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

In this article, we report the establishment of persistent HIV type 1 infection of normal Swiss mice after a single intraperitoneal injection with high-producing HIV-infected U937 cells. Anti-HIV antibodies were found more than 500 days after the original injection, and p24 antigenemia was detected in approximately 50% of the mice. By polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques, HIV-specific gag and env sequences were detected in DNA samples from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and peritoneal cells of seropositive mice 300 to 500 days after inoculation with HIV-infected cells. These DNA samples did not contain human DNA sequences, as determined by PCR analysis using primers and the probe for the HLA-DQ alpha gene. Low levels of p24 and detectable human reverse transcriptase activity were found in cultures of PBMC and peritoneal macrophages. Cocultivation of PBMC, peritoneal cells, and spleen cells with human uninfected U937 or CEM (a T lymphoma cell line) cells resulted in HIV infection of the target cells, as determined by PCR analysis and/or p24 assays. The intravenous injection of untreated Swiss mice with the PBMC from PCR-positive mice resulted in the development of an increasing antibody response to HIV in the recipient animals. Together these results indicate that cells from seropositive Swiss mice were persistently infected with HIV and were capable of producing infectious virus. The development of persistent HIV infection in an immunocompetent mouse may represent the starting point for further studies aimed at defining the host mechanisms involved in the restriction of virus replication, defining the pathogenesis of HIV infection, and testing antiviral compounds and vaccines.
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PMID:Persistent infection of normal mice with human immunodeficiency virus. 173 5

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related infection of the brain constitute a large fraction of the most recent research into central nervous system infection. Two major areas of controversy discussed in the past year's literature were the neuroradiologic and neurologic manifestations of early human immunodeficiency virus infection in the central nervous system and differentiation of toxoplasmosis from lymphoma. Other non-AIDS related infections discussed included infectious aneurysms, bacterial abscesses, tuberculosis, cysticercosis, fungal infections, and zoster myelitis.
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PMID:Imaging of infections of the central nervous system. 173 1

Postmortem neuropathologic changes were evaluated in 141 consecutive patients dying with human immunodeficiency virus infection at publicly supported hospitals affiliated with the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, between August 1984 and September 1990. Morphologic abnormalities were identified in 112 cases (79%). Cytomegalovirus was the most common opportunistic infection encountered, with characteristic viral inclusions identified in 23 patients, and presumptive evidence of infection in six additional patients. Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy was present in four patients. Gram-positive bacterial infections were identified in six patients, and mycobacterial infections in three patients. Opportunistic fungal infections included cryptococcosis (13 cases), histoplasmosis (two cases), and coccidioidomycosis (one case). Toxoplasmosis was uncommon, with active or quiescent lesions identified in five patients. Lymphoma was present in nine patients and was primary in the central nervous system in five patients. Multinucleate giant cell (human immunodeficiency virus) encephalitis was identified in 28 patients. In an additional 26 patients, microglial nodules and/or more generalized white-matter abnormalities were encountered in the absence of multinucleate giant cells, cytomegalovirus inclusions, or systemic cytomegalovirus infection. Vacuolar change was present in 21% of spinal cords, and was highly correlated with cytomegalovirus infection in the nervous system. Mixed infections and/or neoplasms were identified in 24 patients. This survey documents a high frequency of neuropathologic abnormalities in human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals in a geographical region of the United States not represented in previous series. Variations noted in the frequencies of specific central nervous system disorders between this and other study populations reinforce the need for continuing documentation of geographical trends in human immunodeficiency virus-associated disorders.
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PMID:The neuropathology of human immunodeficiency virus infection. The Dallas, Texas, experience. 174 29

A 29-year-old man, a known heroin addict until 1984 in whom HIV antibodies had been first demonstrated in 1985, was hospitalized because of fever, nocturnal sweating, weight loss and treatment-resistant diarrhoea. An opportunistic infection of the gastrointestinal tract was excluded microbiologically and serologically. Coloscopy and biopsy revealed a highly malignant gastrointestinal B-cell lymphoma, which had caused a spontaneous rectosigmoid-ileum fistula. Lymphoma infiltrations were also found in the duodenum, jejunum, left lung and brain. Because the underlying disease was far progressed (CD4/CD8 ratio: 0.04) and the patient was in a poor general condition neither surgery nor chemotherapy was undertaken. He died of cerebral lymphoma involvement. Gastrointestinal lymphoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of chronic diarrhoea in HIV-positive patients.
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PMID:[A fistula between the rectosigmoid junction and the ileum as a complication of highly malignant AIDS-associated lymphoma]. 174 69

Bone marrow biopsies from eighty-five patients with different stages of HIV infection were reviewed. Biopsies were generally indicated to evaluate peripheral blood abnormalities, but suspicion of lymphoma and other specific pathologies was another important indication. The histopathological features are described and are often suggestive of HIV infection but non-specific. Hypercellularity (72.9%), dysmyelopoiesis (78.8%), plasma cell hyperplasia (97.7%), lymphoid infiltration (27%) and histiocytosis with or without granulomata (11.7%) were the most striking abnormalities. Other frequent features include: increased stainable iron deposits, venous stasis and serous atrophy (gelatinous transformation). Marrow hypoplasia is rather infrequent (28.2%) and usually a terminal event of AIDS. Bone marrow biopsies revealed opportunistic and neoplastic complications in seven cases, with demonstration of pathogens in four cases (Mycobacterium avium, Cryptoccocus neoformans, Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania donovanii) and malignant lymphomas in three other cases (one Burkitt's lymphoma and two Hodgkin's disease). Bone marrow biopsy provides useful information for the diagnosis and prognosis of HIV infection and for the diagnosis of complications.
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PMID:[Bone marrow changes at several stages of HIV infection, studied on bone marrow biopsies in 85 patients]. 175 64

