Browsing by Subject "pathogenesis"
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Item Open Access Markers of Tissue Repair and Cellular Aging Are Increased in the Liver Tissue of Patients With HIV Infection Regardless of Presence of HCV Coinfection.(Open forum infectious diseases, 2018-07) Naggie, Susanna; Swiderska-Syn, Marzena; Choi, Steve; Lusk, Sam; Lan, Audrey; Ferrari, Guido; Syn, Wing-Kin; Guy, Cynthia D; Diehl, Anna MaeLiver disease is a leading cause of HIV-related mortality. Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related fibrogenesis is accelerated in the setting of HIV coinfection, yet the mechanisms underlying this aggressive pathogenesis are unclear. We identified formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded liver tissue for HIV-infected patients, HCV-infected patients, HIV/HCV-coinfected patients, and controls at Duke University Medical Center. De-identified sections were stained for markers against the wound repair Hedgehog (Hh) pathway, resident T-lymphocytes, and immune activation and cellular aging. HIV infection was independently associated with Hh activation and markers of immune dysregulation in the liver tissue.