) among school children is a useful indicator of the leprosy problem in certain areas, school surveys were carried out. These surveys have the advantage of targeting an easily accessible, stable and standardized population. Antibodies to the species-specific PGL-I of Mycobacterium leprae were detected in a simple gelatin particle agglutination test. We have determined the seroprevalence rates in 2835 school children from five different areas in three provinces of Sulawesi, Indonesia. Three areas with a case-detection rate of over 3.4/10,000 were designated as high-endemic areas. The other two were designated as low-endemic areas, having a case-detection rate of less than 1/10,000. The seroprevalence rates in the three high-endemic areas ranged from 26% to 28% (95% CI 21%-31%). In both low-endemic areas the seroprevalence rate was 7% (95% CI 5%-10%). In a second survey conducted in one high-endemic area 3 years after the first survey, the seroprevalence rate was the same as in the first survey. These results indicate that seropositivity rates among school children may reflect the leprosy incidence. They illustrate the potential applicability of seroprevalence as an indicator of the magnitude of the leprosy problem in a selected area. (AU)^ien.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/imunol
Glicolipídeos/imunol
Anticorpos/genet
Limits:Animais
Ratos
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1999/pdf/v67n3/v67n3a03.pdf / en
Location:BR191.1


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Id:19586
Author:Hasan, Rumina; Dockrell, Hazel M; Chiang, Thomas; Hussain, Rabia.
Title:Quantitative antibody ELISA for leprosy.
Source:Int. J. Lep;57(4):766-776, dec. 1989. ^btab, ^bgraf.
Abstract:Quantitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) were established to measure IgM and IgG antibody levels to soluble Mycobacterium leprae sonicate (CD60) and to the synthetic disaccharide antigen based on the phenolic glycolipid-I antigen of M. leprae coupled to bovine serum albumin in 46 leprosy patients. Separate reference pools for IgM and IgG antibody were established. The reciprocal of the antibody titer was expressed as the number of arbitrary units in the reference pools which was subsequently used as the calibrator for assessment of units in individual test sera. The dose-response relationship for both IgM and IgG was highly specific and reproducible for both isotypes, as indicated by the intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation. The distribution of antibody levels are in general agreement with the results from previous studies against different M. leprae antigens. The lepromatous group showed 10- to 100-fold higher IgM antibodies to both the soluble sonicate antigen and the disaccharide as compared to the control group. Very low to undetectable levels of IgM antibodies were observed in the tuberculoid group of leprosy patients. IgG antibodies, on the other hand, were not only present but showed considerable overlap with the lepromatous patient group. Optimized ELISAs, such as the one described in this study, would allow one to address issues such as antibody changes with treatment, antigen clearance, and correlation with other immune parameters associated with disease pathogenesis and protection.
Descriptors:Anticorpos Antibacterianos/imunol
Imunoglobulina G/imunol
Imunoglobulina M/imunol
Mycobacterium leprae/imunol
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n4/v57n4a04.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19584
Author:Gelber, Robert H; Li, Futian; Cho, SN; Byrd, Sally; Rajagopalan, K; Brennan, Patrick J.
Title:Serum antibodies to defined carbohydrate antigens during the course of treated leprosy.
Source:Int. J. Lep;57(4):744-751, dec. 1989. .
Abstract:Sequential monitoring of 724 sera for antibodies to a neoantigen based on phenolic glycolipid-I (PGL-I) and native lipoarabinomannan (LAM) in 90 leprosy patients undergoing therapy in San Francisco was conducted. Untreated lepromatous patients frequently (91%) had significant antibodies to both moieties. Antibodies were less frequently found in tuberculoid patients (74% to neoantigen and 37% to LAM). In the first 3 years of treatment, average serum antibodies to both moieties fell significantly. Antibodies to LAM fell during each of the first 4 years of therapy, but decreasing antibody levels to the PGL-I neoantigen did not appear to fall consistently after the third year of treatment. A wide variation in the rate of fall of serum antibodies was noted. Sequential changes in the amounts of serum antibodies to the neoantigen and LAM in general paralleled one another but were at times discrepant. Both in San Francisco and Malaysia, skin-smear negative, long-term treated, lepromatous leprosy patients frequently harbored significant antibodies to both PGL-I and LAM.
Descriptors:Anticorpos Antibacterianos/imunol
Anticorpos Antibacterianos/fisiol
Antígenos de Bactérias/imunol
Glicolipídeos/imunol
Hanseníase/terap
Limits:Humanos
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n4/v57n4a02.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19583
Author:Chanteau, Suzanne; Cartel, Jean-Louis; Celerier, Philippe; Plichart, Régis; Desforges, Sylvie; Roux, Jean.
Title:PGL-1 antigen and antibody detection in leprosy patients: evolution under chemotherapy.
Source:Int. J. Lep;57(4):735-743, dec. 1989. ^btab.
Abstract:Multibacillary (MB) and paucibacillary (PB) leprosy patients were tested for circulating phenolic glycolipid-I (PGL-I) antigen and antibodies before treatment. In the 27 MB patients tested, 27 (100%) were antigen positive with levels ranging from 50 to 5000 ng/ml, and 26 (96%) were antibody positive with titers ranging from 1000 to 64,000. Although the antigen and antibody levels were much higher in MB than in PB patients, we could not demonstrate a correlation between the number of acid-fast bacilli/mg of skin biopsy and these two parameters in 14 MB patients. After starting daily multidrug therapy, 10 MB patients were monitored monthly. As much as 88.75% +/- 10.8% of the PGL-I antigen was cleared from the bloodstream after 1 month while the anti-PGL-I antibody remained stable. This rapid decrease in the PGL-I antigen level strongly suggests the usefulness of this test for monitoring MB patients under chemotherapy.
Descriptors:Anticorpos Antibacterianos/anal
Antígenos de Bactérias/anal
Dapsona/uso terap
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/1989/pdf/v57n4/v57n4a01.pdf / en
Location:Br191.1


