scholarly journals Identification of Immune Activation Markers in the Early Onset of COVID-19 Infection

Author(s):  
Johannes J. Kovarik ◽  
Anna K. Kämpf ◽  
Fabian Gasser ◽  
Anna N. Herdina ◽  
Monika Breuer ◽  
...  

This study aimed to determine the specific cytokine profile in peripheral blood during the early onset of COVID-19 infection. This was a cross-sectional exploratory, single center study. A total of 55 plasma samples were studied. Serum samples of adults showing symptoms of COVID-19 infection who were tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection (CoV+, n=18) at the COVID-19 outpatient clinic of the Medical University of Vienna were screened for immune activation markers by Luminex technology. Additionally, age and gender-matched serum samples of patients displaying COVID-19 associated symptoms, but tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 (CoV-, n=16) as well as healthy controls (HC, n=21) were analyzed. COVID-19 positive (CoV+) patients showed a specific upregulation of BLC (141; 74-189 pg/mL), SCD30 (273; 207-576 pg/mL), MCP-2 (18; 12-30 pg/mL) and IP-10 (37; 23-96 pg/mL), compared to patients with COVID19-like symptoms but negative PCR test (CoV-), BLC (61; 22-100 pg/mL), sCD30L (161; 120-210 pg/mL), MCP-2 (8; 5-12 pg/mL) and IP-10 (9; 6-12 pg/mL) and healthy controls (HC) (BLC 22; 11-36 pg/mL, sCD30 74; 39-108 pg/mL, MCP-2 6; 3-9. pg/mL, IP-10 = 8; 5-13). The markers APRIL, sIL-2R, IL7, MIF, MIP-1b, SCF, SDF-1a, sTNF-RII were elevated in both CoV+ and CoV- patient groups compared to healthy controls. HGF, MDC and VEGF-A were elevated in CoV- but not CoV+ compared to healthy controls. BLC, sCD30, MCP-2 and IP-10 are specifically induced during early stages of COVID-19 infection and might constitute attractive targets for early diagnosis and treatment of this disease.

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s380-s380
Author(s):  
Sree Kalpana Mohankumar ◽  
Vishweshwarayya Hiremath ◽  
Rajashree Koppad

Background: Countries that have good rubella surveillance, report ∼10,000–20,000 rubella cases annually. In India, not many cases of rubella are reported. The Hebballi Agasi ward of Dharwad district in Karnataka state, India, reported rubella cases on the last week of January 2015. Objective: We investigated the outbreak by time, place, person, and clinical symptoms. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study. We defined a case as any resident of Heballi Agasi who had fever and rash, with or without lymphadenopathy, arthralgia, conjunctivitis, coryza, and cough, after December 15, 2014. We collected sociodemographic details and clinical symptoms of patients. We collected 5 serum samples and sent them to the National Measles Laboratory, Bangalore. We tested for measles and rubella antibodies. We drew an epidemic curve and a spot map. We computed mean age of cases, and we calculated attack rates by mean age and gender. We calculated proportions to describe clinical symptoms, and we interviewed stakeholders regarding rubella vaccination. We continued surveillance until March 2015. Results: The population of Heballi Agasi was 1,458. We identified 15 rubella cases (9 girls and 6 boys). The outbreak lasted between December 10, 2014, and February 21, 2015, with a peak on January 16, 2015. The overall attack rate was 1% (15 of 1,458). The mean age of the cases was 6 years (range, 1–23). The attack rate was high (7.7%) among those aged 1–6 years (11 of 143). The attack rate among those aged >6 years was 0.3% (4 of 1,315). In addition to fever and rash, 93% of cases (14 of 15) had coryza, 47% had cough (7 of 15), and 40% had conjunctivitis (6 of 15). Lymphadenopathy was present in only 1 case (1 of 15), and arthralgia was absent among all 15 cases. There was no death among the cases. All 5 sera were positive for rubella and negative for measles. Rubella vaccination was not given for any of the cases because no rubella vaccination is provided in the routine immunization program. Conclusions: There was a rubella outbreak in Heballi Agasi ward. Children aged 1–6 years were most affected. We recommend rubella vaccination in the routine immunization.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (53) ◽  
pp. 6553-6566
Author(s):  
GC Onyemelukwe ◽  
◽  
D Ogoina ◽  
GE Ibiam ◽  
GH Ogbadu

