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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The fungus Histoplasma capsulatum causes histoplasmosis, the most common endemic respiratory
mycosis
in the United States. Disseminated histoplasmosis in adults is often associated with immunosuppression, such as occurs in
HIV infection
. We report a case of oral histoplasmosis in an
HIV
-seropositive patient who presented with an ulceration on the left tip of the tongue, extending to the floor of the mouth, but was otherwise free of any active systemic disease. Histoplasma capsulatum was shown, by both histopathology and staining with a fluorescent antibody reagent specific for the organism, to be present in the lesion and was deduced to be the causative organism.
...
PMID:Oral Histoplasma capsulatum infection in association with HIV infection: a case report. 155 67
Involvement of the liver with the same opportunistic organisms and neoplasms affecting other organs has been recognized since the beginning of the AIDS epidemic. In this overview of hepatic histopathologic features in AIDS, we review the range of opportunistic infections and neoplasms accompanying
HIV infection
. Hepatic disease may result from viral, bacterial, protozoal, or
fungal infection
, or secondary to drugs and neoplasms. Liver involvement in AIDS usually reflects disseminated rather than primary disease. CMV and mycobacteria are the most common organisms in liver identified in biopsy and autopsy studies. A variety of nonspecific features, including steatosis, granulomas, and sinusoidal abnormalities may also be seen.
HIV
-1 itself was recently identified in the liver. Speculation regarding the significance of this finding has been discussed in this review. Hepatitis B, C, and D may also complicate the course of disease in patients with AIDS. Hepatitis B behaves differently in the population with AIDS than in immunocompetent patients. We concluded our review with a discussion of the present recommendations regarding the use of liver biopsies in these patients. This topic continues to be widely debated in the literature.
...
PMID:Hepatic histopathology in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 163 22
Prophylactic treatment with human granulocyte colony stimulating factor (hG-CSF) affords significant protection against systemic infections caused by C. albicans in cyclophosphamide-treated but not in cortisone-treated mice. Localized candidosis in neutropenic mice does not respond to hG-CSF. Our data show that granulocytes play an important role in the immune defence against deep
mycoses
, but not against local infections. From our data it is reasonable to assume that prophylactic treatment with hG-CSF may augment the resistance of immunosuppressed patients to deep Candida infection, but it would be of little help against oral candidosis of
HIV
patients.
Mycoses
PMID:Protective effect of human granulocyte colony stimulating factor (hG-CSF) on Candida infections in normal and immunosuppressed mice. 172 Nov 5
The rapid and thus far generally inexorable rise in
HIV
infections has led to a series of opportunistic infection that includes those caused by bacteria, yeasts, and members of the Eumycetes. The infections range in prevalence from occasional to highly prevalent, in severity from trivial to fatal, and in anatomic areas involved from local to disseminated. They occur as isolated, concurrent, or sequential infections with regard to other opportunistic diseases. Some vary in their geographic distribution. They may be newly acquired or reactivated and occur early or late in the course of
HIV infection
. Bacterial infections are usually easily treated, although they frequently disseminate and often recur after seemingly appropriate treatment. In contrast, all but the mildest fungal infections are difficult to treat and even more difficult or impossible to eradicate. The diagnosis of bacterial and fungal infections begins with clinical suspicion and involves relatively standard methodology. Treatment of the systemic
mycoses
and some bacterial infections in
HIV
infected patients is punctuated by exaggerated side effects of therapy, frequent relapses, and the need for maintenance suppressive therapy.
...
PMID:Medical management of AIDS patients. Bacterial and fungal infections. 172 36
In a series of 342 bone marrow examinations from 314 patients with
human immunodeficiency virus infection
, 70 examinations (20%) detected opportunistic mycobacterial or fungal infections. One hundred eleven of the 314 patients had such infections, and, hence, 63% (70/111) were detected by bone marrow examination. Special stains for microorganisms detected 16 (32%) of 50 Mycobacterium avium complex infections, 10 (22%) of 45 Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections, eight (73%) of 11 Histoplasma capsulatum infections, and five (83%) of six Cryptococcus neoformans infections. Bone marrow cultures detected 36 (72%) of the 50 M avium complex infections, 13 (29%) of the 45 M tuberculosis infections, and 63% of the fungal infections. Marrow examination revealed infection in only one of the 70 specimens (1%) collected to evaluate thrombocytopenia alone or hematologic malignancy, but in 69 (25%) of 274 with fever, neutropenia, anemia, or miscellaneous other indications for marrow examination. Granulomas were detected in 102 (30%) of the biopsy specimens, including 71 (64%) of those in cases with mycobacterial or
fungal infection
. The granulomas showed caseous necrosis in nine cases, all in patients with tuberculosis, and the 27 cases with tuberculosis-associated granulomas tended to show large, tightly cohesive granulomas. The presence of granulomas correlated with opportunistic infection in 82 (80%) of 102 cases. Without granulomas, special stains were positive in only eight (3%) of 240 specimens. These results suggest that (1) bone marrow granulomas are a common and valuable histologic clue to opportunistic infection; (2) without them, special stains may not be a cost-efficient way to diagnose such infection; and (3) bone marrow examination can be a useful method of diagnosing opportunistic mycobacterial and fungal infections in patients with fever, anemia or neutropenia, and underlying
human immunodeficiency virus infection
.