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Id:19363
Author:Schettini, Antonio Pedro M; Ferreira, Luiz Carlos de L; Milagros, Ruth; Schettini, Maria da Conceição A; Pennini, Silmara N; Rebello, Paula B.
Title:Enhancement in the histological diagnosis of leprosy in patients with only sensory loss by demonstration of mycobacterial antigens using Anti-BCG polyclonal antibodies.
Source:Int. J. Lepr;69(4):335-340, Dec., 2001. ilus, tab.
Abstract:This study was undertaken to assess whether the immunoperoxidase technique using anti-BCG serum is able to confirm the diagnosis of early leprosy among patients whose unique clinical manifestation is a localized area of sensory loss, in a higher proportion than the routine mycobacterial staining methods, namely hematoxylin-eosin and Wade. The study was held in the north of a hyper-endemic area of leprosy, Manaus, Amazonas (Brazil). Fifty-one paraffin-embedded skin biopsy blocks were retrieved and processed for the immunohistochemical study, by means of anti-BCG polyclonal antibodies for the detection of mycobacterial antigens. The routine stains confirmed the leprosy diagnosis in 17% of the cases, while the immunostaining method confirmed it in 47%. The McNemar test showed that the observed difference between these two techniques was statistically significant (p = < 0.05). In the same way, 50 blocks of skin conditions considered in the differential histopathological diagnosis of early leprosy were processed for the immunohistochemical test to analyze the possibility of false-positive results which occurred in 8 (16%) patients. The study suggests that immunostaining may increase the proportion of the routine histological diagnosis of leprosy in patients who have sensory loss only, even while using biopsies obtained in fieldwork conditions. This is very advantageous in hyper-endemic areas and in areas that are in the post-elimination period of leprosy control where sensory loss may be a sentinel sign of the disease. (AU)^ien.
Descriptors:Hanseníase/microbiol
Hanseníase/fisiopatol
Vacina BCG/imunol
Vacina BCG/uso terap
Anticorpos Antibacterianos/imunol
Anticorpos Antibacterianos/fisiol
Anticorpos Antibacterianos/uso terap
Limits:Humanos
Electronic Medium:http://hansen.bvs.ilsl.br/textoc/revistas/intjlepr/2001/pdf/v69n4/v69n4a05.pdf / en
Location:BR191.1


