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Query: UMLS:C0001175 (
AIDS
)
120,706
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifteen 67Ga lung scans were obtained from 11 men with
AIDS
to detect opportunistic lung infection. Results were compared with clinical findings, chest radiographs, CO-transfer and transbronchial biopsies or BAL. Clinical symptoms were least helpful in diagnosing pneumonia. Chest radiographs were normal in six of eight normal 67Ga studies and abnormal in four of seven abnormal scans. In four cases the X-ray showed equivocal abnormalities, twice corresponding to a normal and twice to an abnormal scan. Once the X-ray was normal, but the scan showed diffuse abnormalities. CO-transfer in patients with a normal scan was higher (55-68%) than in patients with an abnormal scan (22-44%). Biopsy or BAL revealed P. carinii in five of six patients. Cytomegalo-virus was isolated once. All six patients had abnormal 67Ga scans. 67Ga lung scintigraphy is a sensitive indicator of active
lung disease
in
AIDS
, especially when chest X-rays are normal or equivocal.
...
PMID:Gallium-67 lung scintigraphy in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). 301 49
The clinical significance of pulmonary function tests (including blood gas analysis) lies in their sensitivity for detecting PCP. PCP has most consistently been found to cause abnormalities in the DLCO and the exercise arterial blood gas; both are highly sensitive for the presence of Pneumocystis infection. These tests are more sensitive for the detection of PCP than are the resting arterial blood gas and chest x-ray. Therefore, measuring these values can be especially helpful in evaluating HIV-infected individuals who have pulmonary symptoms but whose resting arterial blood gas and/or chest radiograph are normal. The advantage of performing the exercise test over measuring the DLCO is that the exercise test is simple. It can be done without pulmonary function equipment and without a technologist. Furthermore, since many
AIDS
patients with non-PCP pulmonary disorders maintain "normal" exercise tests despite abnormal DLCO, it can be useful in evaluating patients for PCP who have known underlying
lung disease
with progressive symptoms. Measurement of lung volumes and spirometry lacks both sensitivity and specificity for detecting pulmonary disease in general and PCP in particular. Spirometry is helpful in detecting airways obstruction, which is not an uncommon finding in
AIDS
patients. The etiology, clinical significance, and treatment of obstructive ventilatory defects in the
AIDS
population remains unclear.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function tests. 304 83
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia occurs at some point in the course of disease in approximately 85 per cent of patients with
AIDS
. Because of the frequency of P. carinii pneumonia and because it is readily treatable, prompt, accurate, and efficient diagnostic schemes are of extreme importance. The clinical presentation is generally characterized by fever, nonproductive cough, and shortness of breath. Such symptoms in a patient from a recognized HIV transmission category should prompt a diagnostic evaluation to identify P. carinii or other opportunistic infections. A chest radiograph usually provides an objective indication of
lung disease
. Pulmonary function tests, particularly the DLCO and lung imaging using 67Ga-citrate, are useful screening tests in patients with normal chest films. Examination of sputum induced by inhalation of a mist of hypertonic saline is a very useful means of identifying P. carinii. Bronchoalveolar lavage is nearly 100 per cent sensitive to the presence of P. carinii and should be performed in patients who have a nondiagnostic sputum examination. Transbronchial biopsy increases the overall yield for diagnoses other than P. carinii and should be performed in patients in whom bronchoalveolar lavage does not provide a diagnosis. Because of the effectiveness of sputum examinations and bronchoscopic procedures, open lung biopsy is rarely necessary. Measurements of circulating P. carinii antigen and antibodies are of no help in diagnosis.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. 306 May 25
During a period of 16 months 26 fluid specimens obtained by broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) in 24 immunocompromised patients were examined. This material included 13 HIV positive patients and 11 patients presenting malignant hemopathies (MH), of whom 7 had had a blood marrow transplantation. The BAL fluid was divided into two equal parts, one of which was sent to the Institute of Pathology and the other to the Laboratory of Bacteriology of Geneva University Hospital. In some cases a transbronchial biopsy was also studied. Eight out of 13 HIV positive patients presented a Pneumocystis carinii infection and one a cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection (associated with atypical mycobacteria infection). In another case streptococcal pneumonia was observed. In 3 patients, analysis of the BAL fluid failed to yield a diagnosis. In the 11 patients with MH, 2 cases of CMV, 2 infections with Candida albicans and one with Aspergillus fumigatus were found. In 2 patients the
pneumopathy
was due to bacterial infection. Four BAL fluids failed to yield a diagnosis; however, in one of these transbronchial biopsy revealed interstitial pneumonia of unknown origin. On the basis of our material and comparison with clinica, radiological and serological data, it appears that BAL fluid analysis is a helpful and rapid diagnostic aid in infectious pneumopathies of immunocompromised patients. This is especially true of
AIDS
patients in whom the most common pulmonary complication is Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. However, success of the analysis requires close cooperation between clinician, bacteriologist and pathologist.
...
PMID:[Infectious pneumopathies in immunodepressed patients. Value of the study of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid]. 317 70
Between February 1987-May 1988, 109 patients at the Dakar Central Hospital were diagnosed by the ELISA method and confirmed by Western Blot as seropositive for HIV infections. 44 had
AIDS
, including 2 blood donors and 1 child. 39 asymptomatic but seropositive subjects included 15 blood donors, 7 spouses and 2 children of seropositive individuals, 2 subjects who had spent time in Central Africa where HIV is endemic, 2 patients receiving blood transfusions in Benin and the Ivory Coast, 2 patients with a positive treponemic serology, 4 pregnant women, and 5 patients with disorders unrelated to
AIDS
. The remaining 26 seropositive blood donors were not examined and their risk factors and health status were unknown. Among the 109 cases there were 50 seropositivities to HIV 1, 44 to HIV 2, and 15 for both HIV 1 and 2. 83 men and 26 women were seropositive, for a sex ratio of 3.9. The average ages of
AIDS
patients were 33.2 for HIV 1, 41.1 for HIV 2, and 42.3 for HIV 1 and 2. Average ages of asymptomatic carriers were 30.1 for HIV 1, 29.5 for HIV 2, and 26.1 for HIV 1 and 2. Risk factors were difficult to study, but 78 records including information indicated 3 open homosexuals, 4 drug users, 25 who frequented prostitutes, 11 patients who had received transfusions, and 30 who had received injections. 21 of 35 seropositive for HIV 1, 5 of 33 seropositive for HIV 2, and 5 of 10 seropositive for both HIV 1 and 2 had lived outside Senegal and its neighboring countries in the past 10 years. Clinical signs in the 44
AIDS
patients were highly varied. The most frequently noted were poor general state with weight loss, fever, diarrhea, polyadenopathic syndrome,
pneumopathy
, and meningoencephalitis. 9 men and 3 women died during the study period. In all cases the clinical status at hospital admission was very poor. There has as yet been no epidemic of
AIDS
in Senegal following observation of the 1st case in 1987. The 44
AIDS
patients represented .78% of hospital admissions during the study period, while the 43 seropositive blood donors represented 1.35% of all donors. The HIV 1 and HIV 2 viruses both cause profound immunodepression. Some evidence suggests that the HIV 2 virus has a longer incubation period. The study indicates that the epidemiology of HIV is not the same in West Africa as in Central Africa.
...
PMID:[Human immunodeficiency virus infections (HIV-1 and HIV-2) in Dakar. Epidemiologic and clinical aspects]. 322 81
The ability of alveolar macrophages (AM) to release hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), an indicator of AM function, was studied in five children with the
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
) related complex and, for comparison, in 11 children without disorders of the lung parenchyma. In the AIDS-related complex group, pulmonary manifestations were mild, and lung involvement was suspected by moderate clinical and/or radiological features. None had a past history of opportunistic infections; neither did any have lymphopenia. Cytologic study of the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid revealed increased cellularity with increased percentage of lymphocytes. The study of H2O2 release was performed on unstimulated AM and on AM stimulated by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). Under both experimental conditions, the amount of H2O2 accumulated in the medium was significantly increased in the group with AIDS-related complex (P less than 0.001). As no enhanced oxidative activity has been reported in AM from patients with full-blown
AIDS
, an increased ability of AM to release oxygen metabolites from children with AIDS-related complex may reflect an initial and temporary step in the course of the LAV/HTLV-III pulmonary disease. Determining AM activation might be a reliable method of assessing the evolution of
lung disorder
in
AIDS
.
...
