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Query: UMLS:C0011991 (
diarrhea
)
57,543
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-typhoid Salmonella infections associated with HIV infection are 20 times more frequent than those observed in the general population. Drug addicts and homosexuals are equally infected. Concerning physiopathology, a deficit in gastric acid secretion has been blamed as an etiological factor, together with T-cell deficit, except for reduction in the number of
CD4
cells. This type of infection usually presents as fever;
diarrhea
is noted in only 20% of the cases. Several viscera can be involved. The best treatment seems to be fluoroquinones administered during 3 weeks, and several months in case of relapse. Patients under AZT therapy are less often affected with salmonellosis due to the antibiotic activity of this anti-retrovirus agent.
...
PMID:[Non-typhoid salmonellosis in HIV infection]. 129 93
Gastrointestinal (GI) infections are frequent in AIDS patients. The frequency and type of opportunistic GI infections are exactly the same in homosexuals and heterosexuals.
Diarrhoea
is the usual sign of GI infection, and its mechanism seems to combine a secretory component and a malabsorption. Although a number of pathogens can be isolated, in many cases the
diarrhoea
cannot be explained by an infection or a lesion. The hypothesis of a primary HIV infection in the epithelium of the small bowel and colon has not been confirmed by immunofluorescence and molecular hybridization. The HIV virus has been found in the GI mucosa, but it was probably carried by the immune cells in general circulation (
CD4
lymphocytes and macrophages) which subsequently colonize the chorion of the mucosa.
...
PMID:[Diarrhea in AIDS. Group AIDS GIT]. 131 17
49 gay men confirmed to be infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and 9 HIV seronegative gay men participated in a pilot study comparing clinical status and enteric parasite load with gastrointestinal structure, function and symptomatology. Cases included 16/49 (33%) men who were CDC stage II, 7/49 (14%) who were CDC stage III, and 26/49 (53%) who were CDC stage IV. The mean
CD4
-lymphocyte count was 476 +/- 199 (SD)/microliter. The prevalence of enteric parasitic flora was similar in HIV seropositive patients and controls. Seven cases had enteric infection with pathogenic agents including 3 patients with Entamoeba histolytica, and 4 patients with Giardia lamblia, one of whom also had cryptosporidiosis. Other cases were most frequently colonized with Blastocystis hominis (44%) and Endolimax nana (41%) regardless of the HIV clinical status. HIV seropositive patients with enteric parasitic colonization tended to have lower mean levels of serum IgA than cases without parasites. Duodenal morphometric mucosal changes demonstrated a significant decrease in the mean villous height (p < 0.01) with no elongation of the crypt depth in HIV-infected patients with and without
diarrhea
compared to controls. Despite gastrointestinal symptoms including
diarrhea
and weight loss being more prevalent in HIV infected individuals than controls, no correlations were found between the presence of particular enteric parasites, gastrointestinal symptomatology, the clinical HIV status of the
CD4
-lymphocyte count, the malabsorption of D-xylose or morphometric changes in the duodenum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Absence of an association between enteric parasites in the manifestations and pathogenesis of HIV enteropathy in gay men. The GI/HIV Study Group. 136 Dec 41
The incidence of cryptosporidiosis in our unit has increased over the last 6 years, being diagnosed in approximately 5 per cent of all patients with HIV infection and in 21 per cent of those with AIDS, but a marked seasonal variation occurs. We have studied the course of the infection in 128 patients and identified four clinical patterns of disease: transient (28.7 per cent), chronic (59.7 per cent), fulminant (7.8 per cent) and asymptomatic (3.9 per cent). Transient disease occurred in patients with a wide range of
CD4
lymphocyte counts, but was more common in less immunosuppressed patients. Fulminant disease, defined by the passage of more than 2 l of stool/day from the time of presentation, only occurred in patients with a
CD4
count less than 50/mm3. This group had lost more than 7 kg in weight at presentation and more commonly had other intercurrent gastrointestinal infections. They survived for a median of only 5 weeks, compared with 20 weeks for those with chronic
diarrhoea
and 36 weeks for those with transient infection. The survival was unaffected by any treatment other than zidovudine. Cryptosporidiosis in HIV-infected individuals is a heterogeneous disease.
