2 resultados para Immune deficiency syndromes

em Aston University Research Archive


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AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)was first, described as a new disease of humans in 1981. The origins of the disease are controversial. AIDS is caused by a retrovirus, a type of virus which rarely attacks human cells. The first virus of this type recorded in humans is reponsible for a type of leukaemia and was identified in 1978. AIDS is thus the third type of human retrovirus to be discovered and hence, is referred to as T-lymphotrophic virus III (HTLV-III). For viruses to replicate, they have to invade a host cell which in this case is a T4-lymphocyte, a type of white blood cell that regulates the immune system. The problems of the disease result directly from the death of these cells. As a consequence, the immune system is compromised leading to a number of opportunistic secondary infections and other disorders.

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The adrenal cortex secretes steroid hormones, including glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids. Glucocorticoids control body homeostasis, stress, and immune responses, while mineralocorticoids regulate the water and electrolyte balance. A spectrum of genetic defects can disrupt the normal adrenal development, causing adrenal hypoplasia and various forms of adrenal insufficiency, which usually present in infancy or childhood with or without mineralocorticoid deficiency and with or without gonadal dysfunction. The genetic causes of adrenal hypoplasia can be broadly categorized into adrenal hypoplasia due to adrenocorticotropic hormone resistance syndromes (i.e., familial glucocorticoid deficiency and triple A syndrome) and adrenal hypoplasia due to primary defects in the development of the adrenal glands (i.e., X-linked adrenal hypoplasia congenita and primary adrenal hypoplasia caused by steroidogenic factor 1 mutations).