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Id:18286
Author:Reinherz, Ellis L; Schlossman, Stuart F
Title:The differentiation and function of human T lymphocytes ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 1980. 7 p. tab, graf.
Descriptors:ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS B/anal
ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS B/sangue
ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS B/imunol
ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS T/anal
ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS T/sangue
ANTIGENOS DE DIFERENCIACAO DE LINFOCITOS T/imunol
ANTIGENOS SECUNDARIOS DE ESTIMULACAO DE LINFOCITOS/anal
ANTIGENOS SECUNDARIOS DE ESTIMULACAO DE LINFOCITOS/sangue
ANTIGENOS SECUNDARIOS DE ESTIMULACAO DE LINFOCITOS/imunol
LINFOCITOS/sangue
LINFOCITOS/clas
LINFOCITOS/imunol
INTERLEUCINA-1/anal
 INTERLEUCINA-1/sangue
 INTERLEUCINA-1/imunol
 ANTICORPOS MONOCLONAIS/bios
 ANTICORPOS MONOCLONAIS/isol
 ANTICORPOS MONOCLONAIS/farmacocin
 IMUNOFLUORESCÊNCIA/util
Limits:HUMANO
ANIMAL
Location:BR191.1; 00799/s


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Id:18206
Author:Douglas, J. T; Cellona, R. V; Fajardo, T. T; Abalos, R. M; Balagon, M. V. F; Klatser, P. R
Title:Prospective study of serological conversion as a risk factor for development of leprosy among household contacts ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 2004. 4 p. tab.
Abstract:Although the prevalence of leprosy has decline over the years, there is no evidence that incidence rates are falling. A method of early detection of those people prone to develop the mosth infectious form of leprosy would contribute to breaking the chain of transmission. Prophylactic treatment of serologically idenfified high-risk contacts of incidend patients should be an operationally feasible approach for routine control programs. In addition, classification of high-risk household contacts will allow control program resources to be more focused. Is this prospective study, we examined the ability of serology used for the detection of antibodies to phenolic glycolipid I of Mycobacterium leprae to identify those household contacts of multibacillary leprosy patients who had the highest risk of developing leprosy. After the start of multidrug therapy for the index case, a new case of leprosy developed in one in seven of the 178 households studied. In households where new cases appeared, the seropositivity rates were significantly higher (P<0.001) than those in households without new cases. Seropositive household contacts had a significantly higher risk of developing leprosy (relative hazard adjusted for age and sex [aRH], 7.2), notably multibacillary leprosy (aRH=24), than seronegative contacts (AU).
Descriptors:ANTICORPOS/anal
ANTICORPOS/sangue
ANTICORPOS/clas
HANSENIASE/epidemiol
HANSENIASE/prev
HANSENIASE/transm
TRANSMISSAO DE DOENCA/prev
 BUSCA DE COMUNICANTE
Limits:HUMANO
Location:BR191.1; 09189/s


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Id:17987
Author:Ulrich, Marian; Rodríguez, Vestalia; Convit, Jacinto.
Title:IgC antibodies in leprosy and their relation to Th1/Th2 responses.
Source:Hansen. int;(n.esp):133-136, Jun. 1998. tab, graf.
Conference:Present in: Congresso da Associação Brasileira de Hansenologia, IX, Foz do Iguaçu, 04-08 junho 1997.
Descriptors:ANTICORPOS/anal
ANTICORPOS/genet
ANTICORPOS/fisiol
HANSENIASE/genet
HANSENIASE/imunol
HANSENIASE/microbiol
CELULAS TH1/citol
 CELULAS TH1/imunol
 CELULAS TH1/fisiol
 CELULAS TH2/citol
 CELULAS TH2/imunol
 CELULAS TH2/fisiol
Limits:RELATO DE CASO
ESTUDO COMPARATIVO
HUMANO
Location:BR 191.1


