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Cell Recipients (cell + recipient)
Kinds of Cell Recipients Selected AbstractsGenital herpes due to acyclovir-sensitive herpes simplex virus caused secondary and recurrent herpetic whitlows due to thymidine kinase-deficient/temperature-sensitive virusJOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 11 2007Yuka Shimada Abstract Herpes simplex virus (HSV)-2 caused a genital ulcer in a 40-year-old allogenic stem cell recipient, and a secondary herpetic whitlow appeared during 2 months of acyclovir (ACV) therapy. Both genital ulcer, and whitlow were cured 3 months later, but 6 months after recovery the whitlow alone recurred. DNA of the genital, first, and recurrent whitlow isolates showed similar endonuclease digestion fragment profiles. The genital virus was ACV-sensitive, and the two whitlow isolates were ACV-resistant/thymidine kinase (TK)-deficient. The TK gene of the whitlow isolates had the same frame shift from the 274th amino acid and termination at the 347th amino acid due to the deletion of a cytosine at the 819th nucleotide. Because the temperature of the thumb is 33/34°C or lower, the temperature sensitivity of the isolates were compared, and both whitlow isolates were significantly more temperature-sensitive (ts) at 39°C than the genital isolate. The two whitlow isolates showed cutaneous pathogenicity in mouse ear pinna but not midflank, while the genital isolate was pathogenic at both sites, suggesting that temperature adaptation was an important element of pathogenicity in the whitlow. The virus populations of isolates of the genital, and first whitlow were examined by 31, and 82 clones, respectively, and the clones from genital, and whitlow isolates were ACV-sensitive, and -resistant, respectively, showing their homogeneity. The acyclovir-sensitive genital lesion had spread as a TK-deficient/ts herpetic whitlow during ACV treatment, and an apparently TK-deficient virus adapted to the local temperature might have caused the whitlow recurrence. J. Med. Virol. 79:1731,1740, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Disseminated Scopulariopsis brevicaulis infection in an allogeneic stem cell recipient: case report and review of the literatureCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 5 2010A. Salmon Clin Microbiol Infect 2010; 16: 508,512 Abstract A fatal case of disseminated Scopulariopsis brevicaulis infection in an allogeneic stem cell transplant recipient is described. The patient was initially thought to have pulmonary aspergillosis, on the basis of clinical signs and antigenaemia, but Aspergillus was not isolated by culture. Scopulariopsis brevicaulis was subsequently isolated from skin and then from sputum and stool. Further investigation revealed that the infection had spread from a primary pulmonary site to the skin. A review of the literature underscores the difficulty of diagnosing infections caused by such emerging fungal pathogens and the poor outcome of immunocompromised patients with non- Aspergillus mould infections. [source] Effective alternates to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as antimicrobial prophylaxis in stem cell recipients: Are there any?PEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 8 2008Mayur Ramesh First page of article [source] Favorable response of pediatric stem cell recipients to human protein C concentrate substitution for veno-occlusive diseasePEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 1 2007S. W. Eber Abstract:, Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 is known to be elevated in patients with hepatic VOD after intensive chemotherapy. To re-establish endogenous fibrinolysis and to inhibit thrombin formation, we used non-APC (zymogen) to normalize PAI-1 levels. As a consequence of thrombin formation inhibition and the consecutive inhibition of the coagulation cascade, this treatment is expected to reduce the elevated D-dimer level. Six pediatric stem cell recipients with moderate or severe VOD after busulfan or total body irradiation conditioning regimen are reported here who were therapy-refractory to defibrotide or rt-PA therapy. All patients had low levels of PC activity (16,39%). The administration of PC (60,240 IU/kg) led to a rapid and sustained rise in PC activity (target level >80%) with near normalization of prothrombin and partial thromboplastin time in all patients. Elevated PAI-1 levels declined. Five of the six patients showed a good clinical response with prompt resolution of clinical, sonographic, and laboratory signs of hepatic blood flow obstruction, while one patient with severe VOD, as well as concomitant liver GVHD and CMV disease, had a slow but detectable response to PC therapy. All patients survived. [source] Production of germ-line chimeras by the transfer of cryopreserved gonadal germ cells collected from 7- and 9-day-old chick embryosANIMAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, Issue 1 2004Atsushi TAJIMA ABSTRACT Gonadal germ cells (GGC) were collected from the gonads of 7- or 9-day-old White Leghorn chick embryos and suspended in freezing medium containing 10% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). The cell suspension was frozen at ,1°C/min. until the temperature reached ,80°C. Then, the cells were immersed in liquid nitrogen at ,196°C and stored for 3,4 months. Approximately 50 frozen/thawed GGC were injected into the dorsal aorta of each 2-day-old Rhode Island Red (RIR) embryo, from which blood was drawn before germ-cell injection. The injected embryos were incubated until they hatched and the chicks were raised until sexually mature. On reaching sexual maturity, a progeny test was performed by mating recipient chicks with normal RIR of the opposite sex. Progenies were obtained from male germ cell recipients that were injected with germ cells collected from 7- and 9-day-old embryos. The results demonstrated that frozen/thawed GGC collected from 7- or 9-day-old fertilized eggs can be used to produce male germ-line chimeras. [source] |