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Query: UMLS:C0001175 (
AIDS
)
120,706
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten unselected African patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and with slim disease were evaluated using physical examination, anthropometric measurements, Karnovsky performance score, and muscle biopsy. All had marked weight loss (36.8 +/- 10.8%) with extreme fatigue, marked diffuse wasting with significantly decreased circumferences of arms, thighs and calves (P < or = 0.002), and a low Karnovsky performance score (range 30-70). Mild to moderate motor deficit (in 9/10 patients) contrasted with the major amyotrophy. Chronic
diarrhoea
(in 7/10) and/or prolonged fever (in 7/10) were always associated with the amyotrophy. Atrophy of muscle fibers was the main finding of muscle biopsy. Only 5 patients met the CDC criteria for the 'HIV wasting syndrome'. We conclude that slim disease, which is highly suggestive of the
acquired immune deficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
) in Africa, is a condition associated with chronic
diarrhoea
and/or prolonged fever, that encompasses the 'HIV wasting syndrome' sensu stricto and probably other debilitating diseases associated with
AIDS
, such as tuberculosis.
...
PMID:The slim disease in African patients with AIDS. 141 62
Chronic
diarrhea
is one of the hallmarks of advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease. The symptoms of this complication are troublesome, have a significant impact on the patient's quality of life, and in severe cases can lead to extreme abnormalities in fluids and electrolytes and can even cause death. The workup for
AIDS
-associated
diarrhea
is often frustrating and frequently unrewarding. However, during the last 10 years, much has been learned about the causes of
diarrhea
; while treatment is still often ineffective, some advances have been made. Dr. John G. Bartlett and his colleagues in the Department of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have been responsible for many of these advances. In this
AIDS
Commentary, these experts discuss recent advances that have enhanced our understanding of chronic
diarrhea
in HIV-infected persons and offer their recommendations for the most efficient and effective approach to managing these patients.
...
PMID:AIDS enteropathy. 828 57
Chronic
diarrhea
and wasting are very common manifestations of
AIDS
in adults in developing countries. Etiologic studies show that protozoa (including Cryptosporidium parvum, Isospora belli, and Enterocytozoon bieniusi) and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulara are the most frequently identified pathogens. Limited data in children suggest that common enteric pathogens are equally as likely in HIV+ and HIV- babies. Preliminary analysis of an ongoing longitudinal study of 469 babies born to mothers with known HIV serostatus in Kinshasa, Zaire, reveals progression of acute to persistent
diarrhea
is six times greater in HIV+ compared to HIV- babies, and 3.5 times greater in HIV- babies born of HIV+ mothers in comparison to HIV- babies with HIV- mothers. HIV+ babies were also at greater risk than HIV- babies to have recurrent episodes of
diarrhea
(RR = 2.3). Fifty percent of the deaths were due to acute or persistent
diarrhea
, and were strongly associated with HIV infection. Efforts to improve child survival in
AIDS
infected populations will need to address HIV infections in both mothers and infants.
...
PMID:Persistent diarrhea associated with AIDS. 142 40
There are considerable data suggesting that breast milk and colostrum transmit HIV. The European Collaborative Study shows the risk of transmission of HIV from breast milk to infant to be about 28%. A study in Rwanda indicates that transmission is more likely to take place during viremia which occurs during primary HIV infection and later with progression to
AIDS
. Postnatal transmission in this study stood at about 60%. Breast feeding protects against
diarrhea
and respiratory infections. A study in Brazil demonstrates that infants who were not breast fed were at 14.2 and 3.6 higher risk of death from
diarrhea
and respiratory infections, respectively, than breast-fed infants. These risks are especially great where poverty, inadequate sanitation, and poor hygiene predominate. A study in Malaysia shows that infants living in a household with no piped water and no toilet and were not breast-fed faced a 5-fold risk of death after 1 week of age than breast-fed infants living under the same conditions. This risk continued to be high (2.5) for non-breast-fed infants living in a household with piped water and a toilet. In developed countries, affordable formula, clean water, and adequate facilities for sterilizing bottles allows HIV positive mothers to bottle feed their infants which should reduce the vertical transmission rate. In developing countries, however, bottle feeding is expensive and hazardous. Governments often cannot provide potable water and sanitation services. In addition, mathematical models demonstrate that for HIV positive mothers, the risk of infant death is lower in infants who breast feed than in those who do not. Thus, in those areas of the world where infectious diseases and malnutrition are the leading causes of infant death, health workers should promote breast feeding regardless of HIV status of the mothers.
