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Dive into the research topics where Phillip K. Peterson is active.

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Featured researches published by Phillip K. Peterson.


AIDS | 1990

Morphine promotes the growth of HIV-1 in human peripheral blood mononuclear cell cocultures.

Phillip K. Peterson; Burt M. Sharp; Genya Gekker; Philip S. Portoghese; Kim Sannerud; Henry H. Balfour

Because morphine has been shown to alter the function of human T lymphocytes and monocytes, we postulated that morphine would promote the growth of HIV-1 in these cells. To test this hypothesis, a coculture assay was used consisting of phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from normal donors and PBMC which had been infected with a viral isolate from an asymptomatic patient, HIV-1AT. The growth of HIV-1AT, as reflected by the concentration of p24 antigen in coculture supernatants, was markedly increased in cocultures that contained morphine. A bell-shaped dose-response curve was observed with three- to fourfold increased growth at a morphine concentration of 10(-12) M. Augmentation of HIV-1AT growth by morphine required an interaction with the PHA-activated donor PBMC. Furthermore, potentiation of HIV-1AT growth by morphine was stereospecific and was antagonized by naloxone and beta-funaltrexamine indicating involvement of an opiate receptor mechanism. These findings provide an additional explanation of how opiates could act as a cofactor in the pathogenesis of HIV-1 in intravenous drug users.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1991

Stress and Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease

Phillip K. Peterson; Chun C. Chao; Thomas W. Molitor; Michael P. Murtaugh; Franc Strgar; Burt M. Sharp

Abstract Despite inherent difficulties in defining and measuring stress, a scientific framework has been provided in recent years for understanding how disruptive life experiences might be translated into altered susceptibility to infectious diseases. Studies of the effects of stress on pathogenesis of infectious disease are highly relevant to assessment of the biological importance of the immune impairments that have been associated with stress. With a few notable exceptions, investigations of viral infections in humans and in animal models support the hypothesis that stress promotes the pathogenesis of such infections. Similar conclusions can be drawn from studies of bacterial infections in humans and animals and from a small number of studies of parasitic infections in rodent models. While many of these studies have substantial limitations, the data nonetheless suggest that stress is a potential cofactor in the pathogenesis of infectious disease. Given recent unprecedented advances in the neurosciences, in immunology, and in the field of microbial pathogenesis, the relationship between stress and infection should be a fruitful topic for interdisciplinary research.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1990

Apparent biliary pseudolithiasis during ceftriaxone therapy.

Karen L. Heim-Duthoy; Erskine M. Caperton; Robert Pollock; Gary R. Matzke; Dirk Enthoven; Phillip K. Peterson

Biliary pseudolithiasis has been reported in patients who received ceftriaxone therapy. To examine this phenomenon further, serial gallbladder sonograms were evaluated in 44 adult patients who received intravenous ceftriaxone at 2 g or a placebo daily for 14 days in a double-blind controlled study. Ultrasound examinations of gallbladders were performed on days 1 and 14 of therapy and 2 weeks posttherapy if abnormalities were observed on day 14. Eight patients were unevaluable because of abnormal base-line gallbladder sonograms. Thirty-six patients (ceftriaxone, n = 28; placebo, n = 8) demonstrated normal baseline gallbladder sonograms and were evaluated for the development of change. A total of 6 of 28 (21.4%) ceftriaxone-treated patients and 1 of 8 (12.5%) patients who received the placebo demonstrated abnormal gallbladder sonograms on day 14 (P = 0.491). Four of the six ceftriaxone-treated patients demonstrating abnormal sonograms were clinically asymptomatic, while two patients reported vomiting. The abnormal sonograms of gallbladders of patients treated with ceftriaxone returned to normal between 9 and 26 days posttherapy. These data suggest an association between ceftriaxone treatment and the development of gallbladder abnormalities on ultrasound examination which resolve spontaneously on discontinuation of ceftriaxone therapy. Images


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997

Infection of Swine with Mycobacterium bovis as a Model of Human Tuberculosis

Carole A. Bolin; Diana L. Whipple; Kristen V. Khanna; Jack M. Risdahl; Phillip K. Peterson; Thomas W. Molitor

Swine were infected with Mycobacterium bovis to develop a model for pulmonary and disseminated tuberculosis in humans. Pigs were inoculated with various doses of M. bovis by intravenous (i.v.), intratracheal (int), or tonsillar routes. Animals were euthanized between 17 and 60 days after inoculation, and tissues were collected for culture and histopathologic examination. Lesions of disseminated tuberculosis were found in pigs given 10(4) or 10(8) cfu of M. bovis i.v. or int; localized pulmonary disease was found in pigs given 10(2) or 10(3) cfu of M. bovis int. Lesions ranged from well-organized tubercles with coagulative necrosis, epithelioid macrophages, and fibrosis to large expansive tubercles with liquefactive necrosis and extracellular growth of M. bovis. Tuberculous meningitis was observed in animals given M. bovis i.v. Swine infected with M. bovis are a useful animal model for elucidating the mechanisms of pathogenesis and host defense to tuberculosis in humans.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1989

Steady-state pharmacokinetics of intravenous and oral ciprofloxacin in elderly patients.

C. A. I. Hirata; David R.P. Guay; W. M. Awni; D. J. Stein; Phillip K. Peterson

The steady-state pharmacokinetics of ciprofloxacin were evaluated in nine elderly patients with lower respiratory tract infections after an intravenous dosage regimen of 200 mg every 12 h (n = 9) and an oral dosage regimen of 750 mg every 12 h (n = 6). Ciprofloxacin concentrations in serum and urine were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography. The peak concentration in serum, total body clearance (CLs), steady-state volume of distribution (Vss), and terminal elimination half-life after intravenous dosing were 3.5 +/- 0.8 micrograms/ml, 4.38 +/- 1.80 ml/min per kg, 1.6 +/- 0.6 liters/kg, and 5.8 +/- 2.4 h, respectively. The peak concentration in serum, time to peak concentration in serum, absorption lag time, and absolute bioavailability (F) after oral dosing were 7.6 +/- 2.2 micrograms/ml, 1.9 +/- 1.0 h, 0.4 +/- 0.5 h, and 7.7 +/- 24.2%, respectively. The elevated drug concentrations in serum samples from the elderly after oral dosing, compared with data obtained from younger subjects, appear to be a function of reduced CLs, renal clearance, and Vss. The increased F observed in some patients may be due to the effect of concomitant or proximate administration of tube feedings, medications which may alter gastric motility or acidity, or decreased first-pass metabolism. The results demonstrate that factors related to age and declining renal function, rather than infectious disease state, may be primary in determining alterations in pharmacokinetic parameters in the elderly. In elderly patients with normal renal function for their age, no dosage adjustment for intravenous or oral ciprofloxacin is necessary.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2001

Cytokine expression in the mouse brain in response to immune activation by Corynebacterium parvum.

Wen S. Sheng; Shuxian Hu; J. M. Ding; Chun C. Chao; Phillip K. Peterson

ABSTRACT Cytokine expression in the brain has been suggested to mediate various sickness behaviors. Here we report that intraperitoneal injection of a Corynebacterium parvum antigen in C57BL/6 mice was followed by prolonged upregulation of cytokines in the cerebral cortex and subcortical structures in a time course that coincided with reduced spontaneous running activity.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1986

Intracellular Survival of Candida albicans in Peritoneal Macrophages From Chronic Peritoneal Dialysis Patients

Phillip K. Peterson; David Lee; Hwan J. Suh; Melissa Devalon; Robert D. Nelson; William F. Keane

Candidal peritonitis is a tenacious infection in patients undergoing chronic peritoneal dialysis. Since little is known about host defenses of the human peritoneal cavity against fungi, we investigated the interaction of peritoneal macrophages (PM phi) from uninfected dialysis patients with Candida albicans blastospores. Chemiluminescence (CL) techniques were used to assess the respiratory burst activity of these cells, and candidacidal activity was evaluated with a fluorochrome microassay. In sharp contrast to peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) from healthy donors, which gave a brisk luminol-enhanced CL response to opsonized blastospores and killed 35% of cell-associated organisms, PM phi produced barely detectable luminol-enhanced CL and killed only 13% of intracellular Candida. These findings appeared to be associated with a decreased level of myeloperoxidase in PM phi. The mechanism of intracellular survival of C albicans also appeared to be related to relatively poor triggering of superoxide production during phagocytosis of viable blastospores. The CL response of PMNs to C albicans was opsonin-dependent, and peritoneal dialysis effluent was devoid of opsonic activity. These studies suggest that local cellular and humoral mechanisms of defense are inadequate for protection of peritoneal dialysis patients against candidal peritonitis.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1994

Multiple manifestations of renovascular hypertension

Mohamed Sekkarie; Babatunde Olutade; Phillip K. Peterson

We report a case of hyponatremia, polyuria-polydipsia, hypokalemia, nephrotic syndrome, and hypertension caused by unilateral renal ischemia, and the resolution after nephrectomy of the ischemic kidney. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis seems to play an essential role in the pathogenesis of these features. Mechanisms by which angiotensin II, hypokalemia, and proteinuria can affect salt and water balances, and the role of angiotensin II as a cause of heavy proteinuria are discussed. Renovascular hypertension should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hyponatremia, hypokalemia, and polyuria-polydipsia.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1991

Effects of morphine addiction on the pathogenesis of murine toxoplasmosis

Chun C. Chao; Burt M. Sharp; Claire Pomeroy; Gregory Filice; Phillip K. Peterson

Intravenous (IV) opiate use has been known, for at least 40 years, to be associated with a markedly increased morbidity and mortality due to infectious diseases (1). The identification of opiate-mediated immune defects has led to the proposal that these abnormalities may play a role in the pathogenesis of certain infections (2,3). While there are numerous studies demonstrating the effects of opiates on immune functions in vitro, few studies provide convincing data regarding the biological significance of these findings as they may relate to host resistance to infectious agents (4–7).


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 1986

Polymorphonuclear leukocyte, T-lymphocyte, and natural killer cell activities in elderly nursing home residents

Dean T. Tsukayama; R. Breitenbucher; S. Steinberg; J. Allen; R. Nelson; G. Gekker; William F. Keane; Phillip K. Peterson

Whilst all three commercial formulated selective agars are satisfactory for the isolation of campylobacters from human and animal faeces the period of incubation can affect the outcome. The results in Table 1 show that at best only 70 % of human isolates and 70 % of dog and cat isolates would have been recovered after 24 h of incubation and therefore incubation for 4 2 4 8 h is essential..A medium which has greater selectivity may be advantageous with some types of specimens and during routine use a catalase negative campylobacter from a case of human enteritis was isolated on modified CCDA (unpublished observation). In this study modified CCDA was the most selective medium and more campylobacter strains were isolated on it than on either of the other two media. Since the commercial modified CCDA is easy to prepare it should be very suitable for routine isolation o f campylobacters from human and animal faecal specimens.

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Chun C. Chao

University of Minnesota

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Shuxian Hu

Hennepin County Medical Center

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Genya Gekker

University of Minnesota

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Paul G. Quie

University of Minnesota

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