Objective: To evaluate simultaneously the functional state of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes from Venezuelan HIV-1-infected pediatric patients.
Methods: Children were assigned to subgroups of rapid progressors (RPs) and slow progressors (SPs), based on clinical features. To determine the degree of CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocyte functionality, flow cytometry techniques were used, and diverse parameters of the functionality of these cells were characterized by ex vivo tests, such as expression of CD95/Fas and CD127, and frequency of apoptosis.
Preeclampsia (PE) is a disease that onsets in the second half of pregnancy. This condition is characterized by hypertension, proteinuria and, frequently, intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Nitric oxide (NO) regulates blood flow in the human placenta, it induces vasodilatation, inhibition of platelet aggregation and prevents adhesion of platelets to endothelial cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the ex vivo and in vitro expression of CD95/Fas and CD127 receptors in total, naive and memory CD8+ T cells from HIV infected patients with different blood counts of CD4+ T cells. In addition, spontaneous and induced apoptosis were determined in vitro using a viral antigen (Env), along with an evaluation of their specific proliferative capacity. The obtained results demonstrated that patients with low counts of CD4+ T cells (CD4 < 250/microL), showed ex vivo, a high expression of CD95/Fas and a low expression of CD127 in all CD8+ T cell subgroups, as compared with patients with bigger counts of CD4+ T cells in blood (CD4> 250/microL).
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