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

In a national multicentre study, 229 pregnancies in 219 HIV-positive women were prospectively followed up between January 1, 1990, and October 30, 1993. 69.8% were infected by intravenous drug abuse and 91.5% were asymptomatic (CDC classes II and III) in early pregnancy. 48 (21.0%) were first discovered to be HIV-infected during the index pregnancy: 46 of these had risk factors. The present epidemiologic development does not seem to warrant a general HIV-screening in pregnancy at this time. 71 pregnancies (31%) were terminated; 158 children were born, 17 (23.3%) of the 73 definitely classified are HIV-infected. An asymptomatic HIV infection with a sufficiently high (> 200/microliters) CD4 cell count has no proven influence on the pregnancy. Otherwise, however, maternal infectious diseases can lead to prematurity. For mothers with i.v. drug abuse, there is a significantly higher incidence of prematurity and fetal growth retardation. The maternal HIV infection can be transmitted to the child either during pregnancy or at delivery. The incidence of vertical transmission in our study was 23.3%; the most predictive parameter for a prenatal HIV transmission is a low anti-p24 antibody titre. The risk of intrapartum transmission seems to be somewhat, but not significantly, reduced for primary Caesarean sections. Recently, prophylaxis with Zidovudin during pregnancy, beginning after the 14th GW, was found to reduce vertical HIV-transmission by 66%. Since the virus can also be transmitted through mothers' milk, HIV-positive mothers should not nurse their babies. Maternal infections are significantly more frequent in HIV-positive women, and are a risk factor for prematurity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Pregnancies in HIV infected women in Switzerland]. 755 20

The somatic care of HIV-infected intravenous drug abusers (IVDUs) is often combined with many problems. The addict is often an unpopular patient, but society must assume responsibility for him or her and it is important to solve care problems in an appropriate way. This study was undertaken in order to investigate what kind of care addicts want when they become somatically ill. A questionnaire was given to patients who acquired HIV infection due to intravenous drug abuse, who visited an outpatient clinic for HIV-infected patients at the Department of Infectious Disease, Huddinge Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. A total of 72 of the original 78 questionnaires could be evaluated. Thirty respondents took part in the Stockholm Methadone Programme. The patients were asked to rank the importance of professional competence among the staff. The patients ranked competence in pain treatment highest followed by competence in somatic medical care. Lower ranked, but still perceived as important, was competence in psychiatric medical care and social welfare work. Experience in treatment of addiction was ranked as less important. It can be concluded that it is fruitful to ask IVDUs about their preferences concerning care.
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PMID:Somatic care wanted by HIV-infected intravenous drug abusers: the patients' opinions and experiences. 757 12

Severe immunodeficiency is associated with reactivation of latent Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) that is manifested by virus replication. It is unknown whether EBV replication also occurs in the Hodgkin's disease (HD) tissue of patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Therefore, we studied paraffin-embedded lymph nodes from 13 cases of HIV-associated HD to determine the latent or replicative state of EBV infection. All patients were seropositive HIV-infected men; additional clinical information was available for 12 patients. The risk factor(s) for HIV infection were homosexuality (n = 7), intravenous drug abuse (n = 2), homosexuality and intravenous drug abuse (n = 1), sexual promiscuity (n = 1), or hemophilia (n = 1). Advanced clinical stage and B symptoms were common at the time of initial diagnosis of HD. The histological subtype of Hodgkin's disease was universally mixed cellularity, except for a single case classified as nodular sclerosis. Seven cases exhibited foci of relative lymphoid depletion. Five cases contained foci of necrosis. Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells and RS cell variants were positive for CD30/BerH2 and negative for CD45/LCA, CD45RO/UCHL1, and CD20/L26 in all cases. Tumor cells were positive for CD15/LeuM1 in seven cases. In all 13 cases, RS cells and RS cell variants were infected by latent EBV as shown by in situ hybridization to EBV-encoded ribonucleic acid (EBER1). In 12 of 13 cases neoplastic cells coexpressed EBV latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1). EBV replication was examined by two different methods: immunohistochemistry to identify EBV-encoded BZLF1 protein and in situ hybridization to detect EBV BHLF1 transcripts. No positivity in