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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical and serologic features and immune status of 39 homosexual men who had seroconversion to human
immunodeficiency
virus positivity were compared with 26 homosexual men who remained seronegative during a six-month period. An acute clinical illness occurred in 92.3% of seroconverted subjects and 40% of controls. The duration of illness was significantly greater in the seroconverters than the controls (10 + 4.4 days). A general practitioner was consulted by 87.2% of the seroconverters because of the illness, including 12.8% who were admitted to hospital, compared with 20% of controls. The most frequently reported symptoms in the seroconversion group were fever (76.9%); lethargy and malaise (66.7%); anorexia, sore throat, and myalgias (56.4% each);
headaches
and arthralgias (48.7% each); weight loss (46.2%); swollen glands (43.5%); retro-orbital pain (38.5%); and dehydration and nausea (30.8% each). Lymphadenopathy developed in 75% of seroconverters compared with 4% of controls. Changes in T-cell subsets were not found in controls, but the number of T4+ cells and the T4+/T8+ ratio decreased significantly in seroconverters.
...
PMID:Characterization of the acute clinical illness associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 325 8
Toxoplasmosis as an opportunistic infection in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a life-threatening condition. A review of the literature reveals over 140 cases of toxoplasmosis in AIDS victims, and there is sufficient clinical detail on 81 of these cases for in-depth evaluation. Toxoplasma infection in immunocompromised individuals generally affects the central nervous system and is the most common cause of focal brain lesions. Toxoplasmosis seems to be more frequent in AIDS patients in Africa than those from Europe or America. A clinical review of the 81 cases culled from the literature revealed deterioration in mental status in 42, neurological signs in 39, fever in 36, and persistent
headache
in 31. When human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection is associated with slowly evolving dementia and the preservation of consciousness, toxoplasmosis typically results in an acute deterioration in mental state. In AIDS, most cases of clinical toxoplasmosis result from an exacerbation of a chronic infection. Among the techniques that have been used to diagnose toxoplasmosis in AIDS patients are serology, cerebrospinal fluid samples, isolation of the parasite, radiology, and histology. Pyrimethamine plus a sulphonamide has been the traditional treatment for toxoplasma infection in AIDS patients and is associated with a greatly improved clinical state. Regardless of the drug therapy used, complete elimination of toxoplasma from viable cysts is unlikely and the subsequent emergence of trophozoites should be expected. A poor response to toxoplasmosis treatment is associated with failure to reach an early diagnosis, late initiation of drug therapy, and the lack of contrast enhancement of lesions detectable by computerized tomography.
...
PMID:Toxoplasmosis and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 328 Jun 90
The first case of AIDS positively identified in a non-foreigner in Taiwan was a 25-year-old unmarried male who had practiced homosexuality for ten years. The patient began to have abdominal pain accompanied with loose stools and weight loss in June 1985, followed by fever, cough,
headache
, dizziness, and loss of memory. Facial hyperpigmentation and extensive oroesophageal candidiasis were noted. Laboratory studies showed severe lymphopenia with a reversed T-helper to T-suppressor ratio, cutaneous anergy and polyclonal gammopathy. Human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) antibodies were positive by ELISA and Western blot, and the virus was isolated from the blood. At autopsy, disseminated cytomegalovirus infection, extensive CNS toxoplasmosis and early lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma were demonstrated. The detection of HIV in the adrenal medulla supports the consensus that the virus is neurotropic.
...
