Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (focal adhesion kinase)
44,029 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We aim to assess the usefulness of the cytomegalovirus (CMV) pp65 antigenaemia test, also called the CMV direct antigen test (DAT), in the management of patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection; we studied all patients who had pp65 assays between 8 September 1995 and 30 August 1996. Twenty-three patients had 31 tests. The mean CD4 cell count was 20/mm3. The tests were negative in 16 patients, of whom 12 have not developed CMV end-organ disease after a mean follow up of 114 days (range 14-269 days), whilst the remaining 4 patients had previously treated CMV disease. Eleven patients had positive tests: 4 had active CMV disease, 2 subsequently developed CMV retinitis, 2 died within a fortnight of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), one was lost to follow up and 2 have remained disease-free. This test has a positive predictive value of 43% and a negative predictive value of 94%, Fisher's exact test P=0.03. The pp65 antigenaemia assay can be performed in a standard virology laboratory avoiding the problems associated with polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a result is available within 5 h, and it is semi-quantifiable. However, a large prospective study is required to determine the comparative value and roles of the pp65 antigenaemia assay and DNA PCR in the management of CMV disease, especially with regard to the use of primary prophylaxis and pre-emptive therapy.
Int J STD AIDS 1998 Sep
PMID:Cytomegalovirus pp65 antigenaemia as an indicator of end-organ disease in AIDS. 976 40

A descriptive retrospective review of 26 patients with mycobacterial infection; 7 Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), 17 Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), one M. xenopei and one M. kansasii. Diagnosis of non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) was made mainly from blood in 68%, with biopsy material initially useful in 68%. All MTB were fully sensitive. No patients received MAC chemoprophylaxis, yet resistance to rifabutin, ciprofloxacin and ethambutol was noted. It is important to examine the UK experience of mycobacterial infection; individual centres may find it useful to review infecting organisms and resistance patterns.
Int J STD AIDS 1998 Oct
PMID:A UK centre's experience of mycobacterial infections in HIV-infected patients. 981 14

This study assessed the usefulness of routine chest radiography for detecting active pulmonary tuberculosis in persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) without suggestive symptoms in Hong Kong. Tuberculosis is common in this locality and tuberculosis/HIV co-infection has been a frequent and significant problem. Records of patients attending the largest HIV clinic were reviewed. Three hundred and eleven routine chest radiographs were performed among 191 HIV-infected patients with a total follow-up period of 792 person years. Of the 22 routine chest radiographs that had abnormalities in the lungs or hilar region, only one had led to the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis. No patient with a normal chest radiograph was diagnosed to have tuberculosis within the following 2 months. The low yield (0.32%) suggests that routine chest radiography is not useful in screening for active pulmonary tuberculosis in asymptomatic HIV-infected patients even in a locality where the tuberculosis rate is high.
Int J STD AIDS 1999 Jun
PMID:Low yield of chest radiography in screening for active pulmonary tuberculosis in HIV-infected patients in Hong Kong. 1041 85

We identified 34 HIV-infected patients with sputum smear positive for acid-alcohol fast bacilli (AAFB) to determine any factors predictive of subsequent species identification. There were 20 cases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), 9 cases of Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI), 3 cases of Mycobacterium kansasii and one each of Mycobacterium malmoense and Mycobacterium fortuitum. Factors associated with isolation of MAI were lower CD4 cell count, a higher incidence of previous AIDS diagnosis, a history of dyspnoea and a normal chest X-ray. The organism was isolated from blood cultures in 58% of patients with MTB and 78% of patients with MAI infection. Disseminated disease was diagnosed in 45% of MTB patients and 33% of MAI patients.
Int J STD AIDS 1999 Sep
PMID:Acid-alcohol fast bacilli in sputa of HIV-infected patients. 1049 28