...
PMID:Breast feeding and HIV infection. 148 98
A 33-year-old man with human immunodeficiency virus infection had severe protracted
diarrhea
. Radiologic assessment disclosed narrowing of the gastric antrum. Biopsy specimens revealed diffuse Cryptosporidium infection of the antral mucosa. Isolated antral narrowing due to Cryptosporidium gastritis should be added to the list of gastrointestinal complications associated with
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
).
...
PMID:Isolated antral narrowing associated with gastrointestinal cryptosporidiosis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 143 83
The range of clinical presentations of HIV-related disease in Africa has not been adequately described, despite the fact that many hospitals have to rely heavily on clinical diagnosis. Six hundred adult medical patients seen in the Casualty Department of the main Government hospital in Nairobi were enrolled in a study of the presentation and outcome of HIV-related disease: 506 of these patients were admitted, of whom 19 per cent (95) were HIV seropositive. The remaining 94 were dealt with as outpatients: 11 percent (10) of these were seropositive. A history of prior treatment for sexually transmitted disease and, if male, being uncircumcised, were associated with being seropositive. Three presentations were strongly associated with HIV infection: acute fever with no focus except the gastrointestinal tract (enteric fever-like illness), acute cough with fever (community-acquired pneumonia) and chronic
diarrhoea
with wasting. The WHO clinical case definition (CCD) for
AIDS
missed a substantial amount of HIV-related morbidity (sensitivity 39 per cent) and misidentified many seronegative patients (positive predictive value 59 per cent). In comparison with the Centers for Disease Control surveillance definition for
AIDS
, the CCD was specific (91 per cent) and sensitive (79 per cent) but only had a positive predictive values of 30 per cent: the CCD may therefore be a poor surveillance tool for
AIDS
. Seropositive patients were much more likely to die than were seronegative patients (39 per cent vs. 15 per cent mortality). Enteric fever-like illness was the presentation which most commonly proved fatal. A wider spectrum of disease is associated with underlying HIV immunosuppression than has previously been described in Africa.
...
PMID:The presentation and outcome of HIV-related disease in Nairobi. 143 66
Diarrhea
contributes significantly to the morbidity and mortality of patients with the
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
). Up to 50% of
AIDS
patients have
diarrhea
, and an etiologic agent for this cannot be identified in all of them. Recent evidence suggests that enterochromaffin cells may be infected by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and may contribute to the unexplained
diarrhea
. To test this hypothesis further, endoscopic biopsies of duodena from 22 HIV-1 seropositive patients [17 with
diarrhea
(> 500 g/day and > 3 bowel movements/day), five without
diarrhea
] and from 15 normal controls (no HIV risk factors) without
diarrhea
were studied. Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded 5-microns sections were examined by immunocytochemistry, using a monoclonal antibody to the HIV-1 gp41 protein, and by in situ hybridization with a full-length biotinylated HIV-1 DNA probe. Positive staining for gp41 was detected in crypt cells, consistent with the location, size, and morphology of enterochromaffin cells, in 11 of 17 HIV-1-seropositive patients with
diarrhea
, and in none of five without
diarrhea
. Nucleic acid hybridization staining was performed in five of the 11 patients who had positive gp41 staining; all showed HIV nucleic acid sequences in similar cells. All three of the five patients with positive staining for HIV nucleic acid sequences had
diarrhea
for which no etiologic agent for
diarrhea
could be found, and one each had cryptosporidia or microsporidia. No staining was observed in any of the samples from normal control tissues. These results suggest that HIV-1 may infect enterochromaffin cells and possibly alter their function. This, in turn, may contribute to the
diarrhea
associated with
AIDS
.
...
PMID:Detection of HIV-1 protein and nucleic acid in enterochromaffin cells of HIV-1-seropositive patients. 144 87
We studied the prevalence of Cryptosporidium in 29 patients with
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
(
AIDS
) from Zulia State, Venezuela. They ranged in age from five months to 46 years. Two were children and 27 were adults, of which six were women. Of the 21 men, 66.6% reported homosexual behavior. Three stool samples from each patient were examined, and modified Ziehl-Neelsen carbolfuchsin staining of formalinether stool concentrates was used to identify Cryptosporidium oocysts. To detect the presence of other intestinal parasites, direct wet mounts and iron-hematoxylin-stained smears were examined. Cryptosporidium was found in 12 (41.3%) of the patients and was identified as a single parasitic infection in seven of the 12 patients (58.3%). Other pathogenic parasites encountered were Giardia lamblia (3 of 12, 25%), Entamoeba histolytica (1 of 12, 8.3%), Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura, and Strongyloides stercoralis (each 1 of 12, 8.3%). Blastocystis hominis, an organism with an uncertain taxonomic position and pathogenicity, was observed in three of 12 patients (25%). An inflammatory exudate was observed in 10 of 12 patients infected with Cryptosporidium. Most of the patients with this infection presented with chronic watery
diarrhea
and weight loss. Our results suggest that Cryptosporidium is very common in
AIDS
patients with
diarrhea
in Venezuela. However, the role of this parasite as an enteropathogen in these patients is uncertain.
...
PMID:Cryptosporidiosis among patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in Zulia State, Venezuela. 144 98
WHO finds that the health services and the health systems in India have improved. For example, India has made considerable improvement in expansion of health services to rural areas (7-10% expansion) and to the poor. Further, allocation to the minimum needs program, according to the state sector plan, has risen from 42.6% to 50%. In addition, infant and maternal mortality rates have fallen. Improved immunization coverage, prenatal care services,
diarrhea
prevention, malaria control, and contraceptive use have all contributed to the reduction in infant and maternal deaths. Health and welfare programs have generally institutionalized the primary health care concept of community participation. Training for health workers, policymakers, and personnel from nongovernmental organizations has expanded. Nevertheless, life expectancy has essentially not changed. Besides, WHO notes that the disease patterns have not changed. Some regions of India have disease patterns of developed countries, however. India has the highest number of malaria cases in southeastern Asia (almost 71%) and the second highest number of women with anemia. The number of HIV-positive and
AIDS
cases is growing. More than 374 million people are at risk of lymphatic filariasis, and Japanese encephalitis has become entrenched in India. 5% of the population are positive for hepatitis viruses. 1% have iodine deficiency disorders.
...
PMID:WHO commends India. 145 31
HIV is efficiently transmitted through transfusion with HIV-infected blood. Accordingly, 203 multitransfused children with thalassemia attending the thalassemia clinic of the Charak Palika Hospital in New Delhi were screened for antibodies to HIV using ELISA and Western blot tests. 8.37% of the sample tested HIV-seropositive (HIV+). These 17 children were joined by 3 others referred from a neighboring state to constitute a group to be matched against 20 HIV-children for the purpose of comparing psychosocial aspects. The control group was matched for age, sex, educational level, and socioeconomic status with mean age 10.8 years ranging over 1-16 years. 4 members of the HIV+ sample were diagnoses as having clinical
AIDS
according to WHO criteria. The remaining 14 boys and 2 girls were HIV+, but asymptomatic. 25% were of lower class, 63.5% middle class, and 12.5% upper class. Of those with
AIDS
, 50% were diagnosed in their first year of life and 82% were diagnosed by year 3. Symptoms generally developed after 4-6 months of life. Lymphadenopathy and hepatomegaly tend to be visible at birth, while chronic
diarrhea
, prolonged fever, oral thrush, recurrent bacterial infections, and hepatosplenomegaly may also be presented. 7.1% of cases aged 2-3 years exhibited rocking and head banging problems worse than did control subjects. Furthermore, 28.5% had temper tantrums and 21.5% ground teeth. These children may have delayed developmental milestones as well as behavioral problems. The small sample size, however, precludes concluding that psychosocial differences exist between those with HIV/
AIDS
and those with thalassemia major. In fact, behavioral problems in these children were due to child illness and not of HIV-positivity, for children tend to be unaware of HIV/
AIDS
infections and its consequences. The author recommends that HIV+ children continue to attend school unless they can not control bodily secretions, have uncoverable oozing lesions, have unacceptable behaviors, or if there is extreme possibility of contracting infectious diseases at school. The author also stresses parents' and families' need for long-term medical and psychological care.
...
PMID:Psycho-social aspects of HIV infection and AIDS in multiple transfused thalassemic children. 145 60
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