Bull World Health Organ
June 2000
Neurocysticercosis is an infection of the nervous system caused by Taenia solium. It is the most important human parasitic neurological disease and a common cause of epilepsy in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, representing enormous costs for anticonvulsants, medical resources and lost production. Neurocysticercosis is a human-to-human infection, acquired by the faecal-enteric route from carriers of intestinal T.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was carried out to determine the prevailing type of epilepsy in neurocysticercosis. We also evaluated if it could account for the predominance of generalized epilepsy in Peru. We studied the records and EEGs of 49 cases of neurocysticercosis, representing 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree of 6 patients with spastic paraparesis in Lima, Peru, were found to have antibodies to human T-lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I). Blood and cerebrospinal fluid antibodies were confirmed by Western blot analysis. Multilobulated lymphocytes in blood and cerebrospinal fluid of the index case stained with monoclonal antibodies for T-helper cells and for T10, an activation marker.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBasic Res Cardiol
March 1988
In the course of acute rejection, myocardial tissue undergoes massive transformation and we hypothetized that for digitalis-like substances, receptor binding characteristics might be altered. Ten canine heterotopic cardiac allografts were carried out and were harvested once rejection had developed (8-10 days post-transplant). Microsomal membrane fractions of those grafts and of native hearts were isolated.
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