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2008/9 Catalogue
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Summary
June 2007, Vol. 5, No. 3, Pages 475-484 , DOI 10.1586/14787210.5.3.475
(doi:10.1586/14787210.5.3.475)

Review
Chronic helminth infections may negatively influence immunity against tuberculosis and other diseases of public health importance
Daniel Elias, Sven Britton, Afework Kassu and Hannah Akuffo
Author for correspondence



Tuberculosis (TB) has once again become a major public health threat owing to the combined effects of deteriorating socioeconomic situations and the emergence of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. The only vaccine available against TB, although effective in reducing the burden of childhood TB, shows enormous variability in its efficacy against pulmonary TB, which is the most common form of the disease in adults. Most areas of high TB incidence and poor TB vaccine efficacy have a high prevalence of intestinal helminth infections. Such infections have been shown to cause a range of immunomodulation characterized by enhanced T helper 2-type cytokine profile, high immunoglobulin E levels and upregulated regulatory T-cell activity, as well as chronic immune activation. An altered background immune profile could have adverse effects on the outcome of subsequent infections and vaccinations. In support of this hypothesis, studies conducted in animals and humans living in worm-endemic areas have shown that helminths impair resistance against a number of infections of major public health importance, including TB, malaria and HIV/AIDS. Understanding such interactions could assist in the design of vaccines against these diseases.

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Cited by

R. J. Flynn, G. Mulcahy, M. Welsh, J. P. Cassidy, D. Corbett, C. Milligan, P. Andersen, S. Strain, J. McNair. (2009) Co-Infection of Cattle with Fasciola hepatica and Mycobacterium bovis - Immunological Consequences. Transboundary and Emerging Diseases 56:6-7, 269-274
Online publication date: 1-Sep-2009.
CrossRef
P J Cooper. (2009) Mucosal immunology of geohelminth infections in humans. Mucosal Immunology 2:4, 288-299
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2009.
CrossRef
A. Boasso, G. M. Shearer, C. Chougnet. (2009) Immune dysregulation in human immunodeficiency virus infection: know it, fix it, prevent it?. Journal of Internal Medicine 265:1, 78-96
Online publication date: 1-Feb-2009.
CrossRef
Ying ZHANG. (2008) Immunopathogenesis of tuberculosis: Implications for vaccine development. Respirology 13, S81-S87
Online publication date: 1-Oct-2008.
CrossRef

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Authors:
Daniel Elias
Sven Britton
Afework Kassu
Hannah Akuffo
Keywords:
helminths
HIV
immune disorder
immunomodulation
tuberculosis


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