This paper presents data on the increase of plasma interleukin-10 (IL-10) levels and rapid loss of CD4+ T cells among HIV-infected individuals in southern India. A cohort of 35 HIV-positive individuals were evaluated and classified into 3 categories based on the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) clinical classification: 9 asymptomatic, 11 symptomatic with a non-AIDS defining illness, and 15 AIDS cases. Results revealed that asymptomatic individuals experienced rapid declines in CD4 counts (280 cells/mcl/year), which is 3 times lower than the rate of HIV-positive asymptomatic subjects in developed countries. It has been estimated that progression to AIDS would occur within 2 years for the average Indian patient. On the other hand, symptomatic patients were observed to have a stable CD4 count during the 6 months of study, which could be attributable to anti-tuberculosis treatment and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. The shifts in serum IL-10 levels and CD4 counts were lower for a statistically significant correlation (p = 0.1). Several factors were identified that may have caused the differing rates of disease progression, which include infectious agents and malnutrition. Among the patients, the mean period from AIDS diagnosis to death was 5 months, which is similar to reports of rapid progression in India.
Int J STD AIDS 2000 Jan
PMID:Increase in plasma IL-10 levels and rapid loss of CD4+ T cells among HIV-infected individuals in south India. 1066 1

This study evaluated the HIV prevalence and identified the risk factors for HIV infection among women attending the antenatal clinic at a public hospital in Kisumu, western Kenya. Also, the effect of placental malaria on vertical HIV transmission were determined using structured interviews and HIV-1 antibody testing and hemoglobin malaria smears were offered to the respondents. Overall, HIV seroprevalence was 26.1% (743/2844) (95% confidence interval [CI]: 24.5-27.7) and in bivariate evaluation was significantly associated with anemia (risk ratio [RR] 1.8), malarial parasitemia (RR 1.6), fever (RR 1.6), a history of being treated for either vaginal discharge (RR 1.5) or tuberculosis (RR 1.6), alcohol consumption (RR 1.6), being an unmarried multigravida (RR 2.2), or a history of the most recent child having died (RR 2.0). Using the Poisson regression analysis, 5 significant factors associated with HIV seropositivity were identified: anemia, malarial parasitemia, and history of being treated for vaginal discharge, fever, and reported alcohol consumption. Among the pregnant women, the researchers were unable to identify a subgroup at risk of HIV infection using nonserological information, indicating that universal access to voluntary HIV counseling and testing would be preferable to targeted screening.
Int J STD AIDS 2000 Jun
PMID:Risk factors for HIV infection among asymptomatic pregnant women attending an antenatal clinic in western Kenya. 1087 13

A study on AIDS subjects carried out at the Calmette Hospital in Phnom-Penh between the 1st January 97 and the 30th December 98. The objective of this study was to describe the most frequent clinical manifestations as well as the opportunistic infections according to the 1993 CDC classification (purely clinical classification). Three hundred and fifty six AIDS patients hospitalized in medicine B were included in our study. A complete file was prepared for each subject, specifying his/her social and family situation, profession, sexual behavior and history. The clinical condition was specified and the paraclinical examinations were recorded. The average age was 35 years with 250 men and 106 women, i.e. a M/F sex ratio of 2.4. The majority of male contaminations were due to sexual relationships with multiple partners, 82%, and women with a single partner was of 78%. The use of condoms was of 60% (versus 40% occasional); the extent of drug-addiction was 1.12% (4 cases). A history of STD was found in 56% of cases. The presenting symptoms most frequently found were asthenia, anorexia, fever and weight-loss. In decreasing order, the clinical manifestations often associated were: weight-loss > 10% or a catechetic condition 58.70% (209/356), fever > 38 degrees C >1 month 53% (189/356), diarrhea (> one month) 41.60% (148/356). The most frequent opportunistic infections were: oral candidiasis 51.40% (183/356) and 40% are oro-oesophageal (oral candidiasis + dysphagia or odynphagia), pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculoses (TB) 43.50% (155/356) (pulmonary TB in 65.16%, TB of the lymph nodes 23.22% and disseminated TB and cerebral TB 11.61%), cryptococcal meningitis 11.80% (42/356) and pneumocystosis 6.50% (23/356), CMV retinitis 1.12% (4/356). The other opportunistic manifestations such as toxoplasmosis and Kaposis sarcoma are much more rarely encountered due to the difficulties of the paraclinical diagnosis. The mortality in the department was of 17.40% (62/356). In conclusions, tuberculosis is the most frequent of the opportunistic infections in Cambodia. Cryptococcal meningitis is in 3rd place for opportunistic infections. It is the first diagnosis that should be evoked in a meningeal irritation.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of AIDS at the Calmette hospital in Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia A report on 356 patients hospitalized in the Medicine "B" Department of the Calmette Hospital]. 1131 28

