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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
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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

Neurosyphilis, a sexually transmitted disease that can cause neurologic damage, has become increasingly prevalent in the AIDS era. HIV carriers can contract neurosyphilis without the presence of other concurrent opportunistic infections. Because MR findings of neurosyphilis are seldom reported, we retrospectively reviewed and evaluated contrast-enhanced MR images of six young (average age, 33 years) HIV-positive men with high serum and CSF VDRL titers indicative of neurosyphilis. All six patients tested negative for concurrent opportunistic infections. Five patients had acute or subacute strokelike symptoms involving the basal ganglia or middle cerebral arteries; one had a parietal convexity mass mimicking meningioma with headache and ataxia. Contrast-enhanced MR images showed patchy enhancement involving the basal ganglia and middle cerebral artery territories in the first five patients and the convexity mass in the sixth patient. On the basis of brain biopsy, a convexity mass was diagnosed in the patient with syphilitic gumma. The imaging findings of the remaining five patients represented ischemic infarct caused by meningovascular syphilis. After penicillin treatment, serum and CSF VDRL titers decreased, and neurologic signs and symptoms improved in all six patients. A follow-up MR study in the patient with the gumma showed that the lesion resolved almost completely. In young HIV patients with stroke symptoms or a convexity mass, neurosyphilis should be considered. Contrast-enhanced MR can reveal the extent of involvement by neurosyphilis and should be used to facilitate diagnosis and proper treatment.
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PMID:Neurosyphilis in HIV carriers: MR findings in six patients. 159 Jan 35

In two patients admitted to hospital-one with signs of cerebral infarction, the other with headaches, vertigo and paraesthesias-the TPHA test was "reactive", while the 19S(IgM)-FTA-ABS test was not. There was no cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis. Further CSF analyses and serological tests for syphilis (including CSF protein profile, demonstration of oligoclonal IgG, quantitative determination of Treponema-specific antibodies in serum and CSF) confirmed the diagnosis of neurosyphilis requiring treatment. In both patients the biologically false-negative 19S(IgM)-FTA-ABS test at first became transiently reactive after treatment. This unusual finding was probably due to antigen, liberated by treatment, again stimulating previously blocked IgM antibody synthesis. The listed additional tests should be performed in all patients with a reactive TPHA test and neurological or psychiatric signs and symptoms.
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PMID:[Diagnostic problems in neurosyphilis]. 305 83

Cerebrospinal fluid IGG and the relations with total protein, and with prealbumin + albumin and the IGG index were studied in 160 patients with various neurological disorders. These patients were distributed in 8 groups according to diagnosis as follows: inflammatory (21 cases); demyelinating (31 cases); degenerative (10 cases); cerebrovascular (19 cases); tumoral (3 cases); convulsive (20 cases); headache (11 cases); other neurological disorders (45 cases). According to the results (table 1) the best applicability of IGG study is the group of chronic inflammatory diseases (neurosyphilis and neurocysticercosis) and the demyelinating disorders (multiple sclerosis). Emphasis is given to the possibility of the occurrence of local synthesis of IGG in the central nervous system in these 2 groups.
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PMID:[Cerebrospinal fluid G immunoglobulins in nervous system diseases]. 728 97

The clinical and MR findings in an unusual case of gummatous neurosyphilis are reported. A 44-year-old woman suffering from diplopia and right-sided headaches was admitted. Physical examination and routine laboratory parameters were normal except for a third-nerve palsy. MR images revealed a contrast-enhancing lesion of the upper brain stem and third cranial nerve. Differential diagnosis included neuroma of the third cranial nerve, as well as neurosarcoidosis and other inflammatory processes. Serologic tests and lumbar puncture revealed the presence of active syphilis. After intravenous treatment with penicillin G, follow-up MR examinations showed diminishing size of the lesion with its complete resolution within 3 months.
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PMID:Third cranial nerve palsy caused by gummatous neurosyphilis: MR findings. 827 27