Aflatoxins are natural contaminants of food crops implicated in the pathogenesis of various human diseases. This study aimed to determine the associations between aflatoxins and protein- energy malnutrition ( PEM) by measurements of aflatoxins in serum, urine and food on plate of Nigerian children with PEM. A cross - sectional study was undertaken in 3 agro - ecological regions of Nigeria (Guinea savannah, Sudan savannah and Rain forest), where aflatoxins B1 , B2, G1, G2, M1, and M2 were measured in sera, urine and food on plate of 79 children with PEM (kwashiorkor n=36, marasmic kwashiorkor n=29 and marasmus n=13) and 33 healthy controls, matched for age and sex. Among healthy controls, aflatoxin detection rates were higher in the Guinea Savannah (72.2%) than in the Sudan Savannah (53.8%), albeit statistically insignificant. In relation to nutritional groups, the rates of detection of aflatoxins were higher in marasmic kwashiorkor (93.1%) and kwashiorkor patients (88.9%) , compared to marasmus (76.9%) and controls (63.6%, p=0.013). The rates of detection of B1 aflatoxin followed a similar trend viz. marasmic kwashiorkor (82.4%), kwashiorkor (69.4%), marasmus (53.8%) and controls (42.4%, p=0.007). Of all types of aflatoxins detected in serum, M2 had the highest rates of detection in all patient groups and controls. The median concentrations of aflatoxins detected in sera of each PEM group were significantly higher than those of controls, but comparisons between PEM groups were not statistically significant. The frequency and concentration of aflatoxins detected in urine and food of PEM groups and controls were not statistically different. However, controls had the lowest serum / urine aflatoxin ratio as well as lowest median aflatoxins concentrations in their food as compared to PEM patient s. In conclusion, aflatoxins are commonly detected in the body fluids and food of Nigerian children , but more frequently and at higher concentrations in children with PEM , possibly due to decreased excretion or increased exposure. Future prospective studies are desirable to determine if aflatoxins contribute to the pathogenesis of all types of PEM and not necessarily kwashiorkor alone.


2018 ◽  
Vol 51 (06) ◽  
pp. 251-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theresa Dembler-Stamm ◽  
Jana Fiebig ◽  
Andreas Heinz ◽  
Jürgen Gallinat

Abstract Introduction Sexual dysfunction figures prominently in patients with schizophrenia; however, medication effects may play a role. The objective of this case control study was to assess differences in the presence of sexual dysfunction in unmedicated patients with schizophrenia versus healthy controls. Methods Sexual dysfunction was assessed using the Derogatis Inventory for Sexual Function self-rating in a cross-sectional design controlling for age and gender effects. A brief sexual anamnesis was applied to describe the psychosocial background of the mostly male sample further. Results Results show a significant difference with patients reporting more problems in most domains and with a significant correlation between severity of psychosis (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale total scores) and the impairment of orgasm experience. The study revealed reduced sexual activities and less pleasure during sexual activities of patients. Discussion This study implies that schizophrenia has an impact on the presence of sexual dysfunction and that sexual dysfunction is partly independent of antipsychotic treatment. Since the sample consisted mostly of first-episode males, conclusions might only be valid for this subgroup.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 30-41
Author(s):  
Maryam Moula Maryam Moula ◽  
Muhammad Akram Sharif ◽  
Faraz A. Wajidi

