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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Involvement of the central nervous system (CNS) is common in patients with advanced disease due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Symptoms range from lethargy and apathy to coma, incoordination and
ataxia
to hemiparesis, loss of memory to severe dementia, and focal to major motor seizures. Involvement may be closely associated with HIV infection per se, as in the AIDS dementia complex, but is frequently caused by opportunistic pathogens such as Toxoplasma gondii and
Cryptococcus neoformans
or malignancies such as primary lymphoma of the CNS. The clinical presentations of attendant and direct CNS involvement are remarkably non-specific and overlapping, yet a correct diagnosis is critical to successful intervention. Toxoplasmic encephalitis is one of the most common and most treatable causes of AIDS-associated pathology of the CNS. A great deal has been learned in the last 10 years about its unique presentation in the HIV-infected patient with advanced disease. Drs. Benjamin J. Luft of the State University of New York at Stony Brook and Jack S. Remington of the Stanford University School of Medicine and Palo Alto Medical Foundation's Research Institute have studied T. gondii for many years and are two of the leading experts in the field. This commentary comprises an update of their initial review (J Infect Dis 1988;157:1-6) and a presentation of the current approaches to diagnosing and managing toxoplasmic encephalitis in HIV-infected patients.
...
PMID:Toxoplasmic encephalitis in AIDS. 152 Jul 57
Neuro-
cryptococcosis
is a common opportunistic infection in AIDS or HIV infected patients. From a series of 10 neuro-
cryptococcosis
the four of them studied by magnetic resonance (MR) are reported. In AIDS patients a high suspicion of opportunistic infection of the CNS is needed as exemplified by two of the four patients who only presented cephalalgia. The other two patients suffered additional symptoms and signs of meningeal and CNS involvement, such as nuchal rigidity, cranial nerve palsies, papilloedema, gait
ataxia
and dismetria. Diagnosis was achieved (confirmed) by a positive culture, serology or indian ink test in CSF. CT scan did not contribute to the diagnosis and management of the patients. In contrast MR, showed in three of them a peculiar pattern of small, confluent, high-signal lesions, roughly symmetrically placed in the basal ganglia and the internal capsule. They probably correspond to the dilated Virchow-Robin spaces through which torulae migrate from the subarachnoid space.
...
PMID:[Use of magnetic resonance in the diagnosis of neuro-cryptococcosis in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: study of 4 patients]. 155 79
A case of acute cryptococcal cerebellar encephalitis with CT enhancement confined to the cerebellum is reported. A 46-year-old man with hepatoma was admitted with chief complaints of headache, fever and dizziness. On admission, cerebellar signs (disturbance of finger-to-nose test and of heel-to-knee test, intention tremor, and truncal
ataxia
) were neurologically noted. However, there were no brainstem signs. Head CT showed swelling and enhancement of the cerebellar cortex and dilatation of the cerebral ventriculi.
Cryptococcus neoformans
was detected in a culture of the patient's CSF. Clinical symptoms and signs, and enhancement of the cerebellum on CT gradually diminished after administration of anti-fungal drugs, and CSF became negative for cryptococcal antigen 6 months after admission.
...
PMID:[A case of acute cerebellar encephalitis due to Cryptococcus neoformans]. 193 83
A 58-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with suspicion of aseptic meningitis. He had been well until the day before admission, when he became suffering from headache and nausea. Cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) analysis on admission revealed
Cryptococcus neoformans
. Neurological examination and brain CT scan showed no abnormality. On the 5th hospital day, he noticed
ataxia
and weakness in his right extremities and soon fell into drowsy to comatose state. CSF study revealed marked elevation of pleocytosis and oligoclonal IgG bands. The T2 weighted image of brain MRI showed multiple high intensity areas, mainly in the white matter, in cerebellar hemisphere, vermis, left medulla oblongata, left occipital lobe and parieto-occipital lobe. Steroid pulse therapy remarkably improved neurological deficit as well as MRI abnormalities. He became alert at the next day.
