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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The independent effects of chronic disease, age, severity of illness, lung injury score (LIS) and etiology, and preceding nonpulmonary organ-system dysfunction (OSD) on the outcome of acute lung injury (ALI) have not been examined in an exclusively medical-intensive-care-unit (MICU) population. Therefore, 107 consecutive MICU patients with ALI (76% with acute respiratory distress syndrome [ARDS]) were prospectively investigated. The impact of comorbidities, age > 65 yr, acute physiology score (APS), LIS, etiology of ALI, and OSD on hospital survival were studied. The overall mortality was 62 of 107 patients (58%), including 47 (58%) with ARDS. With univariate analysis, age > 65 yr, organ transplantation, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, active malignancy, chronic steroid use, and a septic or aspiration-related etiology of ALI were associated with a > or = 1.2-fold greater relative risk (RR) of hospital mortality. With multiple logistic regression, independent predictors of hospital death were age > 65 yr, organ transplantation, HIV infection, cirrhosis, active malignancy, and sepsis. APS, LIS, aspiration-related etiology of ALI, preceding OSD, and other comorbidities were not independently predictive of hospital death. Multivariate analysis of the ARDS cohort showed similar results, although cirrhosis and malignancy did not reach statistical significance. We conclude that comorbid conditions, older age, and sepsis etiology are independent predictors of hospital death in exclusively MICU patients with ALI (76% of whom satisfied criteria for ARDS). These factors should be considered in analyzing studies of new therapies and interpreting trends in mortality for ALI and ARDS.
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PMID:Acute lung injury in the medical ICU: comorbid conditions, age, etiology, and hospital outcome. 956 34

With the evolution of the AIDS epidemic into a relatively chronic disease, practitioners will continue to see an increase in the number of patients infected with HIV for the diagnosis and management of podiatric pathology. A thorough history and physical examination, taken with a complete knowledge base of HIV implications, will enhance the ability to form the strategies required to treat the manifestations of this disease and to request appropriate referrals. Laboratory studies and other diagnostic techniques have been developed and increased in specificity to allow for earlier and more precise identification of the presenting pathology. A continuously expanding choice of medications is available for treatment. The clinical presentations of HIV infection in the foot involve nearly all organ systems. This article reviews the podiatric role as part of the medical team in the diagnosis and treatment of patients infected with HIV.
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PMID:The podiatric examination. 957 53

When AIDS is becoming a chronic disease, gay men with multiple loss experiences can easily turn into a forgotten group of widowers. Due to new medical treatment HIV-infected gay men are living longer and also have to deal with loss and surviving. This paper argues in favour of group grief therapy for multiple loss and survival problems, within the scope of peer support in the gay community during the AIDS era. In this group psychotherapy special attention is given to the influence of a low gay self-esteem on the grief process and surviving strategies.
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PMID:Counselling gay men with multiple loss and survival problems: the bereavement group as a transitional object. 962 94

Case management has been recognized as a major way for coordinating the multiple services needs for people with HIV/AIDS. Such coordination is required because of the progressively debilitating nature of this chronic disease and the fragmented health care and social services delivery system. One of the major problems with the study of case management is the difficulty in actually measuring it. Another major limitation has been the focus almost exclusively on adult models of HIV/AIDS case management. This study was undertaken to assess the efficacy of a time study methodology to measure differences in case management activities when case managers work with families and when they work with individuals. Ten case managers from two urban hospital pediatric and adult HIV/AIDS clinics and 10 case managers from 3 community organizations participated. Case management activity was sampled using a beeper carried by case managers which signaled randomly 8 times a day over 5 consecutive days. When the signal "beeped", case managers checked off on a 1-page form the appropriate descriptor of their involvement concerning task initiation, interaction, location, type, function as well as information about client needs, HIV status, and family history. The results suggest that the Time Study methodology is a useful and valid way of measuring case management and of identifying differences in case mix, client need and background, and case management techniques when case managers work with families and with individuals.
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PMID:Measuring case management for families with HIV. 965 13

Anemia is common in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The etiology is often multifactorial and may include the HIV infection itself, opportunistic infections, cancer, medications (particularly zidovudine and sulfa-containing drugs), or anemia of chronic disease. Epoetin alfa therapy may play a supportive role in some HIV-infected patients by increasing hemoglobin, decreasing fatigue, and reducing the need for exposure to red blood cell transfusions. A large, placebo-controlled trial in the United States for anemic patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome taking zidovudine demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in hematocrit in patients treated with epoetin alfa compared with placebo. Transfusion requirements decreased in epoetin alfa-treated patients over a 3-month period compared with placebo with a trend toward improvement in quality of life. Epoetin alfa was effective, however, only in patients whose pretreatment erythropoietin levels were less than 500 mU/mL. These advantages of epoetin alfa treatment may become especially important as HIV becomes more of a chronic disease, with the concern that red blood cell transfusion may accelerate progression of HIV.
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PMID:Experience with epoetin alfa and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome anemia. 967 34

