Background: Literature on the spectrum of opportunistic disease in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients from developing countries is sparse. The objective of this study was to document the spectrum and determine the frequency of various opportunistic infections (OIs) and non-infectious opportunistic diseases, in hospitalised HIV-infected patients from north India.
Macaque monkeys with the recently described acquired immunodeficiency syndrome show a marked defect in T-lymphocyte function and die with opportunistic infections and lymphoproliferative abnormalities. In the study described here a new type D retrovirus was isolated from two Macaca cyclopis with this syndrome. This virus is related to, but distinct from, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, a type D retrovirus previously isolated from a mammary tumor of a rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta).
We investigated estrogen (estrone and estradiol) levels in serum and in nipple aspirates of breast fluid in relation to reproductive and menopausal characteristics in 104 normal women. In general, breast fluid and serum estrogen levels were not correlated and breast fluid estrogen levels were approximately 5 to 45 times higher than serum levels. Serum estrogen levels were lower in post-menopausal than in pre-menopausal women. In contrast, breast fluid estrogen levels were approximately the same in pre- and post-menopausal women. Breast fluid estrogen mean levels were lower in pre-menopausal parous women than in nulligravidous or nulliparous women whereas serum estrogen levels did not differ in these 3 groups. Breast fluid estrogen levels were positively correlated with months since last birth or since last breast-feeding. Estrogen levels were low in nipple aspirates of breast milk but gradually increased in breast fluid of non-lactating women over a period of several years after cessation of lactation. Serum estrogen levels did not increase with months since last breast-feeding. We were unable to evaluate the post-partum effect of pregnancy without lactation due to the small numbers of these subjects. The high concentrations of estrogen in breast fluid and the absence of a relationship to serum estrogen levels may explain why prior serum studies have failed to link variations in serum estrogens with breast cancer risk. The prolonged low levels of breast fluid estrogens following full-term birth and lactation may, in part, provide a mechanism by which parity reduces breast cancer risk.
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