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  1. Book ; Thesis: Die Pathogenese der Borna Krankheit bei der Ratte

    Kao, Moujahed

    ein Modell für persistente Infektionen und subakute - akute Krankheiten des Zentralnervensystems und für die Fettsucht (Obesity syndrome)

    1985  

    Author's details Moujahed Kao
    Size 125 S.
    Document type Book ; Thesis
    Thesis / German Habilitation thesis Berlin, Freie Univ., Diss., 1985
    HBZ-ID HT004317436
    Database Catalogue ZB MED Nutrition, Environment, Agriculture

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  2. Article ; Online: Obesity induced by Borna disease virus in rats: key roles of hypothalamic fast-acting neurotransmitters and inflammatory infiltrates.

    Gosztonyi, Georg / Ludwig, Hanns / Bode, Liv / Kao, Moujahed / Sell, Manfred / Petrusz, Peter / Halász, Béla

    Brain structure & function

    2020  Volume 225, Issue 5, Page(s) 1459–1482

    Abstract: Human obesity epidemic is increasing worldwide with major adverse consequences on health. Among other possible causes, the hypothesis of an infectious contribution is worth it to be considered. Here, we report on an animal model of virus-induced obesity ... ...

    Abstract Human obesity epidemic is increasing worldwide with major adverse consequences on health. Among other possible causes, the hypothesis of an infectious contribution is worth it to be considered. Here, we report on an animal model of virus-induced obesity which might help to better understand underlying processes in human obesity. Eighty Wistar rats, between 30 and 60 days of age, were intracerebrally inoculated with Borna disease virus (BDV-1), a neurotropic negative-strand RNA virus infecting an unusually broad host spectrum including humans. Half of the rats developed fatal encephalitis, while the other half, after 3-4 months, continuously gained weight. At tripled weights, rats were sacrificed by trans-cardial fixative perfusion. Neuropathology revealed prevailing inflammatory infiltrates in the median eminence (ME), progressive degeneration of neurons of the paraventricular nucleus, the entorhinal cortex and the amygdala, and a strikingly high-grade involution of the hippocampus with hydrocephalus. Immune histology revealed that major BDV-1 antigens were preferentially present at glutamatergic receptor sites, while GABAergic areas remained free from BDV-1. Virus-induced suppression of the glutamatergic system caused GABAergic predominance. In the hypothalamus, this shifted the energy balance to the anabolic appetite-stimulating side governed by GABA, allowing for excessive fat accumulation in obese rats. Furthermore, inflammatory infiltrates in the ME and ventro-medial arcuate nucleus hindered free access of appetite-suppressing hormones leptin and insulin. The hormone transport system in hypothalamic areas outside the ME became blocked by excessively produced leptin, leading to leptin resistance. The resulting hyperleptinemic milieu combined with suppressed glutamatergic mechanisms was a characteristic feature of the found metabolic pathology. In conclusion, the study provided clear evidence that BDV-1 induced obesity in the rat model is the result of interdependent structural and functional metabolic changes. They can be explained by an immunologically induced hypothalamic microcirculation-defect, combined with a disturbance of neurotransmitter regulatory systems. The proposed mechanism may also have implications for human health. BDV-1 infection has been frequently found in depressive patients. Independently, comorbidity between depression and obesity has been reported, either. Future studies should address the exciting question of whether BDV-1 infection could be a link, whatsoever, between these two conditions.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Borna Disease/complications ; Borna Disease/metabolism ; Borna Disease/pathology ; Borna disease virus/physiology ; Brain/metabolism ; Brain/pathology ; Brain/virology ; Encephalitis, Viral/pathology ; Hypothalamus/metabolism ; Hypothalamus/pathology ; Hypothalamus/virology ; Neurons/metabolism ; Neurons/pathology ; Neurons/virology ; Neuropeptides/metabolism ; Obesity/metabolism ; Obesity/pathology ; Obesity/virology ; Rats, Wistar
    Chemical Substances Neuropeptides
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-05-11
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2273162-3
    ISSN 1863-2661 ; 1863-2653
    ISSN (online) 1863-2661
    ISSN 1863-2653
    DOI 10.1007/s00429-020-02063-0
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever caused by dengue virus type 3 in Al-Mukalla, Yemen.

    Madani, Tariq A / Abuelzein, El-Tayeb M E / Al-Bar, Hussein M S / Azhar, Esam I / Kao, Moujahed / Alshoeb, Haj O / Bamoosa, Alabd R

    BMC infectious diseases

    2013  Volume 13, Page(s) 136

    Abstract: Background: Investigations were conducted by the authors to explore an outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) reported in 2010 from Al-Mukalla city, the capital of Hadramout in Yemen.: Methods: From 15-17 June 2010, the outbreak investigation ... ...

    Abstract Background: Investigations were conducted by the authors to explore an outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) reported in 2010 from Al-Mukalla city, the capital of Hadramout in Yemen.
    Methods: From 15-17 June 2010, the outbreak investigation period, specimens were obtained within 7 days after onset of illness of 18 acutely ill patients hospitalized with VHF and 15 household asymptomatic contacts of 6 acute cases. Additionally, 189 stored sera taken from acutely ill patients with suspected VHF hospitalized in the preceding 12 months were obtained from the Ministry of Health of Yemen. Thus, a total of 222 human specimens were collected; 207 specimens from acute cases and 15 specimens from contacts. All samples were tested with RT-PCR for dengue (DENV), Alkhumra (ALKV), Rift Valley Fever (RVFV), Yellow Fever (YFV), and Chikungunya (CHIKV) viruses. Samples were also tested for DENV IgM, IgG, and NS1-antigen. Medical records of patients were reviewed and demographic, clinical, and laboratory data was collected.
    Results: Of 207 patients tested, 181 (87.4%) patients were confirmed to have acute dengue with positive dengue NS1-antigen (97 patients, 46.9%) and/or IgM (163 patients, 78.7%). Of the 181 patients with confirmed dengue, 100 (55.2%) patients were IgG-positive. DENV RNA was detected in 2 (1%) patients with acute symptoms; both samples were molecularly typed as DENV type 3. No other VHF viruses were detected. For the 15 contacts tested, RT-PCR tests for the five viruses were negative, one contact was dengue IgM positive, and another one was dengue IgG positive. Of the 181 confirmed dengue patients, 120 (66.3%) patients were males and the median age was 24 years. The most common manifestations included fever (100%), headache (94.5%), backache (93.4%), malaise (88.4%), arthralgia (85.1%), myalgia (82.3%), bone pain (77.9%), and leukopenia (76.2%). Two (1.1%) patients died.
    Conclusions: DENV-3 was confirmed to be the cause of an outbreak of VHF in Al-Mukalla. It is important to use both IgM and NS1-antigen tests to confirm acute dengue particularly under the adverse field conditions, where proper storage and transportation of specimens are missing, which substantially reduce the sensitivity of the RT-PCR for detecting DENV RNA.
    MeSH term(s) Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Animals ; Antibodies, Viral/blood ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Cohort Studies ; Dengue Virus/genetics ; Dengue Virus/isolation & purification ; Disease Outbreaks ; Female ; Goat Diseases/epidemiology ; Goat Diseases/virology ; Goats ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; RNA, Viral/analysis ; RNA, Viral/genetics ; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Severe Dengue/diagnosis ; Severe Dengue/epidemiology ; Severe Dengue/virology ; Sheep ; Sheep Diseases/epidemiology ; Sheep Diseases/virology ; Yemen/epidemiology ; Zoonoses/epidemiology ; Zoonoses/virology
    Chemical Substances Antibodies, Viral ; RNA, Viral
    Language English
    Publishing date 2013-03-14
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ISSN 1471-2334
    ISSN (online) 1471-2334
    DOI 10.1186/1471-2334-13-136
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Alkhumra, not Alkhurma, is the correct name of the new hemorrhagic fever flavivirus identified in Saudi Arabia.

    Madani, Tariq A / Azhar, Esam I / Abuelzein, El-Tayeb M E / Kao, Moujahed / Al-Bar, Hussein M S / Niedrig, Matthias / Ksiazek, Thomas G

    Intervirology

    2012  Volume 55, Issue 4, Page(s) 259–60; author reply 261–2

    MeSH term(s) Fever/virology ; Flavivirus/isolation & purification ; Flavivirus Infections/virology ; Saudi Arabia ; Terminology as Topic
    Language English
    Publishing date 2012
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Letter
    ZDB-ID 184545-7
    ISSN 1423-0100 ; 0300-5526
    ISSN (online) 1423-0100
    ISSN 0300-5526
    DOI 10.1159/000337238
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article: Gastroenteritis attributable to rotavirus in hospitalized Saudi Arabian children in the period 2007-2008.

    Khalil, Mohamed / Azhar, Esam / Kao, Moujahed / Al-Kaiedi, Noura / Alhani, Hatim / Al Olayan, Ibrahim / Pawinski, Robert / Gopala, Kusuma / Kandeil, Walid / Anis, Sameh / Van Doorn, Leen Jan / DeAntonio, Rodrigo

    Clinical epidemiology

    2015  Volume 7, Page(s) 129–137

    Abstract: Purpose: Rotavirus (RV) is a leading cause of severe gastroenteritis (GE) in children across the world. As there is a lack of epidemiological data for RV gastroenteritis (RVGE) in Saudi Arabia, this hospital-based study was designed to estimate the ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: Rotavirus (RV) is a leading cause of severe gastroenteritis (GE) in children across the world. As there is a lack of epidemiological data for RV gastroenteritis (RVGE) in Saudi Arabia, this hospital-based study was designed to estimate the disease burden of RVGE and assess the prevalent RV types in Saudi children younger than 5 years of age.
    Patients and methods: Children hospitalized for acute GE were enrolled at four pediatric referral hospitals in Saudi Arabia. The study was conducted from February 2007 to March 2008 and used the World Health Organization's generic protocol for RVGE surveillance. The Vesikari severity scale was used to assess the severity of RVGE. Stool samples were tested for RV using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Samples were further typed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and hybridization assay for determining the G and P types.
    Results: A total of 1,007 children were enrolled; the final analysis included 970 children, of whom 395 were RV positive, 568 were RV negative, and seven had unknown RV status. The proportion of RVGE among GE hospitalizations was 40.7% (95% confidence interval: 37.6-43.9). The highest percentage of RVGE hospitalizations (83.1%) was seen in children younger than 2 years of age. The highest proportion of RV among GE hospitalizations was in June 2007 with 57.1%. The most common RV types detected were G1P[8] (49.3%), G1G9P[8] (13.2%), and G9P[8] (9.6%). Before hospitalization, severe GE episodes occurred in 88.1% RV-positive and 79.6% RV-negative children. Overall, 94% children had recovered by the time they were discharged. Two children (one RV positive and one RV negative) died due to GE complications.
    Conclusion: RVGE is responsible for a high proportion of hospitalizations in Saudi children younger than 5 years of age. Routine RV vaccination has therefore been introduced into the national immunization program and may help reduce the morbidity, mortality, and disease burden associated with RVGE in Saudi Arabia.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-02-11
    Publishing country New Zealand
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2494772-6
    ISSN 1179-1349
    ISSN 1179-1349
    DOI 10.2147/CLEP.S69502
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Book ; Thesis: Die Pathogenese der Borna Krankheit bei der Ratte

    Kao, Moujahed

    ein Modell für persistente Infektionen und subakute/akute Krankheiten des Zentralnervensystems und für die Fettsucht ; obesity syndrome

    1985  

    Author's details Moujahed Kao
    Language Undetermined
    Size 125 S, Ill., graph. Darst, 21 cm
    Document type Book ; Thesis
    Thesis / German Habilitation thesis @Berlin, Freie Univ., Diss. : 1985
    Database Former special subject collection: coastal and deep sea fishing

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  7. Book ; Thesis: Die Pathogenese der Borna Krankheit bei der Ratte

    Kao, Moujahed

    ein Modell für persistente Infektionen und subakute/akute Krankheiten des Zentralnervensystems und für die Fettsucht ; obesity syndrome

    1985  

    Author's details Moujahed Kao
    Language Undetermined
    Size 125 S, Ill., graph. Darst, 21 cm
    Document type Book ; Thesis
    Thesis / German Habilitation thesis @Berlin, Freie Univ., Diss. : 1985
    Database Special collection on veterinary medicine and general parasitology

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  8. Book ; Thesis: Die Pathogenese der Borna Krankheit bei der Ratte

    Kao, Moujahed

    e. Modell für persistente Infektionen u. subakute, akute Krankheiten d. Zentralnervensystems u. für d. Fettsucht (Obesity Syndrome)

    1985  

    Language Undetermined
    Size 125 S, Ill
    Document type Book ; Thesis
    Thesis / German Habilitation thesis @Berlin, Freie Univ., Diss., 1985
    Database Friedrich Loeffler-Institute, Federal Research Institute for Animal Health

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  9. Article: Superiority of the buffy coat over serum or plasma for the detection of Alkhumra virus RNA using real time RT-PCR

    Madani, Tariq A / Abuelzein, El-Tayeb M. E / Azhar, Esam I / Kao, Moujahed / Al-Bar, Hussein M. S / Abu-Araki, Huda / Ksiazek, Thomas G

    Archives of virology.. 2012 May, v. 157, no. 5

    2012  

    Abstract: RT-PCR to detect Alkhumra virus (ALKV) RNA in plasma or serum has been the standard practice to confirm this infection in the first seven days of illness. In this study, RT-PCR detection of viral RNA from the plasma, serum, and buffy coat (BC) was ... ...

