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Showing papers by "William A. Blattner published in 1984"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that frequent receptive anal intercourse with many homosexual partners predisposes to HTLV-III infection with the consequent emergence of lymphadenopathy and the various manifestations of lesser and fully fledged AIDS.

291 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence of HTLV-anti-bodies in patients with lymphoid malignancies appears to define a distinct clinicopathologic syndrome which tends to occur in geographic clusters.
Abstract: The human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus (HTLV) is a novel Type-C retrovirus isolated from patients with post-thymic T-cell malignancies. Thirteen patients diagnosed in the United States were identified as having antibodies to HTLV and a typical clinicopathologic syndrome characteristic of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma as described in Japan. The most characteristic diagnostic feature in our series was the presence of highly pleomorphic and lobated lymphoid cells in the peripheral blood. Also notable was acid phosphatase activity which was partially tartrate-resistant in the neoplastic cells. The pathologic spectrum of the associated lymphomas was broad and encompassed several diffuse histologic subtypes in the Rappaport classification, the working formulation, and the classification of the Japanese lymphoma study group. However, differences in survival could not be correlated with differences in histologic subtype. All patients presented with Ann Arbor Stage IV lymphoma. Other common clinical features were generalized lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin and peripheral blood involvement, hypercalcemia, and lytic bone lesions. The clinical course was aggressive with a median survival of 9 months. In two-third of patients with cutaneous involvement, epidermal infiltration resembling Pautrier microabscesses was observed. However, most cases can be readily distinguished from mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome on clinical and epidemiologic grounds. The presence of HTLV-antibodies in patients with lymphoid malignancies appears to define a distinct clinicopathologic syndrome which tends to occur in geographic clusters. Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma is favored as the diagnostic term for this clinicopathologic entity.

190 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This virus is endemic in certain parts of the world, including the southeastern United States, and is associated with the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma, a fulminant lymphoproliferative disorder frequently accompanied by opportunistic infections and hypercalcemia.
Abstract: Human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus is a unique family of T-cell tropic, human, type-C retroviruses. The discovery of this class of retroviruses provides the first proven link between retroviruses and cancer in humans. This virus is endemic in certain parts of the world, including the southeastern United States, and is associated with the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma, a fulminant lymphoproliferative disorder frequently accompanied by opportunistic infections and hypercalcemia. Over the last few years, major advances have been made in understanding the clinical, epidemiologic, molecular biologic, and immunologic features of this unique class of human RNA tumor viruses.

147 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ELISA data confirm the Caribbean region as being endemic for HTLV‐I and extend this region to inland areas of South America and confirm the children as young as 3 years of age in the most endemic areas have continuous exposure to the virus.
Abstract: Serum samples of 769 healthy Venezuelan donors were assayed for natural antibodies to HTLV-I by the ELISA technique. Specific HTLV-I antibody prevalence was 6.8% but varied from 1% in Caracas to 13.7% in the Amazonas region and the State of Zulia. Adults infected with Trypanosoma cruzi had the highest HTLV-I antibody prevalence of 15%. Areas of high antibody prevalence were correlated most strongly with the presence of arthropod-borne diseases and to a lesser extent with socio-economic factors. Genetic factors were not correlated with antibody prevalence. Antibodies were seen in children as young as 3 years of age in the most endemic areas. Antibody titers increased with age, suggesting continuous exposure to the virus. The data provide clues for elucidation of the geographic variation in HTLV-I antibody prevalence seen Venezuela and other HTLV-I endemic areas. In addition, they further confirm the Caribbean region as being endemic for HTLV-I and extend this region to inland areas of South America.

93 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
16 Mar 1984-JAMA
TL;DR: The hypothesis that a transmissible biologic agent may be etiologically responsible for the low helper/suppressor ratios in homosexual men is supported.
Abstract: To investigate risk factors for immunologic abnormalities among homosexual men, T-lymphocyte helper/suppressor (OKT4/OKT8) ratios were determined in 78 healthy Danish homosexual men. Ratios in 26 men (33%) were low ( (JAMA1984;251:1441-1446)

22 citations