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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Viral infections, predominantly those of the
herpes
virus family, account for up to 16% of all clinically significant infections in AIDS patients. Acyclovir has provided successful treatment in AIDS patients suffering from severe herpes simplex and herpes zoster virus infections. Preliminary results are presented on newly developed acyclovir analogues. Desciclovir, an oral prodrug of acyclovir which is metabolized to acyclovir in vivo, allows treatment of virus infections per os, where high serum levels are needed, e.g. in Epstein-Barr virus infections. BW B759U, another analogue of acyclovir, has been used for the treatment of life-threatening or sight-threatening cytomegalovirus infections in AIDS patients. More than 80% of the patients treated for retinitis experienced stabilization or clinical improvement. Antiviral efficacy was demonstrated in 73% of the patients. Azidothymidine, a nucleoside analogue of thymidine, has been developed specifically to treat the
HIV infection
. Its antiviral activity is based on inhibition of reverse transcriptase. Phase I studies have demonstrated that azidothymidine is well tolerated. Its ability to cross the blood brain barrier makes it an attractive candidate for treatment of
HIV
. Trials to determine efficacy are in progress.
...
PMID:Management of viral infections in AIDS patients. 303 16
The risk of opportunistic infection in the renal transplant patient is due to an interaction between two major factors: the epidemiologic exposures (particularly within the hospital environment) and the net state of immunosuppression. The net state of immunosuppression is determined by the nature, dose, and duration of the immunosuppressive therapy being administered; the presence or absence of granulocytopenia and technical factors that could compromise the primary mucocutaneous barriers to infection; such metabolic factors as uremia, hyperglycemia, and the state of nutrition; and, finally, the immunomodulating effects of such viruses as CMV, the hepatitis viruses, and
HIV
. The major types of opportunistic infection to which the renal transplant patient is susceptible are the following: the viruses of the
herpes
group and papovaviruses; bacteria such as L monocytogenes, N asteroides, and Legionella; such fungi as Candida, Aspergillus, C neoformans, and the Mucoraceae; and protozoans such as P carinii, S stercoralis, and T gondii.
...
PMID:Opportunistic infections in renal allograft recipients. 305 19
In
HIV
-infections, skin manifestations are manifold and are conditioned mainly by the immunodeficiency. Kaposi's sarcoma, oral hairy leucoplakia and candidiasis of the esophagus are of diagnostic significance as same as a severe course of opportunistic infections e.g. herpes simplex,
herpes
zooster, cryptococcosis, dermatomycoses, verrucae vulgares, condylomata acuminata and others. Sometimes skin manifestations are the first perceivable sign of an
HIV
-infection.
...
PMID:[Skin manifestations in HIV infection]. 305 89
Modes of preventing the spread of AIDS that have been successful are reviewed. Marked reduction in rates of seroconversion have been recorded among homosexuals in San Francisco and Stockholm, despite high seroprevalence of
HIV
, due to cohesiveness of the community and intense, direct educational campaigns. Although condoms used with nonoxynol-9 spermicide reduce markedly the likelihood of
HIV
transmission, heterosexual spread of
HIV
has not been curtailed. Particularly difficult to reach groups are bisexual men, prostitutes using oral contraceptives, heterosexuals already infected with sexually transmitted diseases, especially chancroid,
herpes
and syphilis, and young people. In Sweden, needle exchange programs have contained AIDS spread abruptly. Paradoxical effects of fear of AIDS in the drug community have worsened the situation in the U.S. For example, fear that heroin causes AIDS has increased the use of cocaine, with its more demanding addiction, that ultimately spreads
HIV
more rapidly by sexual routes. Spread of
HIV
by blood products and to health care workers has become a very rare event recently in the U.S. There is hope that the health message is being articulated more effectively, easing fear and enhancing the response by individuals at risk.
...
PMID:AIDS prevention: issues and strategies. 314 75
A 37-year-old female patient reported marked weight loss, prolonged alopecia, recurrent infections and watery diarrhoea. Examination revealed Salmonella infection, candidiasis and immunological signs of previous toxoplasmosis. Between 1978 and 1981, the patient had had close sexual relations to a patient with haemophilia A. Due to this fact, AIDS was suspected. Serological tests for
HIV
were not available at the time. The findings in DNA image cytometry (nuclear DNA inclusion bodies, polyploid lymphocyte nuclei and binuclear lymphocytes) suggested a viral infection of the lymphoid cells. Electron microscopy revealed in hepatocytes and cerebral cells intranuclear inclusion bodies whose size and contents were not compatible with an infection caused by cytomegalovirus,
herpes
virus or Epstein-Barr virus. In autopsy, infections of various organ systems such as pneumonia, tracheobronchitis, urocystitis, pyelonephritis, Candida oesophagitis and enteritis were found.
...
PMID:[AIDS in a woman having had sexual relations with a patient with hemophilia A. Characteristic findings in DNA image cytometry]. 379 20
We explored a possible route of transmission of Kaposi's-sarcoma-associated
herpes
virus (KSHV) with nested and unnested PCR techniques. We looked for KSHV DNA sequences in semen of
HIV
-positive homosexual men and
HIV
-negative healthy semen donors. With unnested primers we found KSHV sequences in 21 of 33 (64%) homosexual men and in none of 30 healthy donors. With a nested PCR assay, 30 of 33 (91%) specimens from the homosexual men and 7 of 30 (23%) specimens from healthy donors had detectable KSHV sequences. Over 5 years of follow-up, 13 of 30 KSHV-positive homosexual men (43%) developed KS compared with none of the 3 KSHV-negative homosexual men.
...
PMID:Is Kaposi's-sarcoma-associated herpesvirus detectable in semen of HIV-infected homosexual men? 966 Jun 80
Samples were examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the presence of the putative Kaposi's sarcoma
herpes
virus (KSHV). KS DNA from
HIV
-negative, African, endemic (EKS) samples, and epidemic
HIV
-positive KS (AKS), and sporadic KS (SKS) samples were tested from Tanzania and Sweden. All of the
HIV
KS (18 African EKS and 4 Swedish SKS) as well as the
HIV
-positive AIDS-related KS (16 African and 7 Swedish AKS) biopsies were shown to contain the previously described DNA sequences. KS lesions from children, females, and males in various tissues were analyzed including skin, lymph nodes, gut and oral mucosa. All forms of KS showed a single PCR product of the expected size (233 base pairs). To exclude amplification of other types of
herpes
virus, virus preparations of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), herpes simplex virus, cytomegalovirus, vesicular stomatitis, and human
herpes
virus type 6 (HHV6) were assayed, again by PCR, using the KSHV primers. No PCR products were obtained with any of these virus strains. However, most
HIV
-positive and
HIV
-negative KS DNA samples also contained either EBV and/or HHV6 sequences. All biopsies from non-KS tissues (cells) of
HIV
-positive and
HIV
-negative individuals were consistently negative for KSHV by PCR. The observation that the same
herpes
virus-like DNA sequence is present in endemic and sporadic, as well as AIDS-related, Kaposi's sarcoma cases suggests a possible pathogenic association between this putative novel,
herpes
-like virus and KS. The
herpes
virus-like DNA sequences described by Y. Chang in 1994 may indeed represent a novel
herpes
(KSHV), etiopathologically associated with various clinical forms of Kaposi's sarcoma. Its pathogenic importance is indicated by its presence in different KS tissues with various clinical types of KS and its absence from non-KS-involved tissues. Furthermore, the presence of KSHV in KS of children suggests a nonsexual mode of transmission.
...