To determine employee autonomous motivation and find out the effect of age and Gender on autonomous motivation among employees working in public sector medical university, Karachi. A Cross-sectional study design was used to conduct this study among employees of public sector medical university. The duration of the study was three months. The sample size of the study was 384. The response rate was 78%, 300 out of 384 duly filled questionnaires were collected. A probability random sampling technique was used to collect data. SPSS software was applied to analyze the collected data. Mean ±SD and % & n were explored for Quantitative and Qualitative variables, respectively. T-Test and one-way ANOVA were applied to test hypotheses. P-Value <0.05 was considered significant. 59.3% (n=178) were males. 46% (n=138) were females in age between 25 to 31 years. 53.7 % (n=161) respondent reported their marital status as single. The mean age of the respondents was 30.16±7.03. Factors that motivate employees included salary (34%), positive feedback (26.3%), felt very proud when did well at work (52%), learnt new things (57.7%), , had a feeling of accomplishment (35.3%), Solving work issues made them feel important (26.7%), felt guilty if didn’t accomplish a job-related task (45.3%). The t-test and ANOVA revealed significant effect of gender; t (298) = -2.81, p-value = 0.005, CI [-3.77, -0.66] and age; F (5,294) =2.56, p-Value = 0.027 on employees’ autonomous motivation. It was observed proven that there was a significant effect of gender and age on employee’s autonomous motivation.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 856-856
Author(s):  
Thomas Luft ◽  
Katharina Schmidt ◽  
Karl-Heinz Kellner ◽  
Aleksandar Radujkovic ◽  
Nicola Lehners ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Severe chronic graft versus host disease (cGVHD) causes debilitating morbidity due to fibrotic and inflammatory changes in connective tissues mainly of skin, lungs, eyes and the gastrointestinal tract. In contrast, mild cGVHD is strongly associated with better overall survival due to lower relapse rates, so that permissive immunosuppressive drug management is actively pursued by many clinicians. Although alloreactive T lymphocytes are clearly involved in the induction of both grades of cGVHD, it is unpredictable which patients are prone to develop severe rather than mild chronic disease. Monokine induced by interferon gamma (MIG, CXCL9) has been correlated with cGVHD. CXCL9 is a member of the CXCR3 ligand family, which plays a role in other fibrotic diseases such as systemic sclerosis. Anthranilic acid (AA) reduced the severity of acute GVHD in mice. AA is the product of a complex metabolic pathway involving indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), (Trp), kynurenine (Kyn), and Vitamin B6. Based on our observation that anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) and statins independently reduce the incidence of severe cGVHD, we investigated if MIG, IDO, Trp, Kyn and Vitamin B6 serum levels are correlated with cGVHD. Patients and methods: The incidence of cGVHD was evaluated in 554 patients who consented to participate in this observational study and who survived the first 6 months after alloSCT. Median age was 53 years, 333 were male. The underlying conditions were AML (157), ALL (49), MPN/ MDS (95), lymphoma (203), and multiple myeloma (99). Donors were matched related (194), matched unrelated (227), mismatched unrelated (113), or haploidentical (15). Myeloablative or aplasia conditioning was administered in 101, reduced intensity conditioning in 453 patients. 325 patients received ATG and 244 patients received pravastatin at a dose of 20 mg/d starting from day-1 of alloSCT as per institutional policy. 176 patients received both, ATG and pravastatin, whereas 159 patients received neither. Chronic GVHD was diagnosed and graded as severe or non-severe applying the National Institutes of Health's 2005 consensus criteria. Day +100 serum samples for measuring CXCL9, IDO, Trp and Kyn by ELISA were available for 350 patients and at onset of cGVHD for 185 patients. Furthermore, VitB6 was measured by HPLC on day +100 in 194 patients. Results: Chronic GVHD occurred in 295 patients (54%), 58 (11%) of whom developed severe cGVHD of skin, lungs or eyes, 40 (7%) isolated severe cGVHD of the gastrointestinal tract, and 197 (36%) developed non-severe cGVHD. ATG and statin were associated with reduced incidence of of severe cGVHD. In contrast, only ATG reduced mild chronic GVHD whereas statins did not (Figure 1). Increased levels of CXCL9 were observed for both mild and severe cGVHD at disease onset and on day+100 after alloSCT. In contrast, highest Kyn levels were measured at disease onset of patients with severe cGVHD of lung, skin and eyes. Patients who received ATG prior to transplantation showed significantly lower serum levels of CXCL9 at cGVHD onset, but not on d+100. In contrast, statins did not influence CXCL9 levels, but were associated with lower serum levels of Trp and Kyn and increased IDO levels on day+100. Higher Trp and Kyn serum levels on day+100 despite statin usage predicted higher incidence of severe cGVHD. The reduction of both, Trp and Kyn serum levels in the context of IDO activation suggested that Kyn catabolism is enhanced by statins. Indeed, higher Vitamin B6 serum levels compensated for statin failure and protected against severe cGVHD. Conclusions: Ourdata suggest that ATG and statins minimize severe cGVHD by distinct mechanisms. The fact that ATG associates with reduced immune activation markers (CXCL9) at cGVHD onset, but has no impact on homeostatic serum markers on day +100 is consistent with initial depletion of alloreactive T cells during the early post-transplant period, resulting in weaker immune activation after tapering immunosuppressive therapy. In contrast, statin intake seems to induce IDO and reduce Trp serum levels on day+100 along with activation of Kyn catabolism, pointing to a pathophysiological role of this pathway in the prevention of cGVHD. Accordingly, Vitamin B6 levels could reduce severe cGVHD incidence in patients who failed to lower Trp and Kyn levels in the context of statins. The synergism of statin and Vitamin B6 is clinically relevant and warrants further studies. Figure 1. Figure 1. Disclosures Luft: Immundiagnostik AG: Research Funding. Kellner:Immundiagnostik AG: Equity Ownership. Hegenbart:Janssen: Honoraria, Other: travel support.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nagwa Mohamed Sabry Abdelsalam Mahmoud ◽  
Gamal Baheeg ◽  
Mohammed Abdelhakeem ◽  
Hadir Haroun Ahmed Mohamed