Rapid HIV testing is an appealing strategy in the approach to HIV diagnosis in developing countries. Concern has been raised about the use of these tests in the setting of multiple transmitted HIV subtypes. We sought to compare the OraQuick(TM) HIV-1/2 Test, a qualitative immunochromatographic test for the detection of antibodies to HIV-1 and HIV-2 using stored sera, with a conventional enzyme immunoassay (EIA)/Western blot (WB) algorithm. The study design used was a blinded retrospective study. Samples were collected on patients attending sexually transmitted disease clinics and tuberculosis clinics in Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of Congo and included 72 known HIV seropositive and 131 known HIV seronegative subjects. All 72 known HIV seropositive samples were positive by OraQuick and all 131 known HIV seronegative samples were negative by OraQuick resulting in 100% sensitivity and specificity. We conclude that the OraQuick rapid HIV-1/2 test performs well in the setting of diverse HIV viral subtypes.
Int J STD AIDS 2002 Mar
PMID:Evaluation of a rapid test for the detection of antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and 2 in the setting of multiple transmitted viral subtypes. 1186 Jun 93

To identify factors associated with HIV in Botswana, a standardized questionnaire was administered to 135 tuberculosis patients with known HIV status. HIV-positive patients were more likely than HIV-negative patients to: be female (45% vs 26% (adjusted prevalence odds ratio (aPOR)=3.8, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.1-12.7)); be 26-35 years old (50% vs 19% (aPOR=2.7, CI=0.7-10.7)); be unmarried (91% vs 71% (aPOR=13.3, CI=2.5-72.7)); have higher income (24% vs 10% (aPOR=8.2, CI=1.6-42.9)); report separation from spouse/partner for work (63% vs 52% (aPOR=1.8, CI=0.5-6.2)); have 2 sex partners other than their regular partner (82% vs 67% (aPOR=1.8, CI=0.5-7.5)); and state that they or their partner drank alcohol before sex (77% vs 55% (aPOR=6.8, CI=1.9-24.1)). Only 22% of respondents used condoms during all of their past 10 sexual encounters. These data provide information for HIV prevention strategies.
Int J STD AIDS 2002 May
PMID:HIV risk factors among patients with tuberculosis--Botswana 1999. 1197 34

Symptomatic anterior uveitis is rare in HIV-positive patients. The uveitis associated with cytomegalovirus retinitis (CMVR), the commonest ocular manifestation in AIDS patients, is rarely symptomatic and patients do not typically present with a red painful eye in conjunction with blurred vision. In this article we report 12 cases of symptomatic anterior uveitis in HIV-positive patients and discuss the aetiology. The case notes of all HIV-positive patients presenting to the eye department with symptoms of uveitis over a 4-year period were studied retrospectively. The notes were analysed for age, sex, race, risk factors of HIV, features of the uveitis, concurrent disease and CD4 counts. Only 12 patients were identified to have symptomatic uveitis out of a total 172 patients. There were 9 males and 3 females with an average age of 35 years. None of these patients were taking either rifabutin, protease inhibitors or cidofovir. Seven out of the 12 patients had granulomatous uveitis. Of these 7 patients, 4 had CD4 counts over 200 and no other concurrent illness whilst 3 patients, with CD4 counts between 130-200, were subsequently found to have an underlying aetiology namely lymphoma, tuberculosis and candida. The remaining 5 patients, all with CD4 counts below 40, had a history of systemic illness with herpes zoster preceding the onset of the uveitis. HIV-positive patients with symptoms of uveitis do not have active CMVR and the ophthalmologist must search for other causes such as tuberculosis or lymphoma in those with granulomatous uveitis or herpes zoster in those with non-granulomatous uveitis. The CD4 count may be helpful.
Int J STD AIDS 1999 Apr
PMID:Symptomatic anterior uveitis in HIV-positive patients. 1203 82


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