Publications by authors named "Mariona Mestre"

The "rods and rings" (RR) antinuclear antibody (ANA) pattern is believed to be restricted to hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and related to the treatment. This is a 4-year retrospective study of all patients with RR pattern from the 20,000 serum samples received at the Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge for ANA testing. Two control groups with HCV patients without RR pattern: ANA-positive (n = 74) and ANA negative (n = 75) were included.

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Objectives: It has been suggested that statins have an effect on the modulation of the cytokine cascade and on the outcome of patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). The aim of this prospective, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was to determine whether statin therapy given to hospitalised patients with CAP improves clinical outcomes and reduces the concentration of inflammatory cytokines.

Setting: A tertiary teaching hospital in Barcelona, Spain.

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Background: Detection of markers predicting allograft rejection is important for risk assessment before kidney transplantation, as well as to minimize posttransplantation immunosuppression.

Methods: We studied the expression of CD25, HLA-DR, CD134, CD62L, and CD44 by flow cytometry in CD4, CD8, and CD3 cells, from pretransplant blood samples from 91 transplanted patients accounting for 16 episodes of acute renal rejection in the first month after transplantation.

Results: None of the activation markers showed a significant association to acute rejection.

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Neuronal cell death by apoptosis is a mechanism involved in Parkinson's disease and indirect signs of apoptosis have been found in brain neurons and blood lymphocytes. The present study was aimed to directly assess the presence of enhanced apoptosis in lymphocytes from 89 idiopathic Parkinson's disease patients, 33 untreated and 56 treated, compared with 33 healthy individuals. The study of both spontaneous and activation-induced apoptosis of T-lymphocyte subsets by annexin-V binding and flow cytometry showed that Parkinson patients increased the expression of Fas in circulating CD4(+) T cells, mainly "naive," that correlated with the decrease of these cells in blood.

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Human cell differentiation molecules, also known as "CD", are cell-surface molecules reacting with different monoclonal antibodies. The fraction of cells belonging to each immunophenotype is measured by flow cytometry. This brief communication proposes the application into clinical immunological laboratories, of the syntax recommended by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry and the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine to describe biological properties.

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Background: The presence of a few circulating donor cells in recipient's blood was first thought to be only an epiphenomenon of solid organ transplantation, also called microchimerism, but several authors have suggested that these circulating cells may contribute to tolerance induction. This study aims to assess the rate of microchimerism after kidney transplantation and determine its influence on acute rejection in a 4-year follow-up.

Methods: A total of 84 single-kidney recipients were included for microchimerism detection and quantification 2, 6, 12, and 18 months after transplantation by specific detection of non-shared STR, VNTR, human leukocyte antigen-A, -B, -DRB1, and SRY alleles.

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Exploring new immunosuppressive strategies inducing donor-specific hyporesponsiveness is an important challenge in transplantation. For this purpose, a careful immune monitoring and graft histology assessment is mandatory. Here, we report the results of a pilot study conducted in twenty renal transplant recipients, analyzing the immunomodulatory effects of a protocol based on induction therapy with rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin low doses, sirolimus, and mofetil mycophenolate.

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PAF antagonists have been used in xenotransplantation to alleviate the pathogenesis of hyperacute rejection. This study evaluated the ability of the PAF antagonist UR-12670 to improve graft function in late xenograft rejection (LXR) in an orthotopic liver xenotransplantation model, and the involvement of PAF (platelet activating factor) in this type of rejection. The recipients of a hamster xenograft received standard immunosuppression (tacrolimus 0.

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Two months after surgical resection of a bronchogenic carcinoma, a 69-year-old patient presented with Schönlein-Henoch purpura with kidney involvement followed by pulmonary hemorrhage. The presence of an IgA linear pattern on the kidney biopsy specimen and circulating anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) IgA antibodies led to the diagnosis of Goodpasture syndrome, which implies the possibility that the well-known pulmonary involvement during the course of Schönlein-Henoch purpura could be caused by Goodpasture syndrome in certain cases. In cases of glomerulonephropathy with lung involvement, clinicians should not limit their investigations to anti-GBM IgG.

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