...
PMID:Cryptosporidiosis in HIV-seropositive patients. 136 61
In a pilot single blind study, beta-carotene (BC) supplementation produced, in ARC patients under current treatment, apparent recovery from asthenia, fever, nocturnal sweating,
diarrhoea
, loss in weight, and led as a result to an improvement in general health and working efficiency, but not to an improvement in multiple district lympho-adenopathies. Nevertheless, BC appeared to prevent progress to AIDS and, in addition, to lower the effective dosage of AZT used in one case of ARC developed into AIDS, producing a recovery from opportunistic infections and an inhibition of Kaposi sarcoma diffusion, in line with a two-fold rise in
CD4
counts.
...
PMID:Short communication: possible activity of beta-carotene in patients with the AIDS related complex. A pilot study. 136 29
In the early 1990s, HIV seroprevalence in the rural community in Casamance, Senegal was .8% (age range from 24 to 68 years). 25 people had HIV-2 infection and 2 had HIV-1 infection. Health workers evaluated 22 of the HIV-2 positive adults and compared them with 64 matched controls. The HIV-2 positive adults were 7.25 times more likely to suffer from ill health than the controls (50% vs. 12.5%). Clinical signs of HIV-2 positive status were more common among HIV-2 positive adults than controls (40.9% vs. 7.8%; odds ration [OR] = 8.2), especially chronic cough (OR - 18.5). Presence of
diarrhea
was insignificant (22% vs. 40%). HIV-2 positive adults had much higher levels of CD8 cells (p = .03), IgG (p = .0001), and beta 2 macroglobulin (p =.001) than the controls. Their
CD4
/CD8 ratio levels were much lower than those of the HIV-2 negative individuals (1.1 vs. 1.9; p = .0001). Among HIV-2 positive adults, symptomatic adults had significantly lower levels of red blood cells (p = .02), white blood cells (p = .02), lymphocytes (p = .01), T cells (p = .01), and
CD4
cells (p = .002) than the healthy adults. Their beta 2 macroglobulin levels were much greater than controls (4.6 mg/vs. 2.9 mg/l, p = .03). 5 HIV-2 cases (22.7%) researchers suffered from immunosuppression (500
CD4
cells/mcl) compared with only 1 control (1.6%) (OR = 18.5). Clinical symptoms were more likely to be present in immunodepressed people than in non immunodepressed people (35.7% of 14 sick adults vs. 1.4% of healthy adults). 1 person who had AIDS as defined by WHO (weight loss, persistent cough, and
diarrhea
) had 429
CD4
cells/mcl. 1 person suffered from bronchopneumonia (326
CD4
cells/mcl). Another person had chronic
diarrhea
and bronchopneumonia (350
CD4
cells/mcl). The mean age of HIV-2 infected people who had a respiratory condition was 51 years (42-68 years) while it was 41 years (26-68 years) for asymptomatic HIV-2 infected people indicating a rather long incubation period. These results suggested that HIV-2 can be significant public health problems.
...