To determine the prevalence and the clinical and serological findings of neurosyphilis in HIV-infected patients, Treponema pallidum hemagglutination (TPHA) tests, CD4+ lymphocyte counts and determination of rapid plasma reagin (RPR) titers were performed in 972 HIV-infected patients over a period of 3.5 years. Patients were scored according to the Centers for Disease Control's classification for HIV infection. Reactive serum syphilis tests and positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) tests, with or without clinical symptoms, were used as the criteria for diagnosis of neurosyphilis. The TPHA test was positive in 31 patients, representing 3.1% of all HIV-infected patients included in the study. Of these, 13 were intravenous drug addicts, 14 were homosexuals and 4 were heterosexuals. Diagnosis of syphilis was concurrent with HIV infection in 19 patients, prior to HIV infection in 6 patients and after HIV infection in 6 patients. CSF examinations were performed in 28 of the 31 (90.3%) patients with serologically evident syphilis. Four patients had positive CSF-VDRL tests with pleocytosis (23.5% of untreated syphilis patients in whom CSF was examined), three of whom reported mild headache, which was considered a doubtful manifestation of neurosyphilis. Patients with syphilis diagnosed and treated prior to diagnosis of HIV infection did not have evidence of neurosyphilis. Seven patients had pleocytosis with a negative CSF-VDRL test, without any clinical manifestations of neurosyphilis. There was no significant difference in the mean CD4+ lymphocyte count between patients with and without neurosyphilis (p = 0.5). RPR titers in neurosyphilis patients were greater than those in patients previously treated for syphilis and in those with pleocytosis only (p = 0.046 and 0.036, respectively). All neurosyphilis patients had an RPR titer > 1:8. After therapy, neurosyphilis patients had negative CSF-VDRL tests with a lower level of pleocytosis. The prevalence of neurosyphilis was 0.4% in HIV-infected patients and 23.5% in HIV-infected patients with untreated syphilis. This high prevalence of neurosyphilis warrants CSF examination in HIV-infected patients with syphilis, regardless of the stage of syphilis.
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PMID:Neurosyphilis in HIV-infected patients. 860 99

Neurological manifestations are frequent in patients with AIDS. Many neurological disorders have disappeared with the advent of highly active antiretroviral combination therapies. We can speculate that some of these disorders may reappear in patients under antiretroviral therapy, possibly with different clinical manifestations and at a different stage during HIV-infection. We discuss the appearance of the most common neurological complications in relation to the CD4-cell count during HIV-infection. The most frequent causes of seizures and headache in HIV-infected patients are shown. We recommend a systematic diagnostic work-up in patients with headache, starting from 3 typical clinical situations: focal signs, convulsions or altered mental status; no focal signs, CD4-cells > 200 microliters, meningism; fever and/or meningism, no focal signs. The analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid by polymerase chain reaction is now a well established diagnostic method for investigating the most common CNS-infections in AIDS-patients. Neuroimaging (by MRI or CT-scan) is an additional, useful investigation. Cerebral toxoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, PML, encephalitis due to herpes-viruses and neurosyphilis are discussed.
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PMID:[CNS-infections in HIV patients]. 1059 81

Simple and rapid latex-based diagnostic tests have been used for detecting specific antigens or antibodies in several diseases. In this article, we present the preliminary results obtained with a latex agglutination test (LAT) for diagnosing neurocysticercosis by detection of antibodies in CSF. A total of 43 CSF samples were assayed by the LAT: 19 CSF samples from patients with neurocysticercosis and 24 CSF samples from patients with other neurologic disorders (neurosyphilis, n = 8; neurotoxoplasmosis, n = 3; viral meningitis, n = 4, chronic headache, n = 9). The LAT exhibited 89.5% sensitivity and 75% specificity. The use of LAT seems to be an additional approach for the screening of neurocysticercosis with advantage of simplicity and rapidity. Further studies could be performed using purified antigens and serum samples.
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PMID:A rapid latex agglutination test for the detection of anti-cysticercus antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). 1189 15

In split of a dramatic increase of syphilis incidence over the last time, neurosyphilis cases are reported relatively rare. The data on ischemic stroke of syphilis origin in 5 patients (3 males and 2 females, aged 35-43 years) are presented. A diagnosis was verified on the basis of clinical and MRT data and the results of blood and spinal fluid serological reactions. The patients had mild and moderate headache (5), movement (5) and sensitivity (3) disorders, membrane syndrome (2), hemianopsia (2), coma (1). Because of the absence of anamnesis data on syphilis survived, recognition of stroke origin was delayed and established only after positive serum and liquor tests. One patient died of multifocal brain lesion, 4 patients discharged from the hospital had differently pronounced movement disorders.
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PMID:[Cerebral ischemic strokes in young patients with neurosyphilis]. 1274 98

A 45-year-old HIV-positive man receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) presented with 6 weeks of right-sided headache and right eye pain. He had been diagnosed seropositive 2 years previously and screened negative for syphilis at that time. Examination demonstrated focal anterior scleritis with underlying retinitis and a mild vitritis. He was found to have positive syphilis serology and further investigations were consistent with neurosyphilis. Parenteral penicillin was commenced with prompt clinical response. This initial presentation of syphilis as acute scleritis emphasizes the need for thorough work-up of immunocompromised patients with inflammatory ocular disease.
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PMID:Syphilis presenting as scleritis in an HIV-positive man undergoing immune reconstitution. 1549 66


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