2 results match your criteria: "St. Christopher's Hospital for Children and Allegheny University of the Health Sciences[Affiliation]"
Clin Diagn Lab Immunol
January 1999
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, St. Christopher's Hospital for Children and Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
A significant proportion of brain tissue specimens from children with AIDS show evidence of vascular inflammation in the form of transmural and/or perivascular mononuclear-cell infiltrates at autopsy. Previous studies have shown that in contrast to inflammatory lesions observed in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) encephalitis, in which monocytes/macrophages are the prevailing mononuclear cells, these infiltrates consist mostly of lymphocytes. Perivascular mononuclear-cell infiltrates were found in brain tissue specimens collected at autopsy from five of six children with AIDS and consisted of CD3(+) T cells and equal or greater proportions of CD68(+) monocytes/macrophages.
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April 1997
Department of Pathology, St Christopher's Hospital for Children and Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, MCP-Hahnemann School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19134-1095, USA.
The authors studied eight colectomy and eight biopsy specimens from 12 patients with cystic fibrosis who had developed fibrosing colonopathy, a complication observed in patients receiving high-strength enzyme replacement. The colectomies originated from five male and three female patients ranging in age from 18 months to 6 years. Five individuals had localized strictures of the right colon and three had stenosing fibrosis of the entire colon.
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