Increased fetal hemoglobin levels in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV1/2)


Autoria(s): Poli-Neto,A.; Nonoyama,K.; Oshiro,M.; Ebner-Filho,W.; Miguita,K.; Medeiros,T.M.D.; Watanabe,C.I.; Barretto,O.C.O.
Data(s)

01/11/2000

Resumo

Fetal hemoglobin was measured in HIV1/2 patients under treatment with combined therapy (zidovudine and a protease inhibitor). A total of 143 patients and 103 normal individuals were investigated by the quantitative method of Betke and the semi-quantitative acid elution method of Kleihauer. In the normal person, hemoglobin F makes up less than 1% and an increase higher than 1.5% was observed in 21.4% of HIV patients by the method of Betke and in 24.8% of HIV-infected patients by the method of Kleihauer. The quantitative biochemical method of Betke showed that the populations were significantly different (two-tailed Mann-Whitney test). The reason for this hemoglobin F increase might be ascribed to the effect of zidovudine or to direct viral action on gamma chain expression. The finding of a higher F cell frequency indicated by the method of Kleihauer rather suggests that there is an increased F cell clone proliferation rather than an increase in hemoglobin F level in every cell.

Formato

text/html

Identificador

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X2000001100008

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica

Fonte

Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research v.33 n.11 2000

Palavras-Chave #human immunodeficiency virus #HIV1/2 #hemoglobin #fetal hemoglobin #F cells #zidovudine
Tipo

journal article