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Id:17689
Author:Scollard, D. M; Joyce M. P; Gillis, T. P
Title:Development of leprosy and type 1 leprosy reactions after treatment with infliximab: a report of 2 cases ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 2006. 4 p. ilus.
Abstract:Humanized monoclonal antibodies to tumor necrosis factor- alpha are valuable for the treatment of rheumatologic conditions, but they have been associated with the development of serious infections. We report the first 2 cases of leprosy developing after treatment with infliximab. After discontinuation of infliximab, both patients developed type 1 ([quot ]reversal[quot ]) leprosy reactions. (AU).
Descriptors:Anticorpos Monoclonais/*AE/IM/TU
Anti-Reumáticos/*AE/IM/TU
Artrite/*DT
Glucocorticóides/TU
Hansenostáticos/TU
Hanseníase Dimorfa/CI/*ET/MI
Fator de Necrose Tumoral alfa/AI
Limits:HUMANO
MASCULINO
FEMININO
MEIA-IDADE
IDOSO
SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, NON-P.H.S.
Location:BR191.1; 09363/S


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Id:17688
Author:Geluk, Annemieke; Ottenhoff, Tom H. M
Title:HLA and leprosy in the pre and postgenomic eras ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 2006. 7 p. graf.
Abstract:Leprosy has intrigued immunologists for many decades. Despite minimal genetic variation between Mycobacterium leprae isolates worldwide, two completely different forms of the disease can develop in the susceptible human host: localized, tuberculoid, or paucibacillary leprosy, which can heal spontaneously, and disseminating, lepromatous, or multibacillary leprosy, which is progressive if untreated. The questions which host factors regulate these very different outcomes of infection, by what mechanisms, and whether these can be used to combat disease remain unanswered. Leprosy has been one of the very first human diseases in which human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes were demonstrated to codetermine disease outcome. Jon van Rood was among the earliest researchers to recognize the potential of this ancient disease as a human model to dissect the role of HLA in disease. Decades later, it is now clear that HLA molecules display highly allele-specific peptide binding capacity. This restricts antigen presentation to M. leprae-reactive T cells and controls the magnitude of the ensuing immune response. Furthermore, specific peptide/HLA class II complexes can also determine the quality of the immune response by selectively activating regulatory (suppressor) T cells. All these factors are believed to contribute to leprosy disease susceptibility. Despite the global reduction in leprosy disease prevalence, new case detection rates remain invariably high, demonstrating that treatment alone does not block transmission of leprosy. Better tools for early detection of preclinical M. leprae infection, likely the major source of unidentified transmission, therefore is a priority. Newly developed HLA-based bioinformatic tools now provide novel opportunities to help combat this disease. Here, we describe recent work using HLA-DR peptide binding algorithms in combination with recently elucidated genome sequences of several different mycobacteria. Using this postgenomic HLA-based approach, we were able to identify 12 candidate genes that were unique to M. leprae and were predicted to contain T cell epitopes restricted via several major HLA-DR alleles. Five of these antigens (ML0576, ML1989, ML1990, ML2283, ML2567) were indeed able to induce significant T cell responses in paucibacillary leprosy patients and M. leprae-exposed healthy controls but not in most multibacillary leprosy patients, tuberculosis patients, or endemic controls...(AU).
Descriptors:Motivos de Aminoácidos
Anticorpos Antibacterianos/BL
Antígenos de Bactérias/IM
Sítios de Ligação
Epitopos de Linfócito T
Genes Classe II do Complexo de Histocompatibilidade (MHC)
Genoma Bacteriano
Glicolipídeos/IM
Antígenos HLA-DR/*GE/IM
Hanseníase/DI/*IM/MI
Hanseníase Virchowiana/DI/IM/MI
Hanseníase Tuberculóide/DI/IM/MI
Mycobacterium leprae/GE/*IM
Linfócitos T/IM/MI
Limits:HUMANO
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov´t
Location:BR191.1; 09362/S


