RESUMO
BACKGROUND: A previous study on Hodgkin's lymphoma in southern Israel found that Bedouin patients had an increased rate of Epstein-Barr virus expression in their tumor cells. OBJECTIVES: To determine the influence of the patients' communities on the pattern of disease in HL. METHODS: We compared the clinical features, demographic data, stage at diagnosis, treatment modality and outcome, as well as laboratory findings, in four community-based subgroups. These groups comprised kibbutz residents (n = 11), Bedouin (n = 19), new immigrants from the former USSR (n = 22), and town-dwellers (n = 82). RESULTS: The Bedouin patients differed significantly from the new immigrants and town-dwellers, particularly regarding the rate of EBV sequences in the tumor tissues, and a poorer response to treatment. The kibbutz patients did not differ significantly from the other populations regarding most of the parameters studied, but showed an intermediate expression of EBV antigens compared to Bedouin patients and the rest of the cohort. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that HL may behave differently in different population groups in a given geographic area. Notably, the Bedouin patients showed markedly different clinical and biological patterns of this malignancy.
Assuntos
Árabes , Doença de Hodgkin/etnologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Antígenos Virais/análise , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Herpesvirus Humano 4/imunologia , Doença de Hodgkin/terapia , Doença de Hodgkin/virologia , Humanos , Lactente , Israel/epidemiologia , Modelos Logísticos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-IdadeRESUMO
Vibrio cholerae, recognized as the causative agent of epidemic cholera, was isolated from healthy professional divers and from water samples collected at dive sites in the United States, Ukraine and Russia. Swabs of nose, ear and throat of divers and their tank regulators, i.e. the divers and their diving gear, were taken before and after routine dives. Blood samples were collected before and 30-60 days after each dive to measure IgG and IgA titers against the whole cell antigen of V. cholerae O1. Nine strains of V. cholerae O1 and nine strains of V. cholerae non-O1 were isolated during this study. These isolates were identified by conventional biochemical tests and indirect fluorescent antibody staining methods, using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled monoclonal antibody, COLTA, prepared against the 'A' antigenic factor of the lipopolysaccharide of V. cholerae O1, and serotyped by slide agglutination. Seven of the nine strains of V. cholerae O1 isolated and successfully cultured during the studies, were toxigenic by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and polymerase chain reaction. Analyses of IgG and IgA antibodies of the divers showed that most of the divers had prior exposure to V. cholerae O1. V. cholerae serotype non-O1 strains isolated during the study were found to be non-toxigenic.