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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: hiv + nile + infection  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 5 of 5 for hiv nile infection. (0.07 seconds) 
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HIV/Aids infection high among discordant couples
Daily Monitor, Uganda -
... in the spread of HIV across the country with Kampala, northern and central regions all having rates of infection above 8 per cent. Presently, West Nile ...
Managing Post-Transplant Infections
Renal and Urology News, NY - Nov 26, 2008
These include seronegative HIV transmission, seronegative hepatitis C transmission, West Nile virus, and lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM) virus. ...

Natural News.com
There Is No Such Thing as the West Nile Virus
Natural News.com, AZ - Nov 8, 2008
West Nile Virus is not the only virus to never have been truly isolated. HIV, the virus believed to cause AIDS, also does not exist. ...
A Doctor, a Mutation and a Potential Cure for AIDS
Wall Street Journal - Nov 8, 2008
Most researchers there believed some HIV still lurks in the patient but that it can't ignite a raging infection, most likely because its target cells are ...
The Science of the Future of War
Wired News - Nov 21, 2008
Egypt has depended on the Nile for irrigation, drinking water, and flushing its waste for thousands of years. But even that vast stream of water is now ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: nile + 0.33 + 21,400  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Uncertainty continues to drive down previous gains on Cairo bourse
Business Intelligence Middle East (press release), United Arab Emirates - Jul 20, 2008
The board of directors of Nile Cotton Ginning announced that it would sell the company's lands in Damanhour and Kafr El Sheikh cities, where the proceeds ...
Source: Google News

Assessment of Terrestrial Gamma Radiation in Sudan -
AK Sam, MMO Ahmed, FA El Khangi, YO El Nigumi, E … - Radiation Protection Dosimetry, 1997 - NTP
... Ad Duwem 0.59 1.57 1.04 1.29 1.43 0.90 1.26 Blue Nile 0.33 ND 1.23 1.45 2.45
0.94 1.26 Um Dom 0.36 ND 0.91 1.27 1.64 0.83 1.38 Dongola ...

[PDF] Experimental infection of North American birds with the New York 1999 strain of West Nile virus -
N Komar, S Langevin, S Hinten, N Nemeth, E Edwards … - Emerg Infect Dis, 2003 - origin.cdc.gov
... 311 RESEARCH To evaluate transmission dynamics, we exposed 25 bird species to West
Nile virus (WNV) by infectious mosquito bite. ... 1999 Strain of West Nile Virus ...
-

[PDF] TOXICITY AND RETENTION OF DYE MARKERS TO HETEROTERMES INDICOLA
A Sattar, RN ZahoorSalihah, A Farid - ird.sut.ac.th
... Dye (Conc.) % Mortality after specified days 3 6 9 12 15 0.06% Nile blue A 0.33 +
0.58 c 0.33 + 0.58 c 1.33 + 0.58 c 2.00 + 0.00 c 3.00 + 1.00 c ...

[CITATION] 18 Hydraulic Roughness of the Nile River
MM GASSER, MBA SAAD, SF EL-SHAZLY - Management and Development of Major Rivers, 1996 - Oxford University Press, USA

… Algae Chlorella homosphaera and Chlorella vulgaris with Respect to Oil Pollution in the River Nile -
MM El-Sheekh, AH El-Naggar, MEH Osman, A Haieder - Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, 2000 - Springer
... The flourishment of Chlorophyta during summer was reported by Ishak et al.
(1979) in the River Nile. ... 2 0.36 0.40 a 0.37 0.33 0.31 a 0.29 a ...

Ultrashort dephasing-time measurements in Nile Blue polymer films -
CH Grossman, JJ Schwendiman - Optics Letters, 1998 - OSA
... a translation resolution of 50 nm and allowed time delays with 0.33-fs increments. ...
beams were sent along parallel paths and focused through a Nile Blue?PVOH ...

Twisted charge transfer processes of nile red in homogeneous solutions and in faujasite zeolite -
N Sarkar, K Das, DN Nath, K Bhattacharyya - Langmuir, 1994 - pubs.acs.org
... Table I. Emission Properties of Nile Red in Different Solvents ... 45.7 0.78 4.8 49.6
0.34 4.2 51.5 0.33 3.7 54.7 0.18 2.6 55.2 0.22 2.8 55.3 0.08 1.8 56.1 0.06 1.6 ...

