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. 1987 Oct;129(1):192-9.

Possible roles of tumor necrosis factor in the pathology of malaria

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Possible roles of tumor necrosis factor in the pathology of malaria

I A Clark et al. Am J Pathol. 1987 Oct.

Abstract

The authors have earlier proposed that tumor necrosis factor (TNF) might contribute to the pathology of malaria. Here they report the outcome of injecting recombinant human TNF/cachectin into normal mice and others with low parasitemias (6-35%) of Plasmodium vinckei. The object was to see how precisely the pathologic features of the terminal stages of this infection could be produced, when parasitemias are 70-80%. Hypoglycemia, mid-zonal liver damage, and pulmonary accumulation of neutrophils in the pulmonary vasculature, all of which are seen in severe P vinckei infection, occurred within 4-12 hours after the mildly infected mice received TNF/cachectin. Uninfected mice were much less susceptible. TNF/cachectin also increases plasma lactate, a change seen in both the human and rodent diseases. From these findings and the recent literature on TNF/cachectin, including its detection in serum from malarial patients, it seems likely that excessive release of this monokine could account for certain of the unexplained pathologic features of human malaria.

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