    Abstract RT-PCR to detect Alkhumra virus (ALKV) RNA in plasma or serum has been the standard practice to confirm this infection in the first seven days of illness. In this study, RT-PCR detection of viral RNA from the plasma, serum, and buffy coat (BC) was compared to virus isolation. Plasma, serum, and BC were obtained from seven patients with clinically suspected ALKV infection in Najran, Saudi Arabia. Baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) and rhesus monkey kidney (LLC-MK2) cell culture monolayers were used for virus isolation. Real-time RT-PCR was used to confirm ALKV infection and to detect viral RNA directly from plasma, serum, and BC. ALKV was isolated from five of the seven patients. The virus was isolated from all three specimen types (plasma, serum, and BC) of the five confirmed patients. ALKV RNA was detected directly by RT-PCR in BC in all five (100%) culture-positive patients and in plasma or serum in only four (80%) of the five patients. Three of the five patients for whom ALKV RNA was detected in BC also had detectable viral RNA in plasma and serum. In the remaining two patients with detectable ALKV RNA in the BC, the plasma was positive but the serum was negative in one patient, whereas the serum was positive and the plasma was negative in the other patient. The use of real-time RT-PCR to detect ALKV RNA in the BC was superior to using plasma and serum and equivalent to virus isolation.
    Keywords Macaca mulatta ; RNA ; cell culture ; coatings ; hamsters ; kidneys ; patients ; type collections ; viruses ; Saudi Arabia
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2012-05
    Size p. 819-823.
    Publishing place Springer-Verlag
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 7491-3
    ISSN 1432-8798 ; 0304-8608
    ISSN (online) 1432-8798
    ISSN 0304-8608
    DOI 10.1007/s00705-012-1237-7
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  10. Article ; Online: Propagation and titration of Alkhumra hemorrhagic fever virus in the brains of newborn Wistar rats.

    Madani, Tariq A / Kao, Moujahed / Abuelzein, El-Tayeb M E / Azhar, Esam I / Al-Bar, Hussein M S / Abu-Araki, Huda / Bokhary, Rana Y / Ksiazek, Thomas G

    Journal of virological methods

    2014  Volume 199, Page(s) 39–45

    Abstract: Alkhumra hemorrhagic fever virus (AHFV) is a novel flavivirus identified first in Saudi Arabia. In this study, successful propagation of AHFV in the brains of newborn Wistar rats is described and the median rat lethal dose (RLD50) is determined. AHFV-RNA- ...

    Abstract Alkhumra hemorrhagic fever virus (AHFV) is a novel flavivirus identified first in Saudi Arabia. In this study, successful propagation of AHFV in the brains of newborn Wistar rats is described and the median rat lethal dose (RLD50) is determined. AHFV-RNA-positive human sera diluted 1:10 were injected intracerebrally into 16, ≤24h old rats. Post-inoculation, the rats were observed daily for 30 days. Brains of moribund rats were tested for AHFV-RNA using RT-PCR and cultured in LLC-MK2 cells. The titer of the isolated virus was determined and expressed in median tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50). To determine the RLD50, AHFV brain suspension was 10-fold diluted serially and each dilution was inoculated in the cerebral hemispheres of 10 rats for a total of 90 rats. Three days post-inoculation, the rats developed tremor, irritability, convulsion, opisthotonus, and spastic paresis starting in the hind limbs and ascending to involve the whole body. All infected rats died within 3-7 days with histopathologically confirmed meningoencephalitis. AHFV-RNA was detected in the brains of all infected rats and the virus titer was 10(9.4) RLD50/ml. The virus titer in LLC-MK2 was 10(8.2) TCID50/ml. In conclusion, AHFV was propagated successfully to high titers in the brains of newborn Wistar rats.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Animals, Newborn ; Brain/virology ; Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne/growth & development ; Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne/isolation & purification ; Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne/pathogenicity ; Encephalitis, Arbovirus/pathology ; Encephalitis, Arbovirus/virology ; Female ; Humans ; Lethal Dose 50 ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Viral Load ; Virus Cultivation/methods
    Language English
    Publishing date 2014-01-18
    Publishing country Netherlands
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 8013-5
    ISSN 1879-0984 ; 0166-0934
    ISSN (online) 1879-0984
    ISSN 0166-0934
    DOI 10.1016/j.jviromet.2013.12.004
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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