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Id:17687
Author:Tapinos, Nikos; Ohnishi, Makoto; Rambukkana, Anura
Title:ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase signaling mediates early demyelination induced by leprosy bacilli ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 2006. 6 p. ilus, tab, graf.
Abstract:Demyelination is a common pathologic feature in many neurodegenerative diseases including infection with leprosy-causing Mycobacterium leprae. Because of the long incubation time and highly complex disease pathogenesis, the management of nerve damage in leprosy, as in other demyelinating diseases, is extremely difficult. Therefore, an important challenge in therapeutic interventions is to identify the molecular events that occur in the early phase before the progression of the disease. Here we provide evidence that M. leprae-induced demyelination is a result of direct bacterial ligation to and activation of ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling without ErbB2-ErbB3 heterodimerization, a previously unknown mechanism that bypasses the neuregulin-ErbB3-mediated ErbB2 phosphorylation. MEK-dependent Erk1 and Erk2 (hereafter referred to as Erk1/2) signaling is identified as a downstream target of M. leprae-induced ErbB2 activation that mediates demyelination. Herceptin (trastuzumab), a therapeutic humanized ErbB2-specific antibody, inhibits M. leprae binding to and activation of ErbB2 and Erk1/2 in human primary Schwann cells, and the blockade of ErbB2 activity by the small molecule dual ErbB1-ErbB2 kinase inhibitor PKI-166 (ref. 11) effectively abrogates M. leprae-induced myelin damage in in vitro and in vivo models. These results may have implications for the design of ErbB2 RTK-based therapies for both leprosy nerve damage and other demyelinating neurodegenerative diseases. (AU).
Descriptors:Anticorpos Monoclonais/PD
Butadienos/PD
Células COS
Células Cultivadas
Cercopithecus aethiops
Técnicas de Cocultura
Doenças Desmielinizantes/*ME/PA
Ativação Enzimática/DE
Inibidores Enzimáticos/PD
Células Hela
Hanseníase/*ME/MI
Camundongos Knockout
Proteína Quinase 1 Ativada por Mitógeno/ME
Proteína Quinase 3 Ativada por Mitógeno/ME
Mycobacterium leprae/GE/*ME
Nitrilos/PD
Pirimidinas/PD
Pirróis/PD
Receptor erbB-2/*ME
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Células de Schwann/EN/ME
Nervo Ciático/ME/MI/UL
Transdução de Sinal
Limits:Ratos
Camundongos Nus
Camundongos
Humanos
Estudo Comparativo
Animais
Location:BR191.1; 09361/s


  18 / 214 HANSEN  
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Id:17617
Author:Moraes Braga, Anna Carolina de; Reason, Iara J. Messias; Maluf, Eliane Cesario Pereira; Vieira, Elizabete Regina
Title:Leprosy and confinement due to leprosy show high association with hepatitis C in Southern Brazil ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; 2006. 6 p. .
Abstract:Leprosy is a disease, which is accompanied by cellular immunity defects, which may increase the susceptibility of patients in developing co-infections. The association of leprosy with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 (HIV 1+2) infection and human T-lymphotropic virus types I and II (HTLV I+II) infection have previously been described in different populations. In this study, the prevalence of these infections was determined in 199 Southern Brazilian leprosy patients and in 681 matched controls. Antibodies to HCV were positive in 3.52% of the patients (7/199) and in 0.15% of the controls (1/681; odds ratio (OR)=24.79; 95% CI=3.03-202.74; p=0.0002). An increased risk of HCV infection was observed in institutionalized patients (OR=14.95; 95% CI=1.76-127.03; p=0.004) and in the lepromatous form of the disease (OR=7.67; 95% CI=0.43-136.62; p=ns). Anti-HIV 1+2 antibodies were positive in only one out-patient (1/199; 0.50%) and in none of the controls (0/681; OR=3.43; 95% CI=0.21-55.16; p>0.05). No leprosy patient was positive for anti-HTLV I+II antibodies. These results demonstrate an increased prevalence of HCV infection in leprosy patients from South Brazil and that both institutionalization and lepromatous form of the disease confer higher risk to HCV infection. These data emphasizes the importance of monitoring hepatitis C and leprosy interactions and the need of special care to institutionalized and lepromatous patients in preventing HCV co-infection. (AU).
Descriptors:Brasil/EP
Infecções por HIV/CO/EP
Infecções por HTLV-I/CO/EP
Infecções por HTLV-II/CO/EP
Hepacivirus/IM
Hepatite C/*CO/*EP
Anticorpos Anti-Hepatite C/BL
Hanseníase/*CO/*EP
Isolamento de Pacientes/*
Prevalência
Limits:Masculino
Meia-Idade
Humanos
Adolescente
Adulto
Idoso
Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais
Feminino
Location:BR191.1; 09359/S


