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

We present two cases of sarcoidosis complicated by HIV infection. Each case had a different level of sarcoidosis activity and coexisted with either an AIDS-related infection or a HIV-positive state. Manifestations of sarcoidosis were not apparent in the patient with the AIDS-defining opportunistic infection, but were active in the patient with asymptomatic HIV infection. Both patients had granulomatous reactions to Kveim antigen, and one had such a reaction following an AIDS-defining infection. These findings suggest that non-T-cell mechanisms may be involved in granuloma formation in sarcoidosis.
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PMID:Positive Kveim test in patients with coexisting sarcoidosis and human immunodeficiency virus infection. 158 20

We present the immunoglobulin spectrum in a series of 156 HIV-infected patients who were affected of tuberculosis (TB) of different localization. Sixty-seven patients had lung TB, in 13 cases lung TB and an opportunistic infection were diagnosed simultaneously and in 76 cases TB was localized outside the lung. The cases were compared to 62 HIV-infected patients classified in stage 11 (CDC 1986) and to 85 cases of HIV-infected patients who suffered carinii pneumonia (PCP). The most outstanding differences were established between IgA of patients with lung TB and group PCP (p less than 0.001). IgG showed significant differences between lung TB patients and the PCP group (p less than 0.001).
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PMID:[A serum immunoglobulin study in patients with tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus infection]. 159 26

The growing epidemic of HIV infection poses a serious threat to women's health in the United States and abroad. In the United States, HIV disproportionately affects African-American and Hispanic-American woman. Primary care providers will be faced with an increasing need to provide counseling and clinical services to these women. It is not yet clear whether gender affects the natural history of HIV infection; differences in survival rates may reflect lack of access to care rather than true biologic differences. Opportunistic infections among women with HIV infection are similar to those found among men with AIDS who use injection drugs. Unique expressions of HIV disease associated with women's reproductive tracts include persistent vaginal candidiasis, human papillomavirus infections and cervical dysplasia. Women with HIV infection should receive thorough gynecologic screening, including Pap smears, every six months. Women who know they are HIV positive may choose to become pregnant; these clients require extensive prenatal care and state-of-the-art HIV management.
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PMID:The epidemiology, clinical manifestations and health-maintenance needs of women infected with HIV. 160 41

We reported two HIV infected patients with bacteremia and pneumonia due to Rhodococcus equi. None of them had suffer any opportunistic infection before this episode. Clinical presentation includes respiratory tract symptoms of subacute onset and fever. The X-ray examination in both cases revealed pneumonia and lung abscess in upper lobes as well as lung infiltrates in other lobes. The microorganism was isolated in lung fine needle aspiration, bronchoalveolar lavage and blood cultures in both cases. One patient died and the other was under antibiotic treatment 5 months after discharge. The therapeutic options in this infection must include the use of at least two different antibiotics to which the microorganism is sensitive, and for a prolonged period of time. Surgical treatment should be considered if the evolution is poor.
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PMID:[Rhodococcus equi in HIV infected patients: 2 new cases]. 160 24

Opportunistic infections are a major cause of morbidity and death among patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), particularly late in the disease, when immunosuppression is severe. Some pathogens, such as Pneumocystis carinii and Toxoplasma gondii, are extremely common in this population and are readily recognized by clinicians caring for these patients. However, many other organisms occasionally cause conditions that clinically mimic the more commonly encountered pathogens. Clinicians must be alert to the threat posed by these less frequently occurring organisms and of the broader differential diagnosis that must be considered for infections in patients with HIV infection.
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PMID:Emergence of unusual opportunistic pathogens in AIDS: a review. 161 54

The location of tuberculosis (TB) early in the course of HIV-induced immunosuppression was located, and an attempt was made to determine the correlation between the degree of immune suppression and prognostic variables to stratify the risk for dissemination of TB in HIV-infected patients. Clinical and laboratory characteristics were reviewed in 73 HIV-infected patients with TB admitted between 1984 and 1990. The presence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was investigated in different clinical samples to verify the diagnostic yield of different sources. TB was extrapulmonary in 46.6 per cent of patients in whom it was their first opportunistic infection, and in 46.7 per cent of patients with previously diagnosed AIDS (p = NS). TB was frequently associated with other opportunistic infections, particularly oesophageal candidiasis (p = 0.006). Patients with localized extrapulmonary or disseminated TB presented more often with cytopenias, hypoalbuminaemia and oral thrush. The existence of extrapulmonary TB or another opportunistic coinfection allowed AIDS to be diagnosed in the same admission in 30 patients and a mean of 8.4 months later in another eight. Extrapulmonary TB was found to be as common in early HIV infection as in patients with established AIDS. Haematological derangements were common in these patients, and cytopenias, hypoalbuminaemia and oral thrush were useful predictors of TB dissemination. The location of TB and its dissemination were not significantly linked to a more advanced CDC stage of HIV infection or a more profound fall in CD4 count.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Risk stratification for dissemination of tuberculosis in HIV-infected patients. 162 Aug 15

Nonhuman primate lentiviruses are the source of the HIV/AIDS (HAIDS) pandemic among humans. Thus HAIDS constitutes a zoonosis. Opportunistic infections which generally are the immediate cause of death in HAIDS patients tend to be zoonoses. Some of these include tuberculosis, cryptococcosis, cytomegalovirus, toxoplasmosis. Pneumocystis carinii, Listeria monocytogenes, and candidiasis. The HAIDS viral ecology paralleled the intense migration of African swine fever into the Caribbean and the continental Americas. Haitian laborers and prostitutes went to Zaire and later returned. Sexual tourism in Haiti and poor Haitian selling their blood for transfusions and production of plasma derivatives to be marketed to developed countries such as the US and France contributed to the spread of HAIDS from Haiti to developed countries. Thus African swine fever and HAIDS originated in this hemisphere from Haiti after being bought to Haiti from Africa. HAIDS began as an endemic regional disease in Africa then became a regional epidemic disease. After African countries gained independence, urbanization increased in Africa which accounted for the spread of HAIDS in each African country. The US and the USSR played their geopolitical games using and/or resulting in famine, war, and disrupted families on the African continent and elsewhere. Thus husbands from 1 continent were moved to armies and labor camps sometimes on another continent. Prostitution spread tremendously to fulfill women's economic needs and men's sexual needs. HAIDS spread along with these events, e.g. Cuba sent troops to Angola where they were mostly stationed near 2 countries with high HAIDS rates, Zaire and Namibia. These troops often returned to Cuba then returned to Africa. During the 1980s, HAIDS prevalence was 45 times higher among Cuban boat refugees and Marielito Cuban immigrants to the US than that claimed for all of Cuba. In fact, their HAIDS prevalence matched that of Cuba's Caribbean neighbors.
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PMID:Macroepidemiology of the HIVs-AIDS (HAIDS) pandemic. Insufficiently considered zoological and geopolitical aspects. 162 79

Nocardia infection is a rarely reported opportunistic infection in HIV-infected patients. Nocardiosis typically occurs in HIV-infected patients with advanced immunodeficiency (89% of cases), often as the initial serious opportunistic infection (42% of cases). In most HIV-infected patients, nocardia infection is disseminated at the time of diagnosis and is characterized by an indolent course that may be difficult to differentiate from other systemic infections. Invasive procedures to obtain tissue of fluid for culture are frequently necessary to make the diagnosis, although a Gram or modified acid-fast stain of sputum or other infected material may suggest the etiologic agent. Although trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is the most commonly used initial therapy, it was discontinued in 50% of cases because of adverse reactions. Even though the optimal treatment has not been defined, nocardiosis in HIV-infected patients can be treated successfully with or without sulfa-containing antimicrobial regimens, along with surgical drainage when necessary. Recurrence is noted after short duration of treatment, and consideration should be given to lifelong maintenance therapy.
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PMID:Nocardiosis in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Report of 2 cases and review of the literature. 163 38

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a common opportunistic infection in both iatrogenic and HIV-induced immunosuppression. The usual sites of involvement are the gastro-intestinal tract, retina and lung. We present three cases of CMV ulceration of the oropharynx. All three patients presented with symptoms localized to the oropharynx and in each case the diagnosis was only made on histological examination of ulcer biopsy specimens. The patients all responded well to ganciclovir treatment and at writing none have required maintenance therapy (7-11 months post diagnosis).
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus ulceration of the oropharynx. 165 35

In an attempt to elucidate the cause and mechanism of the dementia and other neurological disorders that can occur in HIV-1 infection, we have quantitatively assessed neuronal populations, by means of a stereological technique (the disector), in the frontal cortex of patients with HIV infection. Eleven of sixty-five brains in the Medical Research Council Central AIDS Brain Bank were selected for study. The selected patients died without opportunistic infection or neoplasm affecting the brain; they had HIV encephalitis or minimal changes. We compared their neuronal counts with those of eight control subjects (seven died of systemic illness, one of pontine haemorrhage which did not affect the cerebral hemispheres). The neuronal numerical density was significantly lower in the HIV group than in the control group (mean [SD] 307 [46] vs 499 [113] x 10(2) per mm3; p less than 0.001). This difference represents a loss of about 38%. There was no significant difference between the HIV subgroups, which suggests that neuronal loss occurs in cases of minor pathology as well as in HIV encephalitis. This finding contributes to the understanding of dementia in AIDS patients and has important implications for their future treatment.
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PMID:Neuronal loss in the frontal cortex in HIV infection. 167 65


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