Abstract Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinical significance of the platelet to lymphocyte ratio (PLR) and the neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR) in term neonates and its impact on management of Early-Onset Neonatal Sepsis (EOS).Materials and Methods: This prospective cross-sectional observational study was conducted with 40 term neonates diagnosed with EOS compared with 40 healthy controls. Exclusion criteria were prematurity, post- maturity, small or large for gestational age according to week of pregnancy, preeclampsia, gestational diabetes mellitus, chorioamnionitis, congenital major anomalies, and cyanotic congenital heart disease. Results: A total of 80 term neonates were included in the study. Of these, 40 were diagnosed with EOS and 40 were healthy controls. NLR and PLR as predictors of early-onset neonatal sepsis, sensitivity of NLR was 67% and PLR was 70% and specificity of NLR was 99% and PLR was 73% and PPV of NLR was 98%, PLR was 72%. There is a significant weak positive correlation between platelets and sepsis, significant fair positive correlation between WBCs and PLR with sepsis, significant moderate positive correlation between immature neutrophils, I.T and NLR with sepsis, finally a significant negative fair correlation between lymphocytes and sepsis.Conclusions: NLRs and PLRs were positively correlated with EOS in term neonates, and these ratios can be used as diagnostic adjunct tests for neonate EOS workups.


2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 257-264
Author(s):  
Katja Petrowski ◽  
Gloria-Beatrice Wintermann ◽  
Clemens Kirschbaum ◽  
Stefan R. Bornstein

Panic disorder (PD) has been associated with an altered reactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) system in the dexamethasone-corticotropin-releasing-hormone (DEX-CRH) test. Recent findings showed that the duration of the PD and the severity of psychopathology are prominent moderators of the HPA-axis reactivity under hormonal stress induction. As major depression (MD) often occurs as comorbidity in patients with PD, a secondary MD might influence the reactivity of HPA-axis in the DEX-CRH test. For this study, the DEX-CRH test was implemented to observe the adreno-corticotropin-hormone (ACTH) and the cortisol release. The sample included 20 patients diagnosed with PD (mean age = 32.20 years, SD = 9.98), 20 patients with PD and comorbid MD (mean age = 37.63 years, SD = 11.31) in a Structured Clinical Interview (SCID), and 20 healthy controls (mean age = 31.97 years, SD = 10.53) matched by age and gender. The ACTH and the cortisol release increased significantly in all three groups due to the CRH injection (p < .001). The two anxiety patient groups differed in the cortisol response pattern, however, not in the ACTH. Patients with pure PD showed a lower CRH-induced cortisol release than healthy controls (p < .038) and patients with a comorbid major depression (p = .001); the latter showed the highest cortisol release in DEX-CRH test. Duration (AUCg: r = .353, p = .030; AUCi: r = .339, p = .037) and severity of psychopathology (AUCg: r = .496, p = .026; AUCi: r = .463, p = .040) significantly correlated with the cortisol release. Patients with/without comorbid MD showed some dissociation between the central and the peripheral HPA-axis functionality under the DEX-CRH test. Furthermore, it seems that a secondary depressive disorder is the decisive factor in explaining an increased reactivity of HPA-axis in patients with PD.