...
PMID:Bone marrow examination for the diagnosis of mycobacterial and fungal infections in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 174 30
A 30-year-old,
HIV
-positive, man who had been repeatedly treated with amphotericin B for oral thrush, developed headaches, fever up to 38.5 degrees C, dizzy spells with falling tendency, as well as disorder of speech and word finding. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contained 5700/3 cells, of which 90% were encapsulated yeast-fungus. Cryptococcal antigen titres were elevated both in serum (1:256) and CSF (1:1024), providing the diagnosis of cryptococcal meningitis. Intravenous treatment was started with amphotericin B, 0.3 mg/kg daily and flucytosine, 150 mg/kg daily. The clinical, microbiological and serological findings regressed after 4 weeks. After 8 weeks the creatinine concentration rose to 2.5 mg/dl. Because amphotericin B nephrotoxicity was suspected, further intravenous administration was stopped after a cumulative dosage of 2 g. He was placed on a prophylactic dosage of fluconazole, 100 mg by mouth twice daily. The cryptococcal antigen titre had fallen to normal within one year. The prophylactic regimen has been continued now for three years without recurrence or other
fungal infection
.
...
PMID:[Cryptococcal meningitis in AIDS: successful long-term prophylaxis with fluconazole]. 175 95
A retrospective review of charts of 156 human immunodeficiency virus-infected children cared for during a 7.5-year period revealed 11 episodes of disseminateed candidiasis (DC) occurring in 11 patients (7%). All 11 patients developed the
fungal infection
in the context of advanced
human immunodeficiency virus infection
. All but one were hospital-acquired, occurring at a mean of 2.3 months after admission. Ten patients had been febrile for more than 14 days before diagnosis. Previous oral thrush and central venous catheters (73 and 82% of patients) represented major predisposing factors for development of DC. Neutropenia (2 of 11 patients) did not represent a major risk factor for DC. Candida albicans was isolated in 9 patients, Rhodotorula minuta in 1 patient and 1 fungal isolate could not be identified. Sources of isolation were blood (8 of 11 patients), central venous catheters (3 of 11) and urine (2 of 11). Lungs (6 of 11 patients), esophagus (5 of 11) and brain, heart and kidneys (3 patients each) were the organs most often involved in DC. Antemortem diagnosis was achieved in only 7 (64%) patients; none of the 4 patients with DC diagnosed postmortem had been treated before death. Seven patients were treated with amphotericin B; 6 of them died but only 3 were treated for more than 7 days of therapy. The overall mortality was 90% (10 of 11 patients). In all 20% of the 50 human immunodeficiency virus-infected children who died at our hospital during the study period had an episode of DC in close proximity to their death. DC was considered the direct cause of death in 4 of 10 children.
...
PMID:Disseminated fungal infections in children infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 176 3
Candidiasis is the most common oral
fungal infection
seen in association with
HIV infection
. It may present in a number of clinical forms, including pseudomembranous and erythematous candidiasis. To determine whether erythematous candidiasis, like the pseudomembranous form, is predictive of the development of AIDS, we reviewed the records of 169
HIV
-seropositive patients seen at clinic of the Oral AIDS Center, University of California, San Francisco who were diagnosed with pseudomembranous or erythematous (or both) forms of oral candidiasis at their first examination. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a rapid rate of progression to AIDS (median, 25 months) and to death (median, 43.8 months) in all three groups. We conclude that erythematous candidiasis is as serious a prognostic indicator as pseudomembranous candidiasis. Because the erythematous form is more difficult to recognize and hence is underdiagnosed, efforts should be made to teach non-dental clinicians who care for
HIV
-infected patients to diagnose and treat this lesion.
...
PMID:Oral candidiasis in HIV infection: pseudomembranous and erythematous candidiasis show similar rates of progression to AIDS. 176 82
Systemic cryptococcosis occurs in at least 6% patients with
human immunodeficiency virus infection
(
HIV
). The lung infection by cryptococcus neoformans, less frequently observed than meningeal involvement, consists usually in focal parenchymal
mycosis
. Authors report an apparently isolated pleural cryptococcosis in a 41 years old mal with
HIV infection
. Diagnosis was performed initially by pleural and bronchial alveolar lavage (BAL) fluid culture. Characteristic cryptococcosis pathological and histologic findings from thoracoscopy and open pleural biopsy are described. Cryptococcus capsular polysaccharides stainings and thoracoscopy interests are emphasized.
...
PMID:[A predominant manifestation of pleural cryptococcosis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 177 17
Five cases of disseminated Penicillium marneffei
mycosis
of Thai
HIV
patients, presented between November 1990 and April 1991, have been investigated. All patients were male and had bone marrow involvement. They showed mucocutaneous lesions with papules predominantly on the faces and upper extremities (5 cases), palatal papules (3 cases), and chronic genital ulcer (2 cases). P. marneffei was cultured, and the specific tissue form of the fungus was demonstrated histopathologically from skin and bone marrow specimens. In future, with increasing awareness of mucocutaneous lesions, disseminated penicilliosis in
HIV
-infected patients might be diagnosed sooner, thus leading to earlier therapy and better prognosis of the disease.
Mycoses
PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of disseminated Penicillium marneffei mycosis in five HIV-infected patients. 179 21
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