PMID:An autopsy-proved case of AIDS in Taiwan. 330 20
A case of cryptococcal meningitis in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is described, as well as the epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and therapeutic management of the disease. In July 1987 a 38-year-old white man was admitted to the hospital because of confusion, disorientation, and
headache
. His medical history was notable for a positive human
immunodeficiency
virus test. Culture of the cerebrospinal fluid was positive for Cryptococcus neoformans. The patient was started on amphotericin B 16 mg/day (0.3 mg/kg/day) intravenously and flucytosine 2 g every six hours (150 mg/kg/day) orally. Despite premedication with diphenhydramine and acetaminophen, he experienced rigors that were treated with hydrocortisone and meperidine. Three weeks later he was discharged on flucytosine 2 g orally every six hours and amphotericin B 50 mg intravenously every other day. One week later the patient developed fever and chills; blood cultures were positive for methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus, and his peripheral leucocyte count was 1.8 X 10(3)/cu mm. Flucytosine was discontinued, and he was treated with intravenous nafcillin while remaining on amphotericin B. In October the patient complained of nausea, vomiting, weakness, and agitation. A CSF latex agglutination titer for cryptococcal antigen was 1:32. He was treated with amphotericin B 50 mg daily until symptoms resolved and then continued on amphotericin B 50 mg twice weekly. Cryptococcosis is the most common life-threatening fungal infection among AIDS patients. In contrast to immunocompetent hosts, this population invariably develops disseminated disease, with 85% having meningeal involvement. The most effective therapy for cryptococcal meningitis in patients with AIDS has not been established.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Management of cryptococcal meningitis in patients with AIDS. 341 73
Infectious human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) was recovered from 30 of 48 cerebrospinal fluid specimens from seropositive persons with and without neurologic symptoms or disease. Of 16 patients with only neurologic problems or other HIV-related conditions, but not the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), 11 had virus recovered; over half of those with AIDS also had virus isolated. Patients with
headache
or altered mental status had the highest recovery rate of HIV from cerebrospinal fluid. Although virus was primarily found in patients with detectable neurologic disease, it was also isolated from 5 of 8 patients with normal neurologic examinations. Two of these patients had fever alone. The presence of virus in cerebrospinal fluid did not necessarily correlate with isolation of virus from the serum. These findings suggest that HIV may at times replicate preferentially in the brain and that its presence may not immediately cause neurologic signs or symptoms.
...
PMID:Neurologic abnormalities and recovery of human immunodeficiency virus from cerebrospinal fluid. 364 1
Twenty cases of cryptococcal CNS infection treated at the Alfred and Fairfield Infectious Diseases Hospitals from 1975 to 1985 were reviewed. A predisposing immunological deficit was present in 40% of the cases and nearly half had evidence of pulmonary involvement. Severe
headache
was an almost universal presenting feature but fever and meningismus were not. Measurement of CSF cryptococcal antigen and CSF culture were far more reliable diagnostic markers than Indian ink smears. Cerebral CT scanning identified abnormalities in nearly 30% of cases, including 2 with cystic lesions and 2 with mass lesions. Combination therapy with amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine was used as first line treatment. Ventricular shunts were required for 2 patients with hydrocephalus, and persistently raised intracranial pressure often required frequent lumbar punctures and corticosteroids for control. Mortality was 30% and correlated with the presence of impaired conscious state, hydrocephalus or other neurological deficit, underlying
immunodeficiency
and low CSF glucose levels.
...