Author(s):  
Dineo V. Phatlhane ◽  
Hayley Ipp ◽  
Rajiv T. Erasmus ◽  
Annalise E. Zemlin

AbstractThe chronic stage of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, although clinically asymptomatic, is characterized by activation of the immune system and persistent inflammation. Procalcitonin (PCT) has been studied in HIV infection as a marker of bacterial infection. Our aim was to assess the effect of persistent immune activation on PCT levels in asymptomatic treatment naïve HIV infected subjects.This was a cross-sectional study of 68 asymptomatic antiretroviral therapy-naive HIV infected participants and 42 uninfected controls. Stored serum samples were used to measure: PCT, interleukin-6 (IL-6), lipopolysaccharide binding protein (LBP), high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), immunoglobulin G (IgG) and albumin. PCT was correlated with markers of: disease progression (CD4 count and viral load), immune activation (CD 38 on CD8+ T cells, IgG and LBP), inflammation (IL-6, hsCRP and albumin).IL-6, IgG and CD8/38 were all significantly increased while albumin and CD4 counts were significantly lower in the HIV infected group. PCT levels were not significantly different between the two groups. There was no significant difference in LBP and hsCRP; however, their levels were increased in both groups. PCT correlated only with LBP (p=0.0001). IL-6 and LBP correlated positively with hsCRP and IgG. Albumin correlated inversely with IL-6 and viral load. Only IgG and CD8/38 correlated inversely with CD4 counts.We demonstrated the activation of the innate (raised LBP), humoral (raised IgG) and cellular immune systems (increased CD8/38 T cells). Despite a state of persistent inflammation, PCT levels are not elevated in asymptomatic untreated HIV infection.


F1000Research ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 248 ◽  
Author(s):  
April W. Armstrong ◽  
Julie Wu ◽  
Mary Ann Johnson ◽  
Dmitry Grapov ◽  
Baktazh Azizi ◽  
...  

Importance: While “omics” studies have advanced our understanding of inflammatory skin diseases, metabolomics is mostly an unexplored field in dermatology.Objective: We sought to elucidate the pathogenesis of psoriatic diseases by determining the differences in metabolomic profiles among psoriasis patients with or without psoriatic arthritis and healthy controls.Design: We employed a global metabolomics approach to compare circulating metabolites from patients with psoriasis, psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis, and healthy controls.Setting: Study participants were recruited from the general community and from the Psoriasis Clinic at the University of California Davis in United States.Participants: We examined metabolomic profiles using blood serum samples from 30 patients age and gender matched into three groups: 10 patients with psoriasis, 10 patients with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis and 10 control participants.Main outcome(s) and measures(s): Metabolite levels were measured calculating the mean peak intensities from gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry.Results: Multivariate analyses of metabolomics profiles revealed altered serum metabolites among the study population. Compared to control patients, psoriasis patients had a higher level of alpha ketoglutaric acid (Pso: 288 ± 88; Control: 209 ± 69; p=0.03), a lower level of asparagine (Pso: 5460 ± 980; Control: 7260 ± 2100; p=0.02), and a lower level of glutamine (Pso: 86000 ± 20000; Control: 111000 ± 27000; p=0.02). Compared to control patients, patients with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis had increased levels of glucuronic acid (Pso + PsA: 638 ± 250; Control: 347 ± 61; p=0.001). Compared to patients with psoriasis alone, patients with both psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis had a decreased level of alpha ketoglutaric acid (Pso + PsA: 186 ± 80; Pso: 288 ± 88; p=0.02) and an increased level of lignoceric acid (Pso + PsA: 442 ± 280; Pso: 214 ± 64; p=0.02).Conclusions and relevance: The metabolite differences help elucidate the pathogenesis of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis and they may provide insights for therapeutic development.


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