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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Susceptibility and development of resistance to 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) in Candida strains isolated from defined German groups of probands was investigated. 5-FC susceptibility was determined in a microdilution assay in yeast nitrogen base after 24 h of incubation at 37 degrees C. The range of 5-FC concentration investigated was between 0.015 and 16 micrograms ml-1. Isolates with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of > 16 micrograms ml-1 were regarded as 5-FC resistant. In total 335 Candida isolates were investigated, and 20 of them (6.0%) were found to be resistant. The Candida isolates were rather different with respect to their origin: out of 57 vaginal isolates from non-risk patients from Southern Germany 3.5% were 5-FC-resistant strains. One hundred and fifty-nine isolates from the urine of long-term intensive care patients from the whole of Germany showed 5-FC resistance (6.3%). Out of 74 isolates of different localization from intensive care patients of the University Clinics of Freiburg, 10.8% showed 5-FC resistance. Among 45 isolates from the oral cavity of
HIV
-positive patients from the Frankfurt region, no 5-FC-resistant strain was found. The epidemiology of 5-FC resistance is based mainly on the percentage of non-albicans isolates of the proband groups (C. tropicalis, C. krusei and others), and is less based on the frequency of Candida albicans serotype B isolates. In sequential observations with individual intensive care patients, no increase of 5-FC resistance in their Candida isolates could be observed with longer periods of hospitalization.
Mycoses
PMID:Susceptibility of yeast isolates from defined German patient groups to 5-fluorocytosine. 128 80
A 54-year-old man, affected by pemphigus vulgaris and severe steroid-induced diabetes, developed seven red-brown, firm, slightly raised 0.1-1 cm papular lesions on the anterior aspect of both knees and thighs. A cutaneous biopsy showed a granulomatous infiltrate with numerous fungal elements scattered in the dermis and also within giant cells. Cultures of cutaneous biopsy fragments on Sabouraud glucose agar in presence of chloramphenicol resulted in the growth of dark-green colonies at 25 degrees C. They were identified as typical Cladosporium cladosporioides. As far as we know, this species was previously isolated only in an
HIV
-seropositive patient as opportunistic pathogen in the site of skin testing.
Mycoses
PMID:Cutaneous phaeohyphomycosis due to Cladosporium cladosporioides. 129 76
From June 1990 to August 1991, 21 patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) presented with systemic
mycosis
caused by Penicillium marneffei. Between August 1987 and August 1991, only five patients were observed who had P. marneffei infection but not
HIV infection
. The clinical presentation included fever, cough, and generalized papular skin lesions. For 11 of these 21 patients, the presumptive diagnosis of P. marneffei infection could be made by microscopic examination of Wright's-stained bone marrow aspirate and/or touch smears of skin specimens obtained by biopsy several days before the results of culture were available. Initial clinical response to treatment with either parenteral amphotericin B or oral itraconazole was favorable in most patients. Epidemiological and clinical evidence suggest that this systemic
mycosis
is caused by an important opportunistic pathogen and that it should be included in the differential diagnosis of AIDS, at least for countries in areas of endemicity, i.e., Southeast Asia and China.
...
PMID:Penicillium marneffei infection in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 133 15
Penicilliosis marneffei is a rare deep
fungal infection
. The endemic area especially located in the Southeast of Asia. In the former literatures till 1990, 29 cases were reported, most of them were diagnosed pathologically from autopsy. Since 1989 there were more reports of P. marneffei in the
HIV
infected individuals and graft recipient, so far as the increased immunocompromised hosts systemic fungi infection would be a crucial problem. In this report, a case of systemic Penicilliosis marneffei according to biopsy and cultural identification was reported. Amphotericin B was administered in a total dose of 873 mg, and got a good response. The pathogenesis, clinical manifestations and diagnosis were reviewed.
...
PMID:[Penicilliosis marneffei. Report of a case and review of literatures]. 133 13
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.
...
