Publications by authors named "Gordon M. Dickinson"

Article Synopsis
  • About 50% of the HIV-1 Envelope glycoprotein (gp120) mass consists of N-linked carbohydrates, previously thought to lack O-linked carbohydrates.
  • A study reveals that some HIV-1 patient isolates do contain O-linked carbohydrates on the variable 1 (V1) domain of gp120.
  • This O-glycosylation significantly decreases the virus's sensitivity to neutralization by certain antibodies, indicating a potential strategy for the virus to evade the immune response.
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HIV elite controllers represent a remarkable minority of patients who maintain normal CD4 T-cell counts and low or undetectable viral loads for decades in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. To examine the possible contribution of virus attenuation to elite control, we obtained a primary HIV-1 isolate from an elite controller who had been infected for 19 years, the last 10 of which were in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. Full-length sequencing of this isolate revealed a highly unusual V1 domain in Envelope (Env).

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Louis Pasteur's vaccine against rabies was introduced in France during 1885. A year later it became available within the United States. This article tells the story of the first use of the Pasteur vaccine in America and describes the early history of the vaccine's production and distribution across the country by Pasteur Institutes established for this purpose.

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We report a case of a 24-year-old immigrant from Bangladesh with Salmonella typhi meningitis, a rare disease in the United States, especially among adults. The common manifestations of meningitis such as neck rigidity and changes in mental status did not develop and Kernig sign was absent. The patient was successfully treated with intravenous ceftriaxone.

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Invasive pneumococcal disease (PD) occurs frequently among HIV-infected patients, but it is unclear whether its manifestations and outcome are different compared to those observed among patients without HIV-1 infection. Because the immune reconstitution that accompanies antiretroviral therapy may change some of these features and because most cases of HIV- 1 infection occur in resource-poor settings of the world where access to antiretroviral agents is limited, we compared PD among patients with and without HIV-1 infection in a North American population before the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). The records of all pneumococcal cultures processed at this medical center over a period of 20 months were used to identify patients with invasive PD.

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Article Synopsis
  • Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has significantly reduced death and disease in HIV-1 patients, but the virus remains in the body and can mutate to evade treatment.
  • Resistance mutations form particularly when viral loads fluctuate, highlighting the challenges in maintaining persistent viral suppression.
  • Ongoing research focuses on the effects of viral replication in different tissues and aims to improve strategies that reduce both viral replication and the development of drug resistance while preserving the patient's immune response.
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Objective: In this study we evaluated the possibility that plasma viral load elevations secondary to influenza vaccination in HIV-1-seropositive individuals with previously undetectable viral loads (< 200 copies/ml) could develop resistance-bearing mutations in the viral reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease regions.

Methods: Thirty-four patients with undetectable viral burdens on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) were evaluated for elevations in plasma viral load 2 and 4 weeks post-influenza vaccination. Plasma from patients whose viral load increased after vaccination was subject to genotypic resistance analysis by the line probe assay (LiPA) to determine whether primary resistance-bearing mutations developed during this period and at follow-up.

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Pulmonary nocardiosis is an uncommon but serious infection that is increasingly found in immunosuppressed persons, especially transplant recipients and persons with AIDS. The Nocardia species are denizens of soil and decaying plants that gain entry to humans through inhalation or inoculation. Pulmonary nocardiosis typically presents as an acute to subacute necrotizing pneumonia, with a variable clinical picture.

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