10 research outputs found
Collaborative Management of HIV Infection in the Community: An Effort to Improve the Quality of HIV Care
Our hospital led a multidisciplinary community team to improve the quality of care delivered to HIV-infected clients utilizing a disease management approach in a US metropolitan community of 150,000 people. Community needs assessment and client and community surveys were used to define the problems. Patient care flowcharting and the creation of an electronic patient database facilitated patient tracking across the entire community. Clinical guidelines and a consultation and referral immunology clinic standardized care practices. Measurable improvements in the quality of care were noted in multiple areas. Flowchart completion rates rose from 44% to 100%; medication adherence assessment rose from 82% to 100%; immunization rates rose from a mean of 72% to a mean of 87%; PPD screening rose from a low of 35% to a high of 87%; perinatal transmission rates fell from 31% to 4%; and Emergency Department utilization decreased. Two essential components of the effort were the establishment of a full-time leadership position in the form of a clinical nurse practitioner and the creation of an electronic database with flowcharting to standardize the measurement, delivery and tracking of care. The programme has become an example of successful disease management through hospital-community collaboration
Non-essential role for TLR2 and its signaling adaptor Mal/TIRAP in preserving normal lung architecture in mice
Myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) and MyD88-adaptor like (Mal)/Toll-interleukin 1 receptor domain containing adaptor protein (TIRAP) play a critical role in transducing signals downstream of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) family. While genetic ablation of the TLR4/MyD88 signaling axis in mice leads to pulmonary cell death and oxidative stress culminating in emphysema, the involvement of Mal, as well as TLR2 which like TLR4 also signals via MyD88 and Mal, in the pathogenesis of emphysema has not been studied. By employing an in vivo genetic approach, we reveal here that unlike the spontaneous pulmonary emphysema which developed in Tlr42/2 mice by 6 months of age, the lungs of Tlr22/2 mice showed no physiological or morphological signs of emphysema. A more detailed comparative analysis of the lungs from these mice confirmed that elevated oxidative protein carbonylation levels and increased numbers of alveolar cell apoptosis were only detected in Tlr42/2 mice, along with up-regulation of NADPH oxidase 3 (Nox3) mRNA expression. With respect to Mal, the architecture of the lungs of Mal2/2 mice was normal. However, despite normal oxidative protein carbonylation levels in the lungs of emphysema-free Mal2/2 mice, these mice displayed increased levels of apoptosis comparable to those observed in emphysematous Tlr42/2 mice. In conclusion, our data provide in vivo evidence for the non-essential role for TLR2, unlike the related TLR4, in maintaining the normal architecture of the lung. In addition, we reveal that Mal differentially facilitates the anti-apoptotic, but not oxidant suppressive, activities of TLR4 in the lung, both of which appear to be essential for TLR4 to prevent the onset of emphysema
A delayed diagnosis of ocular toxocariasis presenting as total monocular retinal detachment in an immunocompetent 57-year-old male
A healthy 57-year-old man present to outpatient ophthalmological services in southwestern Connecticut with a 16-month history of unilateral periorbital pain, photophobia, and progressively decreasing visual acuity in his left eye. Prior extensive work-up for uveitis in his home state of Mississippi had yielded no etiology for his symptoms, and empiric therapy with glucocorticoid eye drops had not halted their decline. Fundoscopic examination demonstrated total combined retinal detachment of the left eye. Extensive repeat serological and immunological screening was positive for Toxocara immunoglobulin-G, consistent with a diagnosis of ocular toxocariasis, and the patient completed a course of albendazole with stabilization of symptoms. Despite toxocara being endemic to the United States, diagnoses of ocular toxocariasis are extremely uncommon, with the majority of cases occurring in young children. This unusual case of ocular toxocariasis in a healthy adult serves to illustrate that significant, irreversible morbidity can result from lack of both clinician and public awareness of this parasitic infection
Key issues in the clinical development and implementation of TB vaccines in South Africa.
Significant progress has been made in advancing the development pipeline for a new and more effective
TB vaccine with some candidate vaccines now in late stage clinical evaluation. However, progress has
been hampered by an incomplete understanding of the components of a protective immune response
and limited animal models, rendering the field unable to reliably predict vaccine efficacy earlier in
preclinical development, including by evaluation in animal models, and limiting the predictive utility of
comparing immunogenic effects across vaccine candidates in phase I/II studies. Consequently, new
candidate vaccines have to be evaluated for efficacy in large-scale phase II/III trials using clinical
endpoints. Apart from the technical challenges of characterising TB incidence in target populations at
high risk of acquiring TB disease and standardising case definitions in order to improve both the
sensitivity and more importantly the specificity of trial endpoints, there is an urgency in expanding and
supporting the considerable trial infrastructure that will be required to evaluate and ultimately license
a new TB vaccine. In the longer term, implementation strategies are dependent on what policy makers
most value. Economic analyses will be essential to guide policy and implementation. This paper outlines
the gaps and challenges and identifies solutions for effectively developing and efficiently introducing
a new TB vaccine
The major genetic determinants of HIV-1 control affect HLA class I peptide presentation.
Infectious and inflammatory diseases have repeatedly shown strong genetic associations within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC); however, the basis for these associations remains elusive. To define host genetic effects on the outcome of a chronic viral infection, we performed genome-wide association analysis in a multiethnic cohort of HIV-1 controllers and progressors, and we analyzed the effects of individual amino acids within the classical human leukocyte antigen (HLA) proteins. We identified >300 genome-wide significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the MHC and none elsewhere. Specific amino acids in the HLA-B peptide binding groove, as well as an independent HLA-C effect, explain the SNP associations and reconcile both protective and risk HLA alleles. These results implicate the nature of the HLA-viral peptide interaction as the major factor modulating durable control of HIV infection
Selecting appropriate repair materials for concrete
Dr. Michael A. Lacasse: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7640-3701Dr. Michael A. Lacasse: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7640-3701Aussi disponible en francais: Le choix des mat\ue9riaux de r\ue9paration pour le b\ue9tonPeer reviewed: NoNRC publication: Ye