Geographic tongue is a chronic, inflammatory, and immune-mediated oral lesion of
unknown etiology. It is characterized by serpiginous white areas around the
atrophic mucosa, which alternation between activity, remission and reactivation
at various locations gave the names benign migratory glossitis and wandering
rash of the tongue. Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory disease with frequent
cutaneous involvement and an immunogenetic basis of great importance in clinical
practice. The association between geographic tongue and psoriasis has been
demonstrated in various studies, based on observation of its fundamental
lesions, microscopic similarity between the two conditions and the presence of a
common genetic marker, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) HLA-C*06. The difficulty
however in accepting the diagnosis of geographic tongue as oral psoriasis is the
fact that not all patients with geographic tongue present psoriasis. Some
authors believe that the prevalence of geographic tongue would be much greater
if psoriatic patients underwent thorough oral examination. This study aimed to
develop a literature review performed between 1980 and 2014, in which
consultation of theses, dissertations and selected scientific articles were
conducted through search in Scielo and Bireme databases, from Medline and Lilacs
sources, relating the common characteristics between geographic tongue and
psoriasis. We observed that the frequency of oral lesions is relatively common,
but to establish a correct diagnosis of oral psoriasis, immunohistochemical and
genetic histopathological analyzes are necessary, thus highlighting the
importance of oral examination in psoriatic patients and cutaneous examination
in patients with geographic tongue.
Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR) are expressed mainly in natural killer cells and specifically recognize human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules. The repertoire of KIR genes and KIR-HLA pairs is known to play a key role in the susceptibilities to and the outcomes of several diseases, including malaria. The aim of this study was to investigate the distribution of KIR genes, KIR genotypes and KIR-HLA pair combinations in a population naturally exposed to malaria from Brazilian Amazon. All 16 KIR genes investigated were present in the studied population. Overall, 46 KIR genotypes were defined. The two most common genotypes in the Porto Velho communities, genotypes 1 and 2, were present at similar frequencies as in the Americas. Principal component analysis based on the frequencies of the KIR genes placed the Porto Velho population closer to the Venezuela Mestizos, USA California hispanic and Brazil Paraná Mixed in terms of KIR gene frequencies. This analysis highlights the multi-ethnic profile of the Porto Velho population. Most of the individuals were found to have at least one inhibitory KIR-HLA pair. Seventy-five KIR-HLA pair combinations were identified. The KIR-2DL2/3_HLA-C1, KIR3DL1_HLA-Bw4 and KIR2DL1_HLA-C2 pairs were the most common. There was no association between KIR genes, KIR genotypes or KIR-HLA pair combinations and malaria susceptibility in the studied population. This is the first report on the distribution of KIR and known HLA ligands in the Porto Velho population. Taken together, these results should provide baseline information that will be relevant to population evolutionary history, malaria and other diseases studies in populations of the Brazilian Amazon.
References1 Fife KH, Ferenczy A, Douglas JM Jr, Brown DR, Smith M, Owens ML; HPV Study Group. Treatment of external genital warts in men using 5% imiquimod cream applied three times a week, once daily, twice daily, or three times a day. Sex Transm Dis 2001; 28: 226-231. 2 Raasch B. Management of superficial basal cell carcinoma: focus on imiquimod. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol 2009; 11: 65-75. 3 Beutner KR, Spruance SL, Hougham AJ, Fox TL, Owens ML, Douglas JM Jr. Treatment of genital warts with an immune-response modifier (imiquimod).
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