Publications by authors named "Zmijewski C"

Few community-based studies of exercise dependence have been conducted. This investigation examined the prevalence of exercise-dependence symptoms among 237 college undergraduates and the relationship of exercise-dependence symptoms to atypical and disordered attitudes toward eating. Women scored significantly higher than men on the Exercise Dependence Questionnaire's (EDQ) Exercise for Weight Control and Exercise for Health Reasons subscales, and the Dieting and Bulimia and Food Preoccupation subscales of the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT), and exhibited significantly more symptoms of exercise dependence than men.

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The clinical and pathologic findings seen in hyperacute rejection are well documented in renal and cardiac allografts. We describe the second case of hyperacute rejection in a pulmonary allograft and detail the immediate clinicopathologic findings. The patient underwent a single lung transplant for severe COPD with postoperative course complicated by acute rejection and graft failure.

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Evaluation of human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II genes in 54 cases of tuberculoid leprosy (TL) and 44 controls has shown a positive association with HLA-DRB1 alleles that contain Arg13 or Arg70-Arg71. Among TL patients, 87% carry specific alleles of DRB1 Arg13 or Arg70-Arg71 as compared to 43% among controls (p = 5 x 10(-6)) conferring a relative risk of 8.8.

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We report the occurrence of clinically definite multiple sclerosis in an offspring of a couple with conjugal multiple sclerosis. Extensive investigation of all members of this family, which includes two additional asymptomatic children, eliminated the possibility of alternative neurological diagnoses. All family members were studied with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), evoked potentials, and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing.

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The TNF region within the MHC includes a number of immunologically important genes. Microsatellites TNFa and TNFb adjacent to TNF exhibit extensive polymorphism. Employing a PCR-based technique, we identified TNFab haplotypes and defined their distribution in 97 controls and 48 diabetics of Caucasoid origin in a search for other genes within the MHC potentially associated with IDDM.

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Transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease (TAGVHD) is a rare and usually fatal complication of blood transfusion which can arise when immunocompetent lymphocytes from the donor of a cellular blood product are transfused into a severely immunocompromised recipient. We describe the case of an 8-month-old male with a severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome who developed TAGVHD after receiving an unirradiated transfusion. Serologic HLA typing of the parents, the patient, and the blood donor demonstrated the foreign origin of circulating lymphocytes, confirming the diagnosis of TAGVHD.

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We describe a family with parental consanguinity and five of 10 siblings affected by late-onset autoimmune myasthenia gravis. We propose a genetic mechanism as a predisposing factor in this family. Our analysis excludes the major histocompatibility complex, the beta subunit of the acetylcholine receptor, and the T-cell receptor alpha and beta subunits as candidate genes for the disorder in this family.

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From October 1987 through February 1990 approximately 8.5% (29/341) of all donor kidneys shipped under the UNOS Mandatory Sharing Policy were denied to 27 intended recipients due to a positive final crossmatch [XM(+)]. The intended recipients included 18.

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Human T cells express HLA class II molecules upon activation. The factors that regulate the induction of expression of these molecules are for the most part unknown. Here we report preliminary results indicating that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) regulates the induction of cell-surface HLA-DR, DO, and DP molecules in human T cells stimulated with PHA.

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Lymphocytic populations of the posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder in a completely matched renal allograft and a recipient's regional lymph node were examined, using restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis with probe YNH24 to the variable number tandem repeat D2S44. The donor's DNA was found in lymphocytes extracted from both the grafted kidney and the recipient's lymph node 26 days after engraftment. In both these organs, the results of in situ hybridization with a terminally biotin-labeled oligonucleotide probe to the Not I tandem repeat region of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome, as well as those of Southern blot hybridization to the EBV nuclear antigen region of the EBV genome, were positive.

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This chapter presents a summary of living-related, living-unrelated, and cadaver renal transplantation performed at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center between January 1984 and October 1992. Over the past 9 years, 895 patients (557 males, 338 females, mean age 42 yrs) received 942 renal transplants; 599 patients received kidneys from cadaver donors (n = 627) and 296 patients received kidneys (n = 315) from living donors of all types. During this period, 151 patients were retransplanted, sometimes more than once (159 total retransplants, 124 secondary grafts, and 35 third or more transplants).

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The antiglobulin crossmatch (AGXM) is a sensitive technique employed by many transplant centers to enhance detection of preformed antibody to donor antigens that may cause hyperacute rejection. However, positive AGXM may detect irrelevant or very low titers of anti-HLA antibody precluding transplantation in suitable recipients. To investigate the significance of a positive AGXM, cadaveric renal transplantation was carried out despite a weakly positive AGXM (defined as cell killing above background but not greater than 20%) in 48 recipients.

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We have used the HLA-DQB1 gene as a Southern hybridization probe with TaqI-digested genomic DNA in a study of 600 haplotypes from unrelated individuals and have characterized HLA-DQB1 RFLP patterns associated with the DR specificities DR1-DRw10 and DN1. For six of the specificities (DR2, 4, w6, 7, w8 and 9), we have also identified subtypes (multiple DQB1 band patterns). In a previous study (Cox et al.

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Six mouse and 13 rat monoclonal antibodies (mAb) recognizing HLA-DR, DQ and DP antigens were used for the detection of cell surface class II MHC antigens of equine lymphocytes. The monoclonal antibodies were tested against peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from a panel of thoroughbred horses, using two-color fluorescence flow cytometry. Seven of these mAbs reacted with both surface immunoglobulin positive (sIg+) and surface immunoglobulin negative (sIg-) lymphocytes.

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We have analyzed the ability of human gamma+/delta+ T cells to recognize a nominal antigen in association with MHC molecules. A TT-specific T cell line with approximately 40% gamma+/delta+ T cells was established from a hyperimmunized donor, D.F.

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Four patients with a history of multiple blood transfusions who awaited renal transplantation were tested for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and found to be positive on enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and negative on Western blot. None of these patients had any clinical evidence of HIV infection. Absorption of these patients' sera with B-lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL) positive for the serologic specificities DR3, DR4 (Dw4, Dw10, Dw14), and DR5 resulted in EIAs that were negative for HIV.

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Fifteen DR4-bearing haplotypes from twelve patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) were analyzed serologically, cellularly, and biochemically. The HLA-Dw composition of these DR4-positive haplotypes was Dw4 (46%), Dw14 (22%), and Dw10 (33%). The biochemical analysis by two-dimensional electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) of the DR beta chains showed that each Dw specificity is characterized by a specific DR4 beta chain that appears to be identical in normal and diabetic individuals.

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