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Query: UMLS:C0001175 (AIDS)
120,706 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been implicated in a variety of central nervous system syndromes. In a few well-studied patients, EBV has been detected by viral isolation or EBV DNA has been found by Southern hybridization analysis. Using polymerase chain reaction, we evaluated brain biopsy specimens from 24 patients for the presence of EBV genomes. EBV DNA was found in brain specimens from 18 patients in whom presence of the virus in the brain was suspected clinically or on the basis of serological tests. Six patients had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; 2 were kidney transplant recipients. Brain specimens from 4 patients with encephalitis due to other herpes group viruses and from a patient with metabolic encephalopathy were negative for EBV DNA as determined by polymerase chain reaction. The findings indicate a need to evaluate the role of EBV in diverse neurological syndromes, especially those occurring in immunodeficient hosts.
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PMID:Detection of Epstein-Barr virus in the brain by the polymerase chain reaction. 132 32

Recent advances in the molecular biology of excitatory amino acid receptors are reviewed. Evidence that drugs blocking the excitatory action of glutamate at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA receptors may be of clinical use in epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, cerebral ischaemia and trauma, acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) encephalopathy and neuropathic pain is summarized.
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PMID:Excitatory amino acid receptors and disease. 132 24

Four patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, a 27-year-old female intravenous drug abuser and three males (two drug addicts aged 27 and 33 years and a 40-year-old homosexual) presented with a rapidly progressive encephalopathy. Two had generalized varicella-zoster virus skin infection, one had had a regressive thoracic zoster rash 7 months previously and one had no history of cutaneous eruption. Neuropathological examination revealed, in each case, multifocal necrotic changes with numerous, intranuclear Cowdry type A inclusion bodies in glial cells, endothelial cells, macrophages and neurons, within and around the lesions. These inclusion bodies were stained positively for varicella-zoster virus by immunocytochemistry and contained herpes virus nucleocapsids by electron microscopy. Molecular biology using the polymerase-chain-reaction method demonstrated viral genome. In one case, zoster-induced non-inflammatory vasculopathy involved medium sized leptomeningeal vessels and was associated with circumscribed areas of cortico-subcortical infarction. In another case, varicella-zoster virus encephalitis was associated with human immunodeficiency virus encephalitis and a secondary cerebral lymphoma. Multinucleated giant cells expressing human immunodeficiency virus proteins in their cytoplasm, were found in the lymphomatous deposits and in the varicella-zoster virus necrotic lesions. In these latter lesions, Cowdry type A inclusion bodies could be seen in the nuclei of some multinucleated giant cells confirming previous observations of MGCs co-infected by HIV and CMV, and supporting the hypothesis that DNA viruses interact with HIV, thus increasing its effect.
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PMID:Varicella-zoster virus encephalitis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: report of four cases. 133 72

Nervous system opportunistic infections are seen in about one fifth of AIDS cases and account for over 40% of the patients with neurological manifestations. Serious infections are seen in severely immunosuppressed patients, usually with CD4 counts of 200 ml-1 or less. The commonest is CMV, which can produce acute encephalitis, sometimes with focal hemisphere or brain-stem signs, dementia, retinitis, optic neuritis and an ascending radiculomyeloencephalitis. Cryptococcal meningitis is the most frequent fungal disease; a high degree of clinical suspicion is required in patients with fever, malaise, headache or seizures. Only CSF cultures are always positive; both serum and CSF cryptococcal antigen tests are highly sensitive and specific. Treatment with amphotericin B and flucytosine is successful in at least 70% of first episodes but side-effects are common. Without maintenance therapy 50% of patients relapse; fluconazole is recommended. Cerebral toxoplasmosis can present with focal cerebral or spinal cord signs but also as a diffuse encephalopathy; negative T. gondii serology is exceptional but positive serum titres are usually unhelpful. Treatment with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folinic acid achieves good results in 90% of the first episodes, but side-effects are common. Appearances on CT scan or MRI may take several weeks to improve. The value of an empirical approach to treatment is well-established; an initial cerebral biopsy is difficult to justify. Without maintenance therapy a relapse rate of 50% can be expected; therapy with sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine may also prevent pneumocystosis. HIV disease appears to increase the likelihood of neurosyphilis, and the risk of relapse after conventional penicillin doses, in patients with syphilis; at least 3-4 weeks of appropriate therapy are recommended. A number of other diseases caused by viruses, fungi, bacteria and parasites are less common; these include progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, herpes simplex and zoster infections and tuberculosis.
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PMID:Central nervous system opportunistic infections in HIV disease: clinical aspects. 134 47

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infects cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage in addition to lymphocytes, and infection of these cells may be responsible for viral persistence and dissemination, encephalopathy of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and other sequelae of HIV infection. We have developed an in vitro model utilizing peripheral-blood monocyte-derived macrophages to study HIV-1 infection of macrophages. HIV-1 isolates vary greatly in their ability to infect and replicate in macrophages, from highly restricted to highly productive infection. Productively infected macrophages undergo syncytium formation but remain viable in culture and support sustained levels of virus production for prolonged periods. Transformed monocytoid and lymphoid cell lines, however, show very different patterns of permissiveness for HIV-1 strains and do not reflect their corresponding primary cell types in studies of host cell tropism. Studies on viral entry show that the CD4 molecule, known to be the HIV receptor on lymphoid cells, is expressed at low levels on the surface of macrophages as well, where it functions as the receptor for viral entry. Therefore, differential host cell tropism does not result from the use of an alternative macrophage-specific receptor instead of CD4.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 tropism for human macrophages. 138 18