PMID:HIV-2 infections in a rural Senegalese community. 140 31
The clinical features and results of laboratory investigations of the first 19 Indian patients with AIDS seen in our hospital are presented. Weight loss, fever, and
diarrhea
were the most common symptoms. Tuberculosis (TB) was the most common secondary infectious disease; among 13 patients, seven had only pulmonary TB, five had pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB, and one had only extrapulmonary TB. Oropharyngeal candidiasis was found in 11 patients. Other secondary infections were predominantly by virulent bacteria. Opportunistic infections other than candidiasis were infrequent; one patient had cryptococcosis, two had symptomatic cryptosporidiosis, one had noncoagulase-positive staphylococcus septicemia, and one had cytomegalovirus retinitis. Reduced lymphocyte counts (particularly of the
CD4
subset), anemia, hypoalbuminemia, hyperglobulinemia, and elevated liver enzyme levels were frequent laboratory findings. Six patients are under follow-up, two are lost to follow-up, and 11 have died. Lymphocyte counts less than 500/mm3 were only seen in those patients who subsequently died. Response to antituberculosis therapy was good in several patients. Thus, the clinical profile of Indian patients with AIDS is not different from the common picture of patients of low socioeconomic and poor hygienic standards; patients presented with TB, undernutrition, and multiple infections. Therefore, a large population of patients with AIDS in India will not be recognized unless they are tested for evidence of HIV infection.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory profile of AIDS in India. 802 23
During the period February 1987-June 1988, the authors examined 542 stool samples of 271 HIV-positive patients both with and without fullblown AIDS. 100 patients with either acute or chronic
diarrhea
and 180 without
diarrhea
were studied. The stool samples were examined for the presence of Cryptosporidium sp., other protozoa, helminths, and pathogenic enterobacteria. A prevalence of 14.3% of Cryptosporidium sp. in patients with fullblown AIDS and
diarrhea
was found. No Cryptosporidium sp. was seen among asymptomatic patients. The occurrence of
diarrhea
was significantly associated with a
CD4
/CD8 ratio lower than 0.4, with the finding of Cryptosporidium sp. in the stools, being a CDC group IV, and with a positive stool culture for pathogenic enterobacteria. The
diarrhea
caused by Cryptosporidium sp. could not be distinguished on clinical grounds from
diarrhea
caused by other etiologic agents. (author's modified) (summaries in ENG, POR
...
PMID:[Prevalence of cryptosporidiosis in diarrheic syndrome in HIV positive patients]. 165 76
In a 72-year-old man with watery
diarrhoea
and leukocytosis the proliferation of abnormal cells was studied in specimens obtained by endoscopic biopsy of the gastrointestinal tract. Flow cytometry of leukaemia cells revealed a monoclonal expansion of "double-negative" (
CD4
-, CD8-) cells bearing T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha beta products. Southern blotting confirmed monoclonal integration of HTLV-I. A novel T-cell subset of double-negative TCR alpha beta cells in the gastrointestinal tract in adult man may be a target for HTLV-I infection.
...
PMID:Leukaemia of novel gastrointestinal T-lymphocyte population infected with HTLV-I. 167 10
To assess the importance of microsporidiosis of the small intestine in the pathogenesis of chronic
diarrhoea
in HIV-1-infected individuals, duodenal biopsy samples from the following three patient groups were prospectively evaluated for bacterial, viral, and parasitic pathogens by standard methods, and for microsporidia by light microscopy: 55 consecutive HIV-1-antibody-positive subjects with unexplained
diarrhoea
of at least 3 weeks duration (group A); 38 HIV-1-seropositive subjects without
diarrhoea
(group B) who consecutively underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for various reasons; and 7 patients without known risk factors for HIV infection with chronic unexplained
diarrhoea
(group C). In groups A and B most subjects had had previous AIDS-defining opportunistic infections and the median peripheral blood
CD4
lymphocyte count was less than 0.1 x 10(9)/l. Microsporidia were detected as the single pathogen in 15 of the group A compared with 1 (in whom
diarrhoea
subsequently developed) of the group B patients (p = 0.001) and none of the group C patients. With the exception of 4 of the group A patients, no other intestinal pathogens were identified in any of the patients. The median peripheral blood
CD4
count was significantly lower in patients with detectable microsporidia than in those without microsporidiosis (0.03 x 10(9)/l vs 0.06 x 10(9)/l; p = 0.03); in all patients with microsporidiosis, the
CD4
count was equal to or less than 0.1 x 10(9)/l. 13 patients with microsporidiosis were treated with metronidazole, in 10 of whom treatment led to a substantial improvement or disappearance of
diarrhoea
within days of starting therapy, but did not result in eradication of the parasite in the 5 patients who underwent repeat biopsy. The findings suggest that small-intestinal microsporidiosis is an important cause of chronic unexplained
diarrhoea
in HIV-1-infected individuals with pronounced cellular immune deficiency. This infection should therefore be added to the list of AIDS-defining opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of small-intestinal microsporidiosis in HIV-1-infected individuals. 167 61
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