PMID:A role for a new herpes virus (KSHV) in different forms of Kaposi's sarcoma. 758 56
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a member of the
herpes
virus family, which also includes herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2, varicella-zoster virus, and Epstein-Barr virus. CMV is a common viral infection that, in the absence of
HIV
or other immunocompromising conditions, remains latent and is not associated with serious illness. In immunocompromised people, however, CMV may be a major cause of disease because the suppressed immune system may permit reactivation of the virus. More than ninety percent of people with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) show evidence of prior CMV infection and may continue to harbour inactive or latent virus.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus retinitis. 759 17
One mechanism proposed to play a role in T-cell depletion in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is apoptosis (activation-induced cell death). We assessed whether apoptosis is related to activation of T cells in vivo and its possible triggers. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) taken from 16 vertically HIV-infected children and 9 HIV-negative children born to HIV-positive mothers (controls) and tested by agarose gel electrophoresis for the presence of DNA fragments specific for apoptosis. Signs of apoptosis were found on in vitro culture of PBMC from 12 of 16 HIV-infected children, but not in PBMC from the nine controls. Eleven of the 12 HIV-infected children with apoptosis showed an elevated (> 15%) proportion of CD3+/HLA-DR+ cells. This was due to an increased proportion of CD8+/HLA-DR+ cells, as shown in 7 of 7 further tested patients. In none of the probands an increased (> 5%) proportion of IL-2 receptor expressing CD3+ cells was found. T cells undergoing apoptosis were preferentially of the CD8+ phenotype. Expansion of circulating CD8+/interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R)-/HLA-DR+ T cells is known to occur during active infection with
herpes
viruses. To investigate the possible role of
herpes
viral coinfections for apoptosis in
HIV infection
, we focused on Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) as an example for a
herpes
virus usually acquired during childhood. In 10 of 12 patients with apoptosis, we found increased levels of EBV genome in PBMC and/or tissues, indicating active EBV replication. By contrast, no increased burden of EBV was found in the four HIV-infected patients without apoptosis or in the controls. Our data indicate that in children the occurrence of apoptosis in
HIV infection
is closely related to activation of CD8+ T cells. Furthermore, primoinfection with or reactivation of
herpes
viruses, such as EBV, may substantially contribute to such T-cell activation and the ensuing apoptosis. Additional studies are warranted to evaluate the contribution of
herpes
virus-triggered apoptosis to the T-cell loss leading to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:T-cell death by apoptosis in vertically human immunodeficiency virus-infected children coincides with expansion of CD8+/interleukin-2 receptor-/HLA-DR+ T cells: sign of a possible role for herpes viruses as cofactors? 763 48
Mutual activation of reproduction of type 1
HIV
and herpes simplex types 1 and 2 viruses (HSV) was observed in simultaneous infection of continuous T-cellular lymphoblastoid lines (CEM, 119, Hut-78, MT-4, Jurkat-tat) and U-937 monocytic line. Syncytium formation and cytodestructive pattern of reproduction of viruses of both families in these cell lines necessitated the use of enzyme immunoassay (EIA) to detect the antigens of these viruses in order to assess the level of reproduction. The concentration of
HIV
antigens in EIA increased in mixed infection by 1.4 to 2.1 times in different cultures in comparison with the culture infected with
HIV
-1 alone, and concentrations of HSV-1 and HSV-2 increased by 1.3-1.8 times in mixed infection, in comparison with reproduction in lymphoblastoid cultures infected with HSV alone. EIA was alone used to examine the production of IgG and IgM antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus, another representative of Herpesviridae family, in the blood sera of patients with immunodeficiency states in whose sera antibodies to proteins produced by gag
HIV
gene (p15/17, p24, p55) were detected. Increased concentration of IgG antibodies were revealed in 36% of these patients, whereas in healthy donors the sera with elevated concentrations of IgG to Epstein-Barr virus were far less incident (12%). A hypothesis about mutual activation of
HIV
and
herpes
viruses is put forward.
...
PMID:[Activation of viral reproduction in a mixed infection with human immunodeficiency virus and herpes viruses]. 771 8
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