PMID:Central nervous system opportunistic infections in HIV disease: clinical aspects. 134 47
The MIC values of the antifungal drug ketoconazole were evaluated on 66 Candida albicans strains. These strains were isolated from 26
HIV
-1 infected patients with oral recurrent candidosis. Each episode of oral candidosis observed in these patients was orally treated with ketoconazole (200 mg/day) until the clinical disappearance of the lesions. The most frequent MIC values were 20 micrograms/ml and 10 micrograms/ml, observed in 37 and 19 isolates respectively. Only strains from five patients showed changes in their susceptibility to ketoconazole. This fact could indicate that a different strain causes the subsequent reappearance of the oral lesions, rather than the drug selecting resistant fungal strains. Our results stress the role of host characteristics in the occurrence of candidal infections, pointing to the progressing failure of the immunological response as the most important factor responsible for the recurrence of oral candidosis during
HIV
-1 infection.
Mycoses
PMID:Susceptibility to ketoconazole of Candida albicans strains from sequentially followed HIV-1 patients with recurrent oral candidosis. 140 90
Fifty Candida albicans strains isolated from the oral cavities of
HIV
-infected patients were typed with 14 different lectins by means of agglutination reactions. Sixteen different lectin types could be distinguished, the most frequent type representing 22% of strains. A change in the lectin type was found in about half of the Candida albicans strains representing control cultures from identical individuals. A simplified typing scheme based on three lectins seems to be almost as efficacious for epidemiological application.
Mycoses
PMID:The lectin type of Candida albicans--an epidemiological marker relevant to pathogenesis. 143 52
The prevalence of renal and perinephritic abscesses has radically changed over the last few decades basically due to two causes: the efficacy of antibiotics and early diagnosis by echography and/or CAT. Between January 1986 and December 1990, 12 cases of renal abscesses have been diagnoses in our Unit which have been treated conservatively through therapy with antibiotics and lumbar percutaneous drainage. Only one case was resolved with antibiotics alone; all other 11 cases needed drainage, in spite of a improvement in the symptoms, which was performed by translumbar puncture. Drainage was effective in 10 cases and the cultures found 5 cases of E. coli, 4 cases of Staphylococcus aureus and 1 case of Gram(-) bacilli. In the two cases where percutaneous drainage was not effective abscesses were produced by fungi: C. albicans and Mucor
mycosis
which caused highly solid septum and sphacelus requiring in both cases the use of open surgery. Currently this disease no longer represents a serious problem, it has a minimal morbidity and no mortality; only the group of high risk immunosupressed patients (AIDS,
HIV
(+), ADVEP) shows an increase in the number of cases and management in these patients continues to be problematic.
...
PMID:[Percutaneous drainage of renal and perirenal abscesses]. 150 23
Aspergillosis, cryptococcosis and zygomycosis (mucormycosis) are overall the most common systemic
mycoses
but histoplasmosis is particularly endemic in parts of central USA and other areas worldwide. Orofacial lesions caused by systemic
mycoses
have rarely been reported in the past though they have been recorded particularly in outdoor workers from geographic areas with a high prevalence of infection and occasionally in immunocompromised individuals. Increasing world-wide travel, and the dramatic increase in numbers of immunocompromised persons, especially those with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease, have been responsible for an increase in reports and other studies of orofacial disease in systemic
mycoses
and new opportunists are now being recognized. Those in Oral Medicine and Pathology must now be aware of the possibility of a systemic
mycosis
as the cause of chronic oral ulceration, chronic maxillary sinus infection, or bizarre mouth lesions, especially in patients with
HIV disease
, lymphoproliferative disorders, or diabetes mellitus, or in those who have been in endemic areas. Diagnosis and management should be undertaken in consultation with a physician with appropriate expertise, as pulmonary and other systemic infection may well be present. This paper reviews the eight main systemic
mycoses
.
...
PMID:Orofacial manifestations of the systemic mycoses. 152 29
Oral
mycoses
in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are becoming increasingly common. Of these, oral candidiasis is by far the most prevalent; fewer than 10 cases of cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, and geotrichosis have thus far been reported. Oral candidiasis is one of the earliest premonitory signs of
HIV infection
and may present as erythematous, pseudomembranous, hyperplastic, or papillary variants, or as angular cheilitis. Cumulative data from 23 surveys (incorporating 3387 adults) suggest that in general, oral candidiasis may develop in one third to half of HIV-seropositive persons. Almost equal numbers of cases manifest with either erythematous or pseudomembranous variants. These and related concepts pertaining to oral
mycoses
in
HIV infection
are reviewed.
...
PMID:Oral mycoses in HIV infection. 154 12
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