2022
DOI: 10.1515/hmbci-2022-0031
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Comparative evaluation of INF-γ as an immunological healing marker based on anti-tubercular treatment among diabetic and non-diabetic pulmonary tuberculosis patients

Abstract: Objectives Tuberculosis is an infectious airborne disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Pulmonary tuberculosis is the ninth most frequent complication of diabetes mellitus. The co-existence of TB and DM in patient causes severe TB symptoms, modify radiological findings, slower response to treatment outcomes and prognosis. IFN-γ is the key cytokine which play role in the protective immune response against mycobacterium infection. The main function of IFN-γ is macrophage activation whic… Show more

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“…Therefore, we confirm the already well-known alteration of cytokine levels in DMD patients, but we specifically related it to the macrophage M1 prevalence, providing a deeper cellular overview of this clinical evidence. Although IFN-γ is the principal cytokine exerting a protective role in immune response against microbial infections by activating macrophages [ 54 ], a constant and continuous hyperproduction of this molecular signal leads to a deleterious state of macrophage chronic activation, namely chronic inflammation. The high levels of CCR7 and CD86 proteins and the contemporary low levels in pSTAT6 and CD206 protein expression let us speculate that this inflammatory state is both a cause and an effect of a M1 phenotype prevalence [ 55 , 56 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, we confirm the already well-known alteration of cytokine levels in DMD patients, but we specifically related it to the macrophage M1 prevalence, providing a deeper cellular overview of this clinical evidence. Although IFN-γ is the principal cytokine exerting a protective role in immune response against microbial infections by activating macrophages [ 54 ], a constant and continuous hyperproduction of this molecular signal leads to a deleterious state of macrophage chronic activation, namely chronic inflammation. The high levels of CCR7 and CD86 proteins and the contemporary low levels in pSTAT6 and CD206 protein expression let us speculate that this inflammatory state is both a cause and an effect of a M1 phenotype prevalence [ 55 , 56 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%