Distribution of aquatic plants in relation to environmental factors in the Nile Delta -
AHA Khedr, MA El-Demerdash - Aquatic Botany, 1997 - Elsevier
... apicatum in the Nile Delta. ... negatively with CCA axis 1 (Table 3) were shading (r =
-0.88), EC (r= - 0.59), total-P (r = -0.41), total-N (r= -0.33), Ca 2+ (r ...

9.9 River discharge affecting coastal waters -
S Francisco - Springer
... Submarine slope inclination % Ebro 0 0.6500 Danube 0.10 0.3500 Nile 0.33 0.2200
Mississippi 0.46 0.1600 Magdalena 1.00 1.0000 Niger 1.70 0.1350 ...

[CITATION] On the fecundity of the Nile catfish Synodontis schall (BLOCH-SCHNEIDER, 1801)
G Nawar - Sudan Notes and Records, 1959 - Khartoum University Press

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Mutation that protects against HIV infection may raise risk of West Nile virus illness

Researchers from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases ( NIAID ), found that people who lack a cell surface protein called CCR5 are highly resistant to infection by HIV but may be at increased risk of developing West Nile virus ( WNV ) illness when exposed to the mosquito-borne virus.

The study, by Philip M. Murphy, and colleagues, is published in The Journal of Experimental Medicine.

The findings may have cautionary implications for physicians who are treating HIV-positive individuals with experimental CCR5-blocking drugs.

" This is the first genetic risk factor to be identified for West Nile virus infection," says NIH director Elias A. Zerhouni. " While infection does not always lead to illness, the virus can sometimes cause serious problems and, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were 102 deaths in the United States from West Nile virus infection in 2005."

"A decade ago, a number of research groups determined that CCR5 is the primary co-receptor used by HIV to infect cells," says NIAID director Anthony S. Fauci. " Their work laid the foundation for the development of CCR5-blocking drugs, which are designed to slow the spread of HIV from cell to cell."

Most people inherit two normal copies of the gene that codes for CCR5 protein.
About 1 percent of North American whites, however, have a mutation in both copies and thus do not produce any CCR5. These individuals have the good fortune of being highly resistant to HIV infection and otherwise seemed to suffer no ill effects from the absence of this receptor protein, scientists noted. But the new research by Murphy's team suggests that lacking CCR5 may not be an unalloyed good after all.

In 2005 Murphy and his coworkers developed a mouse model to clarify the roles of various immune system cells in responding to WNV infection. They discovered that while most mice survived WNV infection, mice genetically engineered to lack CCR5 receptors suffered rapid and uniformly fatal infection by the virus.
Further investigation showed that CCR5 promoted the movement of several classes of immune system cells into the brain and central nervous system, which appeared to protect normal mice from the encephalitis characteristic of serious WNV infection.

" We wanted to know if humans lacking CCR5 might be at greater risk of the more serious complications of WNV infection," says Murphy. The researchers examined human blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples from 417 laboratory-confirmed cases of WNV infection that occurred in Arizona and Colorado in 2003 and 2004. Of these, 395 were suitable for genetic testing for the presence or absence of the HIV-protective mutation.

Murphy and his colleagues determined that 4.5 percent of 247 WNV-positive samples from Arizona were from patients who had two copies of the CCR5 mutation.
In contrast, a control group of 145 WNV-negative blood samples showed 0.7 percent were from people who had two copies of the CCR5 mutation--a number in line with the expected 0.8 to 1 percent range believed to be present in all North American whites.

Next, the researchers analyzed the WNV-positive samples from Colorado and determined that 4.1 percent of the entire set of 148 samples came from individuals homozygous for the CCR5 mutation. Among those Coloradans who provided WNV-positive samples and who self-reported their race as white, the percentage of homozygous individuals was 8.3.

The absence of normal CCR5 genes is a strong genetic risk factor for developing symptomatic cases of WNV infection, the researchers conclude. "The findings may have important clinical implications for physicians who treat people with HIV," notes Murphy. For example, he says, it may be prudent for HIV-positive individuals who are taking experimental CCR5-blockers to strictly limit mosquito exposure.

Source: National Institutes of Health, 2006

 
 
 
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