Patients with aids are at increased risk of opportunistic and non opportunistic infections. It is now known that the incidence can be reduced by prophylactic measures and/or the use of vaccines. HIV infection produces an elevated frequency of severe pneumococcal disease with a rate of bacteriemia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae 150-300 fold greater than rates reported in non-HIV infected people. For this reason, pneumococcal vaccine should be administered as early as possible in the course of the infection. Besides, the antibody response may be significantly higher for asymptomatic persons. Acute hepatitis caused by hepatitis B virus is milder than in non HIV infected patients but chronic disease is more frequent. The prognosis is worse and there is higher risk for infecting another persons. Hepatitis B vaccine is indicated for all the patients with HIV and negative serology for hepatitis B virus. Influenza vaccine is of limited effectiveness due to the high variability of the virus. Besides, influenza incidence is low among approximately young adults, HIV related immunodeficiency increased influenza risk only minimally, the vaccine is administered yearly and HIV-replication can increase in temporal association with vaccination. For all these reasons, fewer hospitalizations and deaths are prevented making it a far less cost-effective prevention strategy than pneumococcal vaccination. The risk of Haemophilus influenzae infections is elevated, but the vaccine is not routinely recommended because the more frequent serotype in HIV infected patients is b. For these subjects, passive immunization with immunoglobulin may also be necessary to provide protection. In conclusion, pneumococcal and hepatitis B vaccination is a reasonable prevention strategy for HIV infected patients at all stages of immunodeficiency. Influenza and H. influenzae vaccination are not recommended and alternative prevention strategies may be done.
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PMID:[Which are the vaccines that human immunodeficiency virus infected patients must receive?]. 978 Apr 28

Nutrition is a final common pathway in chronic disease, and weight loss is a major manifestation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In sub-Saharan Africa, studies have shown that 25% of children with malnutrition have human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, although patterns of malnutrition are indistinguishable from those who are HIV negative. Breast-feeding increases the risk of vertical transmission, and the overall risk versus benefit needs continuing careful consideration in relation to local mortality from gastroenteritis and malnutrition. Chronic diarrhea is much more common in HIV-infected children in Africa and may have a multiplicity of causes, including infection with adherent forms of Escherichia coli, protozoa, and even direct HIV infection of intestinal mucosal cells. The HIV wasting syndrome produces reduction in bioelectrical impedence, fat, lean body mass, and body cell mass, but the changes can be predicted from equations used in starvation states. Micronutrients may be important, but observed changes may be due to immune mediator activation, rather than malnutrition. Calorie supplementation is beneficial when delivered by any route, but is likely to produce the greatest positive change when CD4 counts are highest in relation to calorie intake. Paradoxically, HIV-infected children may be obese early in the disease until AIDS develops. There is an inextricable link between disease and nutritional status. In children with AIDS wasting syndrome, a low CD4 count and high viral load are likely so that effective antiviral treatment may ultimately produce the greatest improvement in health, including nutritional status.
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PMID:Global issues in pediatric nutrition: AIDS. 978 58

Over 7 years ago, the Chronic Illness Trajectory Framework was applied to persons living with HIV/AIDS (Nokes, 1991). This article addresses how new information about HIV-infection disease can be interpreted through the Chronic Illness Trajectory Framework. At the time of the first writing, HIV infection was diagnosed indirectly through the presence of antibodies and one or two medications were available to treat the infection. Currently, direct viral testing is used clinically and 18 medications, which can be used in a variety of combinations, should be available by the end of 1998. Although mortality rates from AIDS dropped sharply with the advent of new therapies, current anecdotal reports are indicating that some people, who initially felt much better on the medications, are now developing viral resistance and life-threatening toxicities. Unfortunately, it seems that as we approach the 21st century, information about HIV continues to evolve and another update will then be needed.
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PMID:Revisiting how the Chronic Illness Trajectory Framework can be applied for persons living with HIV/AIDS. 980 69

Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) is a relatively common immune-mediated disorder characterized by thrombocytopenia due to clearance of opsonized platelets by the reticuloendothelial system. The acute form, more common in children, is a self-limiting, often post-viral disease. In contrast, the adult form is typically a chronic disorder, which initially responds to corticosteroids. Splenectomy offers a 70% chance of cure. Major progress has been achieved in the elucidation of the immune pathology in ITP, and we review contemporary advances in the treatment of chronic ITP. Practical guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of various aspects of ITP were established in 1996 by the American Society of Hematology. Since these recommendations will most probably substantially influence patient care, they are discussed in detail. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated ITP is a common problem in countries with a high prevalence of HIV infection. The pathogenesis of this subtype probably differs from that of classic ITP, and is considered separately.
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PMID:Immune thrombocytopenic purpura in adults: clinical aspects. 1009 13

Thalidomide has one of the most notorious drug histories because of its teratogenicity. Its widespread use in the 1960s led to a worldwide epidemic of phocomelia in inborns; this in turn led to its complete ban in most of the world. However, it has now been licensed for selected indications including graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) after bone marrow transplantation, wasting associated with tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus infection, and leprosy. Little is known, however, about its use in children in these settings. Therefore, we report our experience and review the literature on thalidomide in children for GVHD after bone marrow transplantation. We studied 6 patients, 2 with chronic GVHD, 2 with acute GVHD, and 2 with acute GVHD progressing into chronic disease. One patient with chronic GVHD had a complete response, whereas the other had a partial response. Side effects consisted primarily of sedation and constipation, which are reported previously and well known side effects. None had neuropathy. One patient had rash, eosinophilia, and early pancreatitis that began shortly after initiation of thalidomide, persisted, and resolved only after discontinuation of thalidomide. Eosinophilia and pancreatitis are both previously unreported side effects or associated findings of thalidomide treatment. Review of the literature reveals three major studies of thalidomide in GVHD; of these two included children and adults together, and one in which age range of patients was not mentioned. In addition, four series of children receiving only thalidomide are reported. These series contained 1 to 14 patients each. Results show efficacy in at least 50% of children with chronic GVHD and little or no efficacy in children with exclusively acute GVHD. Side effects are similar to those reported in adults and consisted mostly of sedation and constipation, both of which subsided over time and resolved after discontinuing the drug. We speculate on the reasons for which thalidomide is more effective in chronic, compared with acute, GVHD in children, and make recommendations for future study.
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PMID:Thalidomide in children undergoing bone marrow transplantation: series at a single institution and review of the literature. 1010 36


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