Introduction: Placental malaria (PM) is characterized by accumulation of inflammatory leukocytes in the placenta, leading to poor pregnancy outcomes. Understanding of the underlying mechanisms remains incomplete. Neutrophils respond to malaria parasites by phagocytosis, generation of oxidants, and externalization of Neutrophil Extracellular Traps (NETs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Altered neonatal immune responses may contribute to the increased morbidity observed in HIV-exposed but uninfected (HEU) infants compared with HIV-unexposed uninfected (HUU) infants. We sought to examine the effects of prenatal HIV and malaria exposure on maternal and neonatal plasma cytokine profiles and transplacental antibody transfer.
Methods: Forty-nine HIV+ and 50 HIV- women and their HIV-uninfected neonate pairs from Kenya were assessed.
Iron deficiency (ID) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection frequently coexist. Little data exist on ID in HIV-infected individuals, partly because the iron marker ferritin is altered by inflammation common in HIV infection. We measured iron biomarkers (ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor [sTfR], hepcidin) and red cell indices (hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume [MCV]) in newly diagnosed, antiretroviral therapy-naive, HIV-infected ( = 138) and uninfected ( = 52) Kenyan adults enrolled in a study of the immune response to malaria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe literature on sero-epidemiological studies of flaviviral infections in the African continent is quite scarce. Much of the viral epidemiology studies have been focussing on diseases such as HIV/AIDS because of their sheer magnitude and impact on the lives of people in the various affected countries. Increasingly disease outbreaks caused by arboviruses such as the recent cases of chikungunya virus, dengue virus and yellow fever virus have prompted renewed interest in studying these viruses.
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