نتایج جستجو برای: viral load

تعداد نتایج: 286421  

Journal: :The new microbiologica 2016
Laura Mazzuti Maria Antonietta Lozzi Elisabetta Riva Paola Maida Francesca Falasca Guido Antonelli Ombretta Turriziani

We assess the concordance between low level HCV values obtained using the VERSANT HCV RNA 1.0 Assay (kPCR) and COBAS AmpliPrep/COBAS TaqMan HCV Quantitative Test v2.0. The correlation between the values obtained by the two RT-PCR assays for samples with quantifiable HCV RNA levels revealed that viral load measured by kPCR significantly correlated with that of the CAP/CTM (R=0.644, P<0.0001). Th...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2005

Journal: :American Journal of Transplantation 2002

Journal: :Antiviral therapy 2013
Bindiya Bagga Christopher W Woods Timothy H Veldman Anthony Gilbert Alex Mann Ganesh Balaratnam Robert Lambkin-Williams John S Oxford Micah T McClain Tom Wilkinson Brad P Nicholson Geoffrey S Ginsburg John P Devincenzo

BACKGROUND Antivirals reduce influenza viral replication and illness measures, particularly if initiated early, within 48 h of symptom onset. Whether experimental antivirals that reduce respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) load would also reduce disease is unknown. This study compares viral and disease dynamics in humans experimentally infected with influenza or RSV. METHODS Clinical strains of ...

Journal: :hepatitis monthly 0
hossein keyvani school of medicine, tehran university of medical sciences, ir iran hossein keyvani school of medicine, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, ir iran avid mohammadi school of medicine, tehran university of medical sciences, ir iran avid mohammadi keyvan virology laboratory, tehran, ir iran masoud sabouri ghannad department of microbiology, faculty of medicine, hamadan university of medical sciences, ir iran +98-8118276295-8, [email protected]; department of microbiology, faculty of medicine, hamadan university of medical sciences, ir iran +98-8118276295-8, [email protected] masoud sabouri ghannad department of microbiology, faculty of medicine, hamadan university of medical sciences, hamadan, ir iran; corresponding author at: masoud sabouri ghannad, department of microbiology, faculty of medicine, hamadan university of medical sciences, hamadan, ir iran. tel.: +98-8118276295-8, fax: +98-8118276299, e-mail:

background the picture that has emerged from studies investigating hiv infected people with gbv-c viremia is that they have lower plasma hiv viral loads in comparison with hiv-positive people who did not have the gbv-c viremia. objectives since gbv-c hiv coinfection has not been studied in iran, we have designed a survey to study the outcomes of gbv-c infection on hiv infected individuals. pati...

Abeer A. Sharaf, Hawazen Ismaeel, Maha S. Kawashti, Naglaa F. Abd El haliem,

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major public health problem with more than 130-180 million people infected worldwide. Several studies in different populations have reported the association of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genotypes, and HCV viral load, and genotypes. The aim of this study was to investigate a possible association between HLA class I and II alleles in HCV-infected patients and heal...

Journal: :AIDS 2014
Luisa Salazar-Vizcaya Olivia Keiser Karl Technau Mary-Ann Davies Andreas D Haas Nello Blaser Vivian Cox Brian Eley Helena Rabie Harry Moultrie Janet Giddy Robin Wood Matthias Egger Janne Estill

OBJECTIVES Many paediatric antiretroviral therapy (ART) programmes in Southern Africa rely on CD4⁺ to monitor ART. We assessed the benefit of replacing CD4⁺ by viral load monitoring. DESIGN A mathematical modelling study. METHODS A simulation model of HIV progression over 5 years in children on ART, parameterized by data from seven South African cohorts. We simulated treatment programmes wi...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2012
Nicolas Wentzensen Patti E Gravitt Rodney Long Mark Schiffman S Terence Dunn J Daniel Carreon Richard A Allen Munira Gunja Rosemary E Zuna Mark E Sherman Michael A Gold Joan L Walker Sophia S Wang

Carcinogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are necessary causes of most anogenital cancers. Viral load has been proposed as a marker for progression to cancer precursors but has been confirmed only for HPV16. Challenges in studying viral load are related to the lack of validated assays for a large number of genotypes. We compared viral load measured by Linear Array (LA) HPV genotyping w...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید