نتایج جستجو برای: congenital cmv

تعداد نتایج: 127723  

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2013
Robert F Pass

Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a leading cause of hearing, cognitive, and motor disability in children for which medical science has yet to provide prevention or cure. Although vaccines aimed at prevention of congenital infection are being developed, there are significant challenges to be overcome and it could easily be a decade or longer before a CMV vaccine is licensed for prev...

2017
Ines Mack Marie-Anne Burckhardt Ulrich Heininger Friederike Prüfer Sven Schulzke Sven Wellmann

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most frequent congenital virus infection worldwide. The risk of congenital CMV (cCMV) transmission is highest in seronegative women who acquire primary CMV infection during pregnancy. A growing body of evidence indicates that secondary CMV infections in pregnant women with preconceptual immunity (either through reactivation of latent virus or re-infection with a new...

Journal: :applied biotechnology reports 0
mohammad sadegh hashemzadeh saman ayoubi majded ghalavand mahdi tat zahra pourpak ruhollah dorostkar

cytomegalovirus is the leading viral cause of congenital disease, often producing serious neurological deficits. cmv attacks the developing central nervous system (cns) resulting in serious brain disorders that include microencephaly, epilepsy, deafness, microgyria, mental retardation, sensory loss, motor problems, and psychiatric disturbances. in addition, cmv is a clinically important opportu...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2011
Steffanie Sabbaj Robert F Pass Paul A Goepfert Sylvie Pichon

Traditionally, vaccines have been utilized to generate immune responses to a pathogen in a naive population. In the setting of congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, a vaccine that, when administered to women already infected with CMV, could boost the mother's immunity to CMV would most likely be beneficial in diminishing in utero transmission of CMV. However, the ability to boost an immun...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
Marianne A.B. van der Sande Steve Kaye David J.C. Miles Pauline Waight David J. Jeffries Olubukola O. Ojuola Melba Palmero Margaret Pinder Jamila Ismaili Katie L. Flanagan Akum A. Aveika Akram Zaman Sarah Rowland-Jones Samuel J. McConkey Hilton C. Whittle Arnaud Marchant

BACKGROUND Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most prevalent congenital infection worldwide. Epidemiology and clinical outcomes are known to vary with socio-economic background, but few data are available from developing countries, where the overall burden of infectious diseases is frequently high. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS As part of an ongoing birth cohort study in The G...

2017
Ashis Patnaik Sudhansu Sekhar Mishra Srikanta Das

Pseudo-TORCH syndrome or congenital infection-like syndrome is a group of conditions which resemble congenital infections such as those caused by toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus (CMV), herpes (TORCH) group of organisms, clinico-radiologically, but serological tests are negative for the organisms. One of the variety shows features such as microcephaly, extensive intracranial calcificatio...

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a type of herpes virus. This virus is one of the most common causes of congenital and prenatal infections. CMV infection in pregnant women, especially in the first trimester, may lead to congenital abnormalities in newborns. The prevalence of CMV infection in developed countries is approximately 40%, and in developing countries, this prevalence may be up to 100%. ...

2014
Masha Fridkis-Hareli

Aims: (1) To review the published literature on immune biology of hostCytomegavovirus (CMV) interactions and to discuss the host immune responses against viral infection, providing insights into the complex interplay between the host and the virus that facilitates viral persistence. (2) To report on the status of CMV vaccines that are currently in preclinical and clinical development, outlining...

Journal: :The Brazilian journal of infectious diseases : an official publication of the Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases 2012
Leila Bagheri Hossein Mokhtarian Narges Sarshar Mohammad Ghahramani

Human cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common cause of congenital infection, with morbidity and mortality at birth.1–5 Usually, there are no clinical symptoms for CMV during primary infection, reactivation, and re-infection with a different CMV strain, but infected individuals may transmit the virus via body fluids such as saliva, blood, cervical secretion, semen, 1–4 and urine. The risk of in...

2015
Hillel Naon Fotini Tania Mitsinikos Nick Shillingford Chuan-Hao Lin Rula Harb

Background: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a ubiquitous virus and has significant implications in the immune suppressed. Several cases of CMV colitis have been reported in neonates, acquiring the virus in a variety of ways, through vertical transmission, breast milk, or blood transfusion. Case Presentation: Here we report a full-term infant who developed severe cytomegalovirus colitis post-operativel...

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