PMID:Activation of alveolar macrophages from children with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex. 323 46
To characterize the postmortem pulmonary disease and analyze the effectiveness of antemortem diagnosis, we examined the clinical records and autopsy material from 54 patients who died of the
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
. At autopsy, all patients had pulmonary disease. One or more specific diagnoses were made in 53, including opportunistic infection, nonopportunistic infection, and Kaposi's sarcoma. Multiple postmortem pulmonary diagnoses were established in 37. Respiratory failure was the most common cause of death. Of the 97 pulmonary disorders discovered at autopsy, only 31 were diagnosed before death. The frequency with which infections were diagnosed during life varied according to the organism, and was significantly higher for Pneumocystis carinii than for cytomegalovirus or bacterial agents. Pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma was diagnosed in only 7% of patients with autopsy documentation. The yield of diagnostic procedures also varied according to the disease present. Sputum culture was relatively effective in detecting Cryptococcus neoformans and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, fiber-optic bronchoscopy was extremely useful for diagnosing P Carinii, and one or more diagnoses were provided in 4 of 7 patients who underwent thoracotomy, but significant disease including cytomegalovirus infection and pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma was frequently missed. Although the spectrum of
lung disease
found at autopsy is similar to that observed during life, the frequency of some pathologic processes including cytomegalovirus infection and Kaposi's sarcoma may be underrepresented in antemortem series.
...
PMID:Pulmonary disease at autopsy in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 326 12
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia occurs at some point in the course of illness in approximately 85% of patients with
AIDS
. Because of the frequency of P. carinii pneumonia and because it is readily treatable, prompt, accurate, and efficient diagnostic schemes are extremely important. The clinical presentation is generally characterized by fever, nonproductive cough, and shortness of breath. Such symptoms in a patient from a recognized HIV transmission category should prompt a diagnostic evaluation to identify P. carinii or other opportunistic infections. A chest radiograph usually provides an objective indication of
lung disease
. Pulmonary function tests, particularly the DLCO and lung imaging using 67Ga-labeled citrate, are useful screening tests in patients with normal chest radiographs. Examination of sputum induced by inhalation of aerosolized hypertonic saline is a very useful means of identifying P. carinii. Bronchoalveolar lavage is nearly 100% sensitive to the presence of P. carinii and should be performed in patients who have a nondiagnostic sputum examination. Transbronchial biopsy increases the overall yield for diagnoses other than P. carinii and should be performed in patients in whom bronchoalveolar lavage does not provide a diagnosis. Because of the effectiveness of sputum examinations and bronchoscopic procedures, open lung biopsy is rarely necessary.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia: diagnosis. 328 81
In 11 non-smoking
AIDS
patients suspected of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), the results of Tc-99m DTPA aerosol clearances, gallium scans, and arterial blood gases were compared with those of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Nine patients had PCP. All had increased clearances five times higher than the normal (5.6 +/- 2.3% X min-1 vs 1.1 +/- 0.34% X min-1, N = 10, P less than 0.001), suggesting an increased alveolar permeability. Gallium scans were abnormal in six patients but normal or slightly abnormal in the three others. Four of these nine patients had normal chest x-rays. In two of these the gallium scan was abnormal, but in the two others, only the increased Tc-99m DTPA clearances showed evidence of
lung disease
. Two patients had normal BAL, with normal clearances and gallium scans. Four out of the nine patients with PCP were studied after treatment. Three recovered and had normal clearance and gallium scans. One still had PCP with increased clearance but normal gallium scan. Gallium scanning and Tc-99m DTPA clearance are useful for detecting
lung disease
in
AIDS
patients with suspected PCP and for prompting BAL when chest x-rays and PaO2 levels are normal. Due to its high sensitivity, a normal Tc-99m DTPA clearance could avoid BAL.
...
PMID:Technetium-99m DTPA aerosol and gallium scanning in acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 330 Nov 47
Water serves as a major reservoir for the environmental mycobacteria. Many cases of cutaneous mycobacterial disease result from water exposure. The current theory of the pathogenesis of M. avium complex
lung disease
involves inhalation of organisms aerosolized from surface water. Disseminated M. avium disease in
AIDS
invariably involves the gastrointestinal tract strongly suggesting that contaminated water could serve as the disease source for this increasingly important disease.
...
PMID:Nontuberculous mycobacteria and water: a love affair with increasing clinical importance. 333 90
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