  19 / 214 HANSEN  
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Id:17553
Author:Bottasso, O. A; Morini, J. C
Title:Imunopatologia de la lepra Immunopathology of leprosy-
Source:s.l; s.n; 1989. 3 p. .
Abstract:Se comentan los estudios en convivientes íntimos de enfermos de Lepra, donde se observó una relación inversa entre grado y tiempo de exposición al Mycobacterium leprae (MI) y la magnitud de la respuesta inmune in vivo hacia el bacilo (reacción de Mitsuda); esta variable por otro lado, se halla influenciada por un importante grado de determinación genética. En un modelo murino experimental, la artritis por adyuvante, también se comprobó que el tratamiento con MI inducia una población de células esplénicas supresoras, con actividad regulatoria sobre la respuesta inmune celular. Se plantean además, las posible alteraciones inmunorregulatorias involucradas con la excesiva respuesta humoral que sirve de sustrato para la generación del episodio de eritema nudoso leproso (ENL) (AU).
Descriptors:Imunidade Celular
Formação de Anticorpos
HANSENIASE/genet
HANSENIASE/imunol
ARTRITE EXPERIMENTAL/terap
TRANSFORMACAO LINFOCITICA
ANTIGENO DE MITSUDA/imunol
MYCOBACTERIUM LEPRAEMURIUM/imunol
Limits:HUMANO
ANIMAL
RATOS
Location:BR191.1; 09332/s


  20 / 214 HANSEN  
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Id:17550
Author:Dugue, Christophe; Perraut, Ronald; Youinou, Pierre; Renaudineau, Yves
Title:Effects of anti-endothelial cell antibodies in leprosy and malaria ..-
Source:s.l; s.n; Jan. 2004. 9 p. ilus, tab, graf.
Abstract:As a result of damaging endothelial cells (ECs), Mycobacterium leprae triggers the production of antibodies (Abs). These anti-EC Abs (AECAs) can be divided into two types. The first type nonspecifically reacts with components of the cytosol (CY) and can be detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The second specifically reacts with the EC membrane (MB) and requires fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis to be detected. The presence of both types of AECAs was determined in 68 leprosy patients. The ELISA was positive for 35 of them but also for 30 of 34 malaria patients and 17 of 50 healthy African controls. However, whereas FACS analysis showed MB reactivity in only three malaria patients and four controls, this reactivity was found in 27 leprosy patients, more of those having the lepromatous than the tuberculoid form. Specificity for MB, which we failed to absorb by incubation with CY lysates, predominated over that for CY in leprosy, unlike malaria, where the EC reactivity was restricted to the CY. Western blot analysis and two-dimensional electrophoresis revealed that calreticulin, vimentin, tubulin, and heat shock protein 70 were targeted by AECAs from leprosy patients, but other proteins remained unidentified. These auto-Abs, but not those from malaria patients, did activate ECs, as indicated by the E-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 upregulation, and/or induced them into apoptosis, as documented by four different methods. Our findings suggest that, in some but not all leprosy patients, AECAs may play a role in pathogenesis. (AU).
Descriptors:Auto-Anticorpos/*IM
Auto-Antígenos/IM
Linhagem Celular
Citossol/IM
Células Endoteliais/*IM/MI/PS
ELISA
Citometria de Fluxo
Hanseníase/*IM/*PP
Malária Falciparum/*IM/*PP
Limits:HUMANO
MASCULINO
FEMININO
ADOLESCENCIA
ADULTO
MEIA-IDADE
SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
Location:BR191.1; 09329/s



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