Objective: To examine whether the polymorphisms of the IL6, TNFA and IL10 genes represent a risk marker for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and to analyze their correlation with risk factors, age of occurrence and type of AMI. Method: Association study that included 310 unrelated Venezuelan individuals, grouped in 190 patients with AMI and 120 controls with or without cardiovascular risk factors. The IL6-174 G/C (rs1800795), TNFA -308 G/A (rs1800629), and IL10-1082 A/G (rs1800896), -819 C/T (rs1800871) and -592 C/A (rs1800872) polymorphisms were determined using the polymerase chain reaction technique with sequence-specific primers. Results: Comparison of genotypic and allelic frequencies, using adjusted logistic regression analysis for risk factors, showed a significantly
Previous studies carried out in an endemic semiarid region northwest of Venezuela at Falcon State have shown a prevalence of 15.4/1000 of chromoblastomycosis following traumatisms with xenophile vegetation infected with Cladophialophora carrionii. We performed high-resolution DNA typing of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, -B and -C and major histocompatibility complex class I chain related gene A (MICA) alleles and segregation analysis in 49 members of one extended family with 12 affected individuals, who have lived for approximately 70 years in this endemic zone. None of the alleles, haplotypes or genotypes is shared by all the patients. No deviation from the expected HLA haplotype distribution or association of chromoblastomycosis with HLA-A, -B and -C haplotypes was observed. Further, a haplotype-sharing transmission/disequilibria testing of 11 nuclear families did not give enough evidence to claim linkage (P = 0.398), suggesting that genes located in the short arm of chromosome 6 may not be relevant in the immune response toward infection with C. carrionii in this Venezuelan endemic zone. Deleted MICA alleles on HLA-B*4802 haplotypes were present among several members of the extended family, but only two of them were affected.
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