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Am J Ther. 2004 Sep-Oct;11(5):344-353. |
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Urinary Tract Diseases Revealed after DTP Vaccination in
Infants and Young Children: Cytokine Irregularities and Down-regulation of
Cytochrome P-450 Enzymes Induced by the Vaccine May Uncover Latent Diseases
in Genetically Predisposed Subjects.
Prandota J.
Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University Medical School, Wroclaw,
Poland.
Prophylactic vaccinations may sometimes shorten the incubation period of some
illnesses and/or convert a latent infection/inflammation into a clinically
apparent disease. Cytokines play a major role in mediating the inflammatory
process in various clinical entities and represent a potential source of
tissue damage if their production is not sufficiently well controlled. It
seems that irregularities in production of proinflammatory cytokines may be
responsible for the abnormalities associated with full-blown clinical
symptoms of various urinary tract diseases observed after DTP vaccination in
13 infants and young children hospitalized over the past 24 years. On
admission, upper respiratory tract diseases, atopic dermatitis, and/or latent
urinary tract infection/inflammation were found in these children. It is
suggested that the whole-cell pertussis present in DTP vaccine, acting as an
excessive stimulus in these patients, produced symptoms reminiscent of
biologic responses to circulating proinflammatory monokines such as IL-1beta,
TNF-alpha, and IL-6 because earlier it was reported that in vitro the
whole-cell vaccine induced significantly more such cytokine production than
did the acellular pertussis or diphtheria-tetanus-only vaccine. Analysis of
the cellular immune disturbances previously reported in urinary tract
infection/inflammation (increased serum and/or urinary IL-1alpha, IL-1
receptor antagonist, IL-6 and IL-8), steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome
(increased IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and decreased or increased IL-4,
depending on the cells studied), and atopic dermatitis (decreased IFN-gamma
and increased IL-4 production), may suggest that similar subclinical chronic
cytokine-mediated abnormalities produced in the course of latent diseases
revealed in our patients, combined with those caused by DTP vaccination
stimulus, were responsible for the pathomechanism of these clinical entities.
This speculation is in agreement with the reports on the long-lasting
induction of cytokine release and down-regulation of hepatic cytochrome P-450
isoenzyme activities after administration of DTP vaccine to mice and may be
supported by the fact that TH1 phenotype is associated with the up-regulation
of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and RANTES, whereas TH2 phenotype is
associated with the up-regulation of the vascular cell adhesion molecule and
P-selectin, which are key players in the migration into inflamed tissues and
localization of lymphocytes and other allergic effector and inflammatory
cells. Because several inflammatory cytokines down-regulate gene expression
of major cytochrome P-450 and/or other enzymes with the specific effects on
mRNA levels, protein expression, and enzyme activity, thus affecting the
metabolism of several endogenous lipophilic substances such as steroids,
lipid-soluble vitamins, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, thromboxanes, and
exogenous substances, their irregularities in the body may eventually lead to
the flare of latent diseases in some predisposed subjects. Also, interleukin
genetic polymorphisms, especially the constellation of TNF-alpha and IL-6
genetic variants, might predispose some infants with infection to a more than
usually intense inflammatory response in the kidneys after vaccination. It
seems that the aforementioned pathomechanism may also be responsible for some
cases of sudden infant death syndrome, which is often preceded by
infection/inflammation.
PMID: 15356430 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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