The interactions between obesity and infectious diseases have recently received increasing recognition as emerging data have indicated an association between obesity and poor outcome in pandemic H1N1 influenza infection. Obesity is an established risk factor for surgical-site infections, nosocomial infections, periodontitis and skin infections. Several studies indicate that acute pancreatitis is more severe in the obese. Data are controversial and limited as regards the association between obesity and the risk and outcome of community-acquired infections such as pneumonia, bacteremia and sepsis and obesity and the course of HIV infection. As the cause-effect relationship between obesity and infection remains obscure in many infectious diseases, further studies are warranted. The consequences of obesity may have substantial effects on the global burden of infectious diseases.
OBJECTIVETo investigate whether bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) activity in human serum is associated with the components of the metabolic syndrome (MetS) in type 1 diabetic patients with various degrees of kidney disease and patients with IgA glomerulonephritis (IgAGN).RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSSerum LPS activity was determined with the Limulus Amoebocyte Lysate chromogenic end point assay in type 1 diabetic patients with a normal albumin excretion rate (n = 587), microalbuminuria (n = 144), macroalbuminuria (n = 173); patients with IgAGN (n = 98); and in nondiabetic control subjects (n = 345). The relationships of the LPS/HDL ratio and MetS-associated variables were evaluated with Pearson correlation.RESULTSThe MetS was more prevalent in type 1 diabetic patients (48%) than in patients with IgAGN (15%). Diabetic patients with macroalbuminuria had a significantly higher serum LPS/HDL ratio than patients with IgAGN. In the normoalbuminuric type 1 diabetic group, patients in the highest LPS/HDL quartile were diagnosed as having the MetS three times more frequently than patients in the lowest quartile (69 vs. 22%; P < 0.001). High LPS activity was associated with higher serum triglyceride concentration, earlier onset of diabetes, increased diastolic blood pressure, and elevated urinary excretion of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1.CONCLUSIONSHigh serum LPS activity is strongly associated with the components of the MetS. Diabetic patients with kidney disease seem to be more susceptible to metabolic endotoxemia than patients with IgAGN. Bacterial endotoxins may thus play an important role in the development of the metabolic and vascular abnormalities commonly seen in obesity and diabetes-related diseases.
The association between dental infections and cerebral infarction was investigated in a case-control study involving 40 patients with ischaemic cerebral infarction under the age of 50, and 40 randomly selected community controls matched for sex and age. Poor oral health, as assessed by two indices measuring the severity of infections of teeth and periodontium, or by the presence of subgingival calculus or the presence of suppuration in the gingival pockets, were more common in male patients than in male controls, but no difference was observed in females. If severe dental infections were combined with other probable bacterial infections there were altogether 16 patients (40%) but only two controls (5%) who had suffered from a probable bacterial infection within 1 month or at the time of the stroke or when examined as a control (P less than 0.01). Our results suggest an association between bacterial infection and ischaemic cerebrovascular disease in patients under 50 years of age. Severe chronic dental infection seems to be an important type of infection associated with cerebral infarction in males.
The role of preceding infection as a risk factor for ischaemic stroke was investigated in a case-control study of 54 consecutive patients under 50 years of age with brain infarction and 54 randomly selected controls from the community matched for sex and age. Information about previous illnesses, smoking, consumption of alcohol, and use of drugs was taken. A blood sample was analysed for standard biochemical variables and serum cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglyceride, and fasting blood glucose concentrations determined. Titres of antimicrobial antibodies against various bacteria, including Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Yersinia, and Salmonelia and several viruses were determined. Febrile infection was found in patients during the month before the brain infarction significantly more often than in controls one month before their examination (19 patients v three controls; estimated relative risk 9-0 (95% confidence interval 2-2 to 80.0)). The most common preceding febrile infection was respiratory infection (80%). Infections preceding brain infarction were mostly of bacterial origin based on cultural, serological, and clinical data. In conditional logistic regression analysis for matched pairs the effect of preceding febrile infection remained significant (estimated relative risk 14-5 (95% confidence interval 1*9 to 112-3)) when tested with triglyceride concentration, hypertension, smoking, and preceding intoxication with alcohol.Although causality cannot be inferred from these data and plausible underlying mechanisms remain undetermined, preceding febrile infection may play an important part in the development of brain infarction in young and middle aged patients.
Our results show that hypertriglyceridaemia and hyperuricaemia at the time of diagnosis are important, previously underestimated predictors of poor outcome in IgAN, although causality between these factors and progression cannot be inferred from the present study.
Our findings broaden the scope of phenotypes caused by mutations in NFKB1 and suggest that a subset of autoinflammatory diseases, such as Behçet disease, can be caused by rare monogenic variants in genes of the NF-κB pathway.
Seventy-four cases of systemic listeriosis occurring from 1971 to 1989 in the greater Helsinki area in Finland are reviewed with a special interest in the effect of preceding immunosuppressive therapy on the clinical presentation. Of these patients, 66% had an underlying disease, most commonly malignancy, diabetes mellitus, or renal transplantation, and 43% had received immunosuppressive therapy within 1 week before onset of listeriosis. Bacteremia and central nervous system infections (both in 43% of cases) were the most common clinical entities. The percentage of patients with meningitis was not greater among immunosuppressed patients (13/32, 41%) than among patients with underlying diseases not treated with immunosuppressive agents (9/16, 56%) or among previously healthy nonpregnant hosts (7/11, 64%). Immunosuppressed patients did not die more frequently than did those with underlying diseases not treated with immunosuppressive therapy (case fatality rate, 29% vs. 38%, respectively). However, all previously healthy non-neonatal patients survived, whereas 32% (15/47) of those with any kind of underlying disease succumbed.
Abstract. Huttunen R, Syrjänen J, Vuento R, Hurme M, Huhtala H, Laine J, Pessi T, Aittoniemi J (Tampere University Hospital; University of Tampere Medical School, University of Tampere; Centre for Laboratory Medicine, Pirkanmaa Hospital District; University of Tampere Medical School; School of Health Sciences, University of Tampere; and Medical School, University of Tampere; Tampere, Finland) Plasma level of soluble urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor as a predictor of disease severity and case fatality in patients with bacteraemia: a prospective cohort study. J Intern Med 2011; 270: 32-40.Objectives. Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) is expressed on a variety of different immune cells and vascular endothelial cells during inflammation. Previous studies indicate that a high plasma concentration of the soluble form of the receptor (suPAR) predicts poor outcome in infectious diseases.Design. A prospective cohort study.Subjects and methods. Plasma suPAR levels were measured in 132 patients with bacteraemia caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, ß-haemolytic streptococcae or Escherichia coli using a commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Values were measured on days 1-4 after a positive blood culture, on days 13-18 and on recovery.Results. The maximum suPAR values on days 1-4 were markedly higher in nonsurvivors compared to survivors (15.8 vs. 7.3 ng mL , the sensitivity and specificity of suPAR for fatal disease was 83% and 76%, respectively. A high level of suPAR ( ‡11 ng mL ) was associated with hypotension (mean arterial pressure <70 mmHg) (odds ratio (OR) 6.5; 95% CI 2.9-14.6) and high sequential organ failure assessment score ( ‡4) (OR 9.3; 95% CI 4.0-21.9). A high suPAR level remained an independent risk factor for case fatality in a logistic regression model adjusted for potential confounders.Conclusion. Plasma suPAR level is a sensitive and specific independent prognostic biomarker in patients with bacteraemia.
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