AIDS is often accompanied by progressive encephalopathy and 'subcortical' dementia, but there is uncertainty regarding how early the brain involvement may begin in the course of HIV infection. This study used a cognitive auditory 'oddball' paradigm to elicit sensory and cognitive event related potential (ERP) components from healthy controls and from patients at different stages of HIV infection. Sensory component latencies did not differ between groups, but cognitive components showed progressive delays corresponding to increasingly severe clinical stages of HIV infection. The earliest changes were found among asymptomatic HIV + patients, suggesting that this test is a sensitive indicator of early subclinical CNS damage. In contrast, neither frequency analysis nor nonlinear dynamical analysis of the EEG showed differences between healthy controls and patients.
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PMID:HIV and the brain: evidence of early involvement and progressive damage. 139 64

A 41-year-old male homosexual with AIDS was hospitalized for temperature elevation to 40 degrees C with confusion. Neurologic evaluation found psychomotor slowing and temporospatial disorientation with no focal signs. The CD4 count was 100/mm3. CSF analysis and the CT scan were normal. Despite antiviral treatment the patient died fifteen days after admission. Gross appearance of the brain was normal. Histologic examination disclosed multiple, small foci of demyelination characteristic of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. These foci were disseminated among the U fibers. In situ hybridization and immunocytochemical studies demonstrated papovavirus particles in oligodendrocytes and a few astrocytes. This case shows that papovavirus infection in AIDS patients may be responsible for a diffuse febrile encephalopathy with normal CT scan findings and a rapidly progressive course.
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PMID:[AIDS-related progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy limited to U fibers, responsible for subacute encephalopathy with normal CT scan findings]. 144 61

Central nervous system disease has emerged as an important manifestation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in both the adult and pediatric populations, with neurologic abnormalities occurring in up to 90% of pediatric patients in some series. Neuropathologic studies, based primarily on the autopsy, have provided valuable insights into the spectrum and pathogenesis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated neurologic disorders, including primary human immunodeficiency virus encephalopathy and as the spectrum of infectious, neoplastic, and cerebrovascular diseases that may complicate the course of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Progressive encephalopathy represents the single most common neurologic disorder in pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and appears to be caused in most cases by direct infection in brain parenchyma by human immunodeficiency virus. Central nervous system lymphoma and cerebrovascular disease continue to account for most focal central nervous system lesions in the pediatric population. In contrast to adults with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, opportunistic central nervous system infections remain relatively uncommon in the pediatric population. Our understanding of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated neurologic disease remains far from complete. A plea is made for regular postmortem examination of the central nervous system in all patients dying with human immunodeficiency virus infection.
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PMID:The neuropathology of pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 146 39

Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using N-isopropyl-p-(123I)iodoamphetamine (123I-IMP) and 99Tcm-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (99Tcm-HMPAO) was performed in 25 patients with different clinical stages of AIDS encephalopathy. The average interval between the two examinations was 7 days. In 15 of the 25 cases (60%) 99Tcm-HMPAO scans were different from 123I-IMP scans. Uptake defects of different extent were observed in 8 of 25 cases (32%), of different extent and different location in 3 of 25 cases (12%) and of identical extent but of different location in 4 of 25 cases (16%). Differences in the uptake patterns of 123I-IMP and 99Tcm-HMPAO with regard to extent and/or location were more commonly shown in patients with early acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) encephalopathy (P = 0.0372). In this group, 99Tcm-HMPAO showed uptake defects of greater extent more frequently than did 123I-IMP (P = 0.0156). Our data indicate different brain uptake mechanisms of 123I-IMP and 99Tcm-HMPAO in early and advanced AIDS encephalopathy.
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PMID:Double-tracer SPECT in patients with AIDS encephalopathy: a comparison of 123I-IMP with 99Tcm-HMPAO. 151 20

Since 1982, voluntary anonymous reports that meet the criteria of the WHO/CDC-AIDS definition are being collected by the Federal Health Office. By December 31st, 1989 a total of 4,306 AIDS cases has been registered. More than 80% of the reported cases are homo- and bisexual men and injection drug-users. The remaining cases are divided between hemophiliacs, persons who get infected by heterosexual contacts, blood transfusion recipients, and children infected pre- or perinatally. In 16% of all cases AIDS was diagnosed only on the basis of a Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) and in another 6% on the basis of KS and an opportunistic infection (OI). KS occurred mostly in homo- and bisexual men. The relative proportion of KS has steadily decreased from 30% up to 1986 to less than 20% in 1989. The overall incidence of KS decreased mainly due to the decrease of KS in homosexual men with AIDS. OI were diagnosed in 70% of the cases. Pneumocystis-carinii-pneumonia is most frequent (47%), followed by candida-oesophagitis (19%) and toxoplasmosis of brain in 9.5%. A malignant lymphoma was diagnosed in 3% of the cases. Furthermore, HIV-encephalopathy was seen in 2.8% and HIV-wasting-syndrome in 1.6% of cases. There is a different spectrum of diseases at the first manifestation of AIDS diagnosed in injecting drug-users. The reasons for this may be due to different life-style in this group.
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PMID:[AIDS in Germany: clinical manifestations of AIDS]. 154 64


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