Up to now little involvement of the afferent visual pathway (optic nerve and optic radiation and visual cortex) in HIV infection has been apparent. These results are based on our prospective investigations of 538 HIV-infected individuals, among them 261 patients with full-blown AIDS carried out by the same examiner over a 6-year period (1984-1990). Diseases of the optic nerve were observed in 22/261 (8.4%) of Aids patients but in only 1/227 (0.4%) of patients with earlier stages of HIV infection. Optic neuritis was the most common disease (in 14/261 = 5.4% of Aids patients), for the most part occurring in the course of CMV (cytomegalovirus) retinitis. For this form the prognosis was primarily good under virustatic therapy with ganciclovir in contrast to primary CMC papillitis. Furthermore, a few cases of optic perineuritis, optic neuropathy in basal meningitis, ischemic optic neuropathy and papilloedema with increased intracranial pressure were observed, most of them caused by opportunistic infections of the central nervous system. In single cases the HIV might hypothetically have played a role in the etiology. Visual impairment of the patients varied from subtle disturbances to blindness. Often optic atrophy resulted. Homonymous hemianopsia was the principal sign in diseases of the visual pathway between the lateral geniculate body and the visual cortex (in 10/261 = 3.8% of Aids patients). This symptom resulted from cerebral toxoplasmosis in 7 cases, progressive multifocal leukoencepalopathy (PML) in 2 cases and primary intracerebral malignant lymphoma in 1 case. The visual fields and neuroradiological findings are demonstrated. In 3 cases the homonymous hemianopsia was the first clinical appearance of Aids. Involvement of the afferent visual pathway in HIV infection may be a cause of blindness or visual disturbances despite normal findings on examination of the eyes themselves.
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PMID:[Disorders of the afferent visual pathway in HIV infection. 1. Optic nerve and 2. Visual pathways/visual cortex]. 179 96

Scrofula has been called "The Dangerous Masquerader" because of its propensity to mimic other diseases. Scrofula has been mistaken for metastatic carcinoma, regional neoplasms, thyroglossal duct cysts, fungal disease, toxoplasmosis, lymphoma, osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, bacterial adenitis, and collagen vascular disease. Because of the enormous number of infectious and neoplastic diseases acquired by the HIV positive population, the diagnosis of scrofula may be further delayed in some patients. In these patients the early diagnosis of scrofula might allow the early identification of HIV infection and the early institution of anti-retroviral therapy. The recommended duration of anti-tuberculosis therapy is also different in HIV positive patients. Therefore, to ensure the patient of the most beneficial therapy, the physician must always consider scrofula in the differential diagnosis of a neck mass, and particularly because of the increases incidence of intrapulmonary tuberculosis in AIDS patients, he must consider the possibility of HIV infection.
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PMID:The re-emergence of scrofula with HIV infection: a review of epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment. 181 95

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma developing in patients with HIV infection fulfills diagnostic criteria for AIDS. Clinical manifestations of AIDS-NHL are similar to those of malignant lymphoma arising in other acquired and congenital immunodeficiency states. AIDS related NHLs therefore consist primarily of tumours with B cell phenotype, intermediate or high grade histological subtype and rapid clinical progression with a high frequency of unusual extranodal involvement. Treatment of AIDS-NHL has been much less rewarding than treatment of lymphoma in non-HIV infected individuals. Complete response rates are lower than the corresponding rates seen in the non-HIV infected population, and responses that do occur tend to be of short duration. Improvements in treatment for AIDS-NHL will require the use of new therapies, designed to cause less myelosuppression, in conjunction with aggressive efforts to prevent opportunistic infections.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations and treatment of HIV related non-Hodgkin lymphoma. 182 18

The excess of NHL associated with HIV infection is well established. Clinically, HIV associated NHL is characterized by histological evidence of a high grade of malignancy, B cell origin, extensive extranodal involvement (most notably of the CNS) and poor prognosis. High grade B cell lymphoma or primary brain lymphoma in HIV infected individuals is considered diagnostic of AIDS by the Centers for Disease Control. The incidence of NHL among individuals with AIDS varies by subtype of lymphoma, age, sex, race and risk group. Younger individuals, males, whites and haemophiliacs are at higher risk than other groups. The incidence of HIV associated NHL is increasing. Because of the paucity of data on risk factors for this malignancy, the current possibilities for risk modification are limited to the prevention of HIV infection.
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PMID:Epidemiology of HIV associated non-Hodgkin lymphoma. 182 26

Central nervous system findings in 30 fatal cases of human immune deficiency viral (HIV) infection are described. Twenty seven patients had acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and three patients had serological evidence of HIV infection only (HIV seropositive). Twenty nine patients had neuropathologic abnormalities at autopsy and frequently had more than one neuropathologic process. Neurologic disease was the dominant clinical feature in nineteen patients. The spectrum of neuropathologic disease is similar to that described in other series encompassing direct HIV infection of brain; indirect CNS involvement by opportunistic pathogens differing slightly from other series in their relative frequency; lymphoma and neurovascular disease. This, the first report which serves to document the level of neurologic disease in Irish patients with AIDS and HIV infection should help to provide meaningful information for use in the planning of neurologic and rehabilitation services for these patients.
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PMID:Neuropathologic findings in AIDS and human immunodeficiency virus infection--report on 30 patients. 182 95


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