PMID:Cryptococcal infections of the central nervous system: a ten year experience. 366 61
Fourteen patients infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) had a lymphocytic pleocytosis unexplained by secondary pathogens or neoplasms. Three men had prior diagnoses of Kaposi's sarcoma; none had acquired immune deficiency syndrome-defining opportunistic infections. Two patterns of illness were observed. Seven men had an acute, self-limited illness that was often accompanied by meningeal findings. The other seven had chronic
headaches
without signs of meningeal irritation and had less marked abnormalities of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cell count and protein. Encephalopathy was a finding in only one of 14 patients. In four of five CSF specimens studied, HIV was recovered. HIV has been associated with acute meningitis at the time of seroconversion and can apparently also cause sporadic episodes of acute or chronic meningitis in patients with prior infection and relatively preserved immune function. Both the clinical presentation with predominant
headache
rather than encephalopathy and the presence of CSF inflammation differentiate this syndrome from other HIV-related neurologic complications.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-associated meningitis. Clinical course and correlations. 367 88
Twelve patients were treated in a Phase I trial of purified human interleukin-2 (IL-2) derived from the JURKAT cell line (E.I. duPont Corp., Glenolden, PA, U.S.A.). The serum half-life, toxicity, and in vivo immunologic effects of IL-2 were studied in patients with cancer unresponsive to standard therapy and in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Patients received 0.25, 2.5, or 25 micrograms/kg IL-2 by bolus or 24-h continuous infusion on a weekly basis for 4 weeks. The serum half-life of JURKAT IL-2 in humans was approximately 6 min. At higher doses of IL-2 a second component of clearance with a half-life of 30-120 min was found. Acute toxicity was minimal and consisted of
headache
(6 of 12), nausea (4 of 12), malaise (6 of 12), and fever and chills (8 of 12). No evidence of pulmonary, hematologic, or renal toxicity or any evidence of autoimmune phenomena was detected. A transient hyperbilirubinemia was seen in two patients receiving 2 mg purified IL-2. No demonstrable effect on tumors or chronic
immunodeficiency
(AIDS) was seen. No consistent chronic immunologic effects (natural killer or lymphokine-activated killer activity, mitogen responsiveness, total lymphocyte counts, or change in the proportion of various mononuclear cell phenotypes as defined by monoclonal antibody) were seen on a week-to-week basis during or following therapy. Acute changes in lymphokine responsiveness, the ability to generate lymphokine-activated killers, and an increase in macrophages in the mononuclear population were noted following administration of 1-2 mg IL-2.
...
PMID:Systemic administration of interleukin-2 in humans. 633 35
M. pneumoniae is a common cause of pneumonia. The diagnosis is suspected when the patient presents with symptoms suggesting primary atypical pneumonia including cough, fever, chills,
headache
, and malaise in association with a segmental or subsegmental pulmonary infiltrate(s), the white blood cell count is normal or only slightly elevated, and the Gram stain of the sputum (if any can be obtained) reveals polymorphonuclear leukocytes and few bacteria. The diagnosis is more difficult when the patient presents with symptoms not suggestive of pneumonia including lethargy, dyspnea, and a 1- to 4-week history of shortness of breath without cough or fever in association with diffuse reticulonodular or interstitial pulmonary infiltrates. The disease in the previously healthy host is usually benign and self-limiting. However, the course is shortened by the administration of tetracycline derivatives or erythromycin. M. pneumoniae pneumonia can occur in association with other diseases including sickle cell anemia, sarcoidosis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Hodgkin's disease, and various other
immunodeficiency
states. In these patients mycoplasma pneumonia can be very serious. Although there is no pathognomonic clinical or radiographic presentation, careful consideration of epidemiologic, clinical, laboratory, and radiographic data are usually sufficient to suggest the diagnosis in most patients.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma pneumonia. 676 79
We have observed an unusual low amplitude, slow and featureless electroencephalogram (EEG) pattern in some human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infected patients without focal lesions on computerized tomography (CT scan) of the head. Out of 17 cases, 13 with AIDS and 4 with HIV positive status, 6 had low amplitude EEGs with slowing, all in the AIDS group. Nine of the 13 AIDS patients were demented, and 4 of these demented patients had slow verbal responses and mutism, indicating advanced HIV-related dementia. All 4 had low amplitude, slow EEGs. The patients with low amplitude, slow EEGs also had atrophy on CT scan by visual assessment and by measurement of ventricular indices. Of 17 age-matched controls referred for non-specific complaints such as
headache
and dizziness or for psychiatric disorders, 3 had EEGs read as low amplitude with slowing; two had normal mental status and one was psychotic. Although this EEG pattern is not etiologically specific, it may correlate with advanced dementia and atrophy on CT scan in AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Low amplitude EEGs in demented AIDS patients. 768 54
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