Ataxia
and motor weakness disappeared in a week. Laboratory examination before the pulse therapy revealed impairment of T cell response to mitogens and reduced number of CD8-positive cells. These abnormalities in the cell-mediated immunity were completely corrected by the steroid pulse therapy. It was hypothesized that cryptococcus infection induced the autoimmune mechanism which resulted in the ADEM-like exacerbation.
...
PMID:[Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)-like exacerbation in the patients with cryptococcus meningitis treated successfully by steroid pulse therapy]. 866 39
The authors studied the clinical histories of 17 patients with AIDS who were hospitalized with the diagnosis of Meningoencephalitis. Laboratory studies showed the causative agent to be
Cryptococcus neoformans
. All patients had fever and most had localized headache. Some patients had nausea and vomiting, nuchal rigidity and convulsions. One each had blurred vision, photophobia, periods of disorientation,
ataxia
, lumbar or cervical pain. Cell count, chemical analysis, India ink preparation and culture of the cerebrospinal fluid confirmed the diagnosis and the etiologic agent. Blood cultures were negative in the few patients on whom it was performed. The best results of therapy were obtained in the patients who received Amphotericin B and Fluocytosine (80%) in dosages of 0.3 to 1 mg/k/day and 150 mg/day respectively, for 21 days.
...
PMID:[Cryptococcus neoformans meningitis in patients with AIDS at the Saint Thomas Hospital]. 896 38
A captive king cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) was evaluated for a subacute onset of
ataxia
in all four limbs. The
ataxia
appeared to be spinal in origin, evidenced by apparent conscious proprioceptive deficits in all limbs, and there was no evidence of cerebellar involvement. Anesthesia was performed and survey spinal radiographs were normal. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis revealed an apparently sterile meningitis of unknown etiology. Although transient improvement was noted with glucocorticoid and antimicrobial therapy, the condition deteriorated subsequently and the animal became quadriparetic and paraplegic. Follow-up cerebrospinal fluid analysis and culture revealed the presence of
Cryptococcus neoformans
. Myelography demonstrated obstruction of the subarachnoid space at the level of the seventh cervical vertebra. Pathological examination following euthanasia revealed a solitary pulmonary cryptococcoma and confirmed cryptococcal meningoencephalomyelitis.
...
PMID:Pulmonary cryptococcoma and cryptococcal meningoencephalomyelitis in a king cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus). 952 45
A 48-year-old man with a history of sarcoidosis was transferred to the Mayo Clinic for evaluation and management of progressive neurologic decline. Two years before admission, he was admitted to a local hospital with mental status changes accompanied by
ataxia
and severe headache. A diagnosis of pulmonary and central nervous system sarcoidosis was made based on computed tomography of the head, lumbar puncture, and chest radiography. A mediastinoscopy with lymph node biopsy exhibited noncaseating granulomas and negative stains for microorganisms. Prednisone therapy was initiated at 80 mg/day. Clinical improvement was apparent for 13 months during steroid therapy until the slow taper reached a dosage of 20 mg/day. At that time, the patient was readmitted to the local hospital with severe confusion and skin lesions. When intravenous methylprednisolone therapy for presumed central nervous system sarcoidosis did not improve the patient's mental status, he was transferred to the Mayo Clinic. Physical examination of the thighs revealed large, well-marginated, indurated, irregularly bordered, violaceous plaques and rare, umbilicated, satellite papules with central hemorrhagic crusts (Fig. 1A). Superficially ulcerated plaques with a similar appearance to the thigh lesions were coalescing around the lower legs (Fig. 1B). A skin biopsy specimen of the thigh demonstrated abundant numbers of encapsulated organisms and minimal inflammatory response (Fig. 2). Skin, blood, and cerebrospinal fluid cultures confirmed the presence of
Cryptococcus neoformans
. Amphotericin and flucytosine combination therapy was initiated, and steroid dosages were gradually tapered. A test for human immunodeficiency virus was negative. The patient was dismissed from hospital after a complicated 2-month course resulting in improved mental status but progression of the lower extremity ulcerations as a result of polymicrobial infection.
...
PMID:Cryptococcal infection in sarcoidosis. 1245 1
A 17-year-old desexed male Birman cat presented with a fleshy mass protruding from the left ear canal. A culture from the mass revealed a heavy growth of Cryptococcus gattii (molecular type VGII, serotype B). The lesion resolved with antifungal therapy over 8 weeks. Itraconazole was continued indefinitely due to persistent high serum cryptococcal antigen titres. The cat was euthanased 12 months later due to the acute development of hindlimb
ataxia
and collapse which may or may not have been attributable to
cryptococcosis
. This cat had first presented when 4 years of age with a 3-week history of inappetance, sneezing and serous nasal discharge. Culture of swabs from both nostrils were positive for C. gattii (VGII). Fluconazole therapy produced steady improvement over a 6 month period, at which time therapy was discontinued. The cat presented 9 months later for sneezing, again with a positive culture of C. gattii from the nasal cavity. Antifungal therapy was continued for 8 months, after which time cultures were negative and symptoms resolved. Three episodes of
cryptococcosis
in a cat over a 13-year period were thus documented. Importantly, the two C. gattii isolates, obtained 13 years apart, were identical using DNA fingerprinting and random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis.
...
PMID:Recrudescent cryptococcosis, caused by Cryptococcus gattii (molecular type VGII), over a 13-year period in a Birman cat. 1696 75
Cryptococcus neoformans
meningoencephalitis is the most common fungal central nervous system infection, in people affected by the human immunodeficiency virus. It is rare in inmunocompetent children and it is often fatal. It predominates in males at a ratio of 3 to 1. We describe the cases of two school children, one male and one female, with history of contact with pigeons (Columba livea), whose clinical symptoms were fever, headache, photophobia, diplopia,
ataxia
and meningeal signs, with unilateral involvement of cranial nerve VI. The diagnosis was established by the isolation of
Cryptococcus neoformans
in culture, staining with India ink and evidence of latex antigen agglutination in the cerebrospinal fluid. The determination of antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus and quantification of CD4, CD8 and T lymphocyte cells, were normal. In the first case, a chest X-ray showed a round mass, circumscribed in the bottom half of the left lung. A brain MRI revealed an image compatible with a nodular cryptococcoma in the parietal region. A pattern of intracranial hypertension was established, with papilledema and bilateral amaurosis, that evolved unsatisfactorily, with the subsequent death of the patient. Both were treated with amphotericin B (1 mg/Kg/day) or fluconazole (6 mg/Kg/day). The second case had a favorable evolution. The Crypotococcus neoformans is not a common fungus in inmunocompetent children. Early detection of the disease and appropriate treatment is essential to achieve a better prognosis ot the disease.
...
PMID:[Cryptococcus neoformans meningoencephalitis in immunocompetent schoolchildren]. 1966 18
A 64-year-old man with idiopathic CD4(+) lymphocytopenia developed cognitive impairment and gait
ataxia
with isolated obstructive hydrocephalus, which was fatal. Cerebrospinal fluid showed mild pleocytosis, but the etiology was not revealed by extensive analysis. At autopsy, inflammatory cells, CD8(+) lymphocytes and abundant macrophages but not CD4(+) lymphocytes were infiltrating the meninges at the base of the brain. Electron microscopy demonstrated that inflammation was caused by
Cryptococcus neoformans
, which was localized exclusively within macrophages, where it grew with budding. Our study suggests that, in idiopathic CD4(+) lymphocytopenia, macrophages can efficiently phagocytize but inefficiently digest C. neoformans, thus representing a vehicle of chronic intracellular infection.
...
PMID:Difficulty diagnosing chronic cryptococcal meningitis in idiopathic CD4+ lymphocytopenia. 2138 79
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