PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Infants with severe RSV disease may be immunosuppressed

Nationwide Children's Hospital study suggests an inadequate immune response in children with RSV is directly associated with the severity of the disease

2012-12-10
(Press-News.org) Infants with severe lower respiratory tract infection caused by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) may have a dysfunctional innate immune response that relates to the severity of their disease. These are the findings from a Nationwide Children's Hospital study appearing in a recent issue of the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

RSV is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection in young children worldwide. The majority of children hospitalized with this condition are previously healthy with no known risk factors for serious disease. Of these infants, up to 20 percent will develop a disease severe enough to require admission to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU).

It's suggested that viral factors and the host immune response both contribute to the severity of RSV disease. A child's functional innate immune response is increasingly being recognized as contributing to disease severity, but few studies have examined this phenomenon.

"For a long time we thought that children with severe RSV disease had higher concentrations of innate immunity cytokines, but it seems to be the opposite," said the study's senior author Asuncion Mejias, MD, PhD, physician scientist in Infectious Diseases at Nationwide Children's Hospital. "When we stimulate the blood of these infants the production of innate immunity cytokines is severely impaired, and more importantly, this weakened response correlates with the more severe forms of the disease."

To investigate the relationship between innate immunity and RSV disease severity, Dr. Mejias and Octavio Ramilo, MD, chief of Infectious Diseases at Nationwide Children's in collaboration with Cesar Mella, MD, and Mark Hall, MD, from Critical Care at Nationwide Children's, sought to determine whether patients with bronchiolitis admitted to the PICU had decreased whole blood functional innate immune responses. They also examined the relationships between innate immune dysfunction and disease outcomes.

The team evaluated 66 previously-healthy children less than two years old who were hospitalized with a first episode of RSV bronchiolitis during the 2010 – 2011 respiratory season. A nasal wash sample and a blood sample were obtained from each patient within 24 hours of admission to confirm RSV infection, and to measure cytokine concentrations before and after LPS stimulation. The team also enrolled healthy infants for control comparison.

They found that critically ill children with RSV admitted to the PICU had a significantly lower production capacity of innate cytokines compared with healthy controls and infants with less severe RSV bronchiolitis hospitalized in the Infectious Diseases unit.

"Whether children who develop severe RSV disease are born with an already impaired immune response, and RSV just uncovers their abnormal immune system will require further studies," says Dr. Mejias, who is also a faculty member at The Ohio State University (OSU) College of Medicine. "Our study clearly suggests the presence of an inadequate, rather than excessive, functional innate immune response in children with RSV. This inadequate functional innate immune response is directly associated with the severity of the disease."

Dr. Hall, also with OSU College of Medicine, said that immune monitoring of RSV patients at the time of hospitalization could have important clinical implications.

"Our data suggest that children with the most severe forms of RSV disease may already be immunosuppressed when we meet them in the ICU, raising the possibility of worsening this immunosuppression with the addition of commonly prescribed corticosteroids used to blunt the pro-inflammatory response to RSV," said Dr. Hall.

Prospective immune monitoring may be helpful to identify children with bronchiolitis at high-risk for severe disease.

The findings also suggest the potential for the use of immune stimulant drugs that have been used with some success in reversing innate immune suppression in critically ill adults and children.

"Further studies are needed to explain the mechanisms responsible for innate immune suppression observed in critically-ill RSV-infected children," said Dr. Ramilo, also with OSU College of Medicine.

### For more information on Dr. Maria A. Mejias, visit http://www.nationwidechildrens.org/maria-a-mejias For more information on Infectious Disease at Nationwide Children's Hospital, visit http://www.nationwidechildrens.org/infectious-diseases


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Caffeinated coffee may reduce the risk of oral cancers

2012-12-10
ATLANTA – December 10, 2012—A new American Cancer Society study finds a strong inverse association between caffeinated coffee intake and oral/pharyngeal cancer mortality. The authors say people who drank more than four cups of caffeinated coffee per day were at about half the risk of death of these often fatal cancers compared to those who only occasionally or who never drank coffee. The study is published online in the American Journal of Epidemiology. The authors say more research is needed to elucidate the biologic mechanisms that could be at work. Previous epidemiologic ...

Overweight pregnant women not getting proper weight-gain advice

2012-12-10
HERSHEY, Pa. -- Overweight women are not receiving proper advice on healthy weight gains or appropriate exercise levels during their pregnancies, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers. "Excessive weight gain during pregnancy is associated with weight retention after delivery and is a positive predictor of obesity after pregnancy," Dr. Cynthia Chuang, associate professor of medicine and public health sciences said. "Excessive gestational weight is particularly concerning for overweight and obese women given their already increased risk for pregnancy ...

Mining ancient ores for clues to early life

Mining ancient ores for clues to early life
2012-12-10
An analysis of sulfide ore deposits from one of the world's richest base-metal mines confirms that oxygen levels were extremely low on Earth 2.7 billion years ago, but also shows that microbes were actively feeding on sulfate in the ocean and influencing seawater chemistry during that geological time period. The research, reported by a team of Canadian and U.S. scientists in Nature Geoscience, provides new insight into how ancient metal-ore deposits can be used to better understand the chemistry of the ancient oceans – and the early evolution of life. Sulfate is the ...

Prostate cancer now detectable by imaging-guided biopsy

2012-12-10
Ground-breaking research by a UCLA team of physicians and engineers demonstrates that prostate cancer can be diagnosed using image-guided targeted biopsy. Traditionally found only by blind biopsy, a procedure that dates from the 1980s, prostate cancer now appears detectable by direct sampling of tumor spots found using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in combination with real-time ultrasound, according to the UCLA study released Dec. 10, 2012 early online for the January 2013 issue of The Journal of Urology®. The study indicates that the MRI and ultrasound fusion biopsy, ...

Targeted prostate biopsy has potential to improve diagnosis of prostate cancer

2012-12-10
New York, NY, December 10, 2012 – Diagnosis of prostate cancer remains imperfect. Current methods of prostate biopsy are limited by over detection of slow-growing tumors and under detection of clinically relevant cancers. Investigators at the University of California-Los Angeles Department of Urology have found that a new technique of targeted biopsy in a clinic setting, using local anesthesia, may improve diagnosis and aid in selecting which patients are suitable for active surveillance and which need focal therapy (noninvasive techniques for destroying small tumors within ...

Renewables and storage could power grid 99.9 percent of the time

Renewables and storage could power grid 99.9 percent of the time
2012-12-10
Renewable energy could fully power a large electric grid 99.9 percent of the time by 2030 at costs comparable to today's electricity expenses, according to new research by the University of Delaware and Delaware Technical Community College. A well-designed combination of wind power, solar power and storage in batteries and fuel cells would nearly always exceed electricity demands while keeping costs low, the scientists found. "These results break the conventional wisdom that renewable energy is too unreliable and expensive," said co-author Willett Kempton, professor ...

Secrets of gentle touch revealed

Secrets of gentle touch revealed
2012-12-10
Stroke the soft body of a newborn fruit fly larva ever-so-gently with a freshly plucked eyelash, and it will respond to the tickle by altering its movement—an observation that has helped scientists at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) uncover the molecular basis of gentle touch, one of the most fundamental but least well understood of our senses. Our ability to sense gentle touch is known to develop early and to remain ever-present in our lives, from the first loving caresses our mothers lavish on us as newborns to the fading tingle we feel as our lives ...

Temple scientists target DNA repair to eradicate leukemia stem cells

2012-12-10
(Philadelphia, PA) – Despite treatment with imatinib, a successful drug that targets chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), a deadly type of cancer, some patients may continue to be at risk for relapse because a tiny pool of stem cells is resistant to treatment and may even accumulate additional genetic aberrations, eventually leading to disease progression and relapse. These leukemia stem cells are full of genetic errors, loaded with potentially lethal breaks in DNA, and are in a state of constant self-repair. Now, scientists at Temple University School of Medicine may have ...

Bugs without borders

2012-12-10
Researchers show that the global epidemic of Clostridium difficile 027/NAP1/BI in the early to mid-2000s was caused by the spread of two different but highly related strains of the bacterium rather than one as was previously thought. The spread and persistence of both epidemics were driven by the acquisition of resistance to a frontline antibiotic. Unlike many other healthcare-associated bacteria, C. difficile produces highly resistant and infectious spores. These spores can promote the transmission of C. difficile and potentially facilitates its spread over greater geographical ...

What it is to be a queen bee?

What it is to be a queen bee?
2012-12-10
Queen sweat bees 'choose' the role of their daughters, according to a new study published in BioMed Central's open access journal Frontiers in Zoology. The amount of food provided for the developing larvae determines whether the daughter becomes a worker or a new queen. The sweat bee Halictus scabiosae are a primitive eusocial insect. Eusocial insects have a hierarchical society with a division of labor between reproductive queens and males, and workers. However for H. scabiosae all the adults have retained the ability to reproduce, although their role in the nest may ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New model of neuronal circuit provides insight on eye movement

Cooking up a breakthrough: Penn engineers refine lipid nanoparticles for better mRNA therapies

CD Laboratory at Graz University of Technology researches new semiconductor materials

Animal characters can boost young children’s psychological development, study suggests

South Korea completes delivery of ITER vacuum vessel sectors

Global research team develops advanced H5N1 detection kit to tackle avian flu

From food crops to cancer clinics: Lessons in extermination resistance

Scientists develop novel high-fidelity quantum computing gate

Novel detection technology alerts health risks from TNT metabolites

New XR simulator improves pediatric nursing education

New copper metal-organic framework nanozymes enable intelligent food detection

The Lancet: Deeply entrenched racial and geographic health disparities in the USA have increased over the last two decades—as life expectancy gap widens to 20 years

2 MILLION mph galaxy smash-up seen in unprecedented detail

Scientists find a region of the mouse gut tightly regulated by the immune system

How school eligibility influences the spread of infectious diseases: Insights for future outbreaks

UM School of Medicine researchers link snoring to behavioral problems in adolescents without declines in cognition

The Parasaurolophus’ pipes: Modeling the dinosaur’s crest to study its sound #ASA187

St. Jude appoints leading scientist to create groundbreaking Center of Excellence for Structural Cell Biology

Hear this! Transforming health care with speech-to-text technology #ASA187

Exploring the impact of offshore wind on whale deaths #ASA187

Mass General Brigham and BIDMC researchers unveil an AI protein engineer capable of making proteins ‘better, faster, stronger’

Metabolic and bariatric surgery safe and effective for patients with severe obesity

Smarter city planning: MSU researchers use brain activity to predict visits to urban areas

Using the world’s fastest exascale computer, ACM Gordon Bell Prize-winning team presents record-breaking algorithm to advance understanding of chemistry and biology

Jeffrey Hubbell joins NYU Tandon to lead new university-wide health engineering initiative & expand the school’s bioengineering focus

Fewer than 7% of global hotspots for whale-ship collisions have protection measures in place

Oldies but goodies: Study shows why elderly animals offer crucial scientific insights

Math-selective US universities reduce gender gap in STEM fields

Researchers identify previously unknown compound in drinking water

Chloronitramide anion – a newly characterized contaminant prevalent in chloramine treated tap water

[Press-News.org] Infants with severe RSV disease may be immunosuppressed
Nationwide Children's Hospital study suggests an inadequate immune response in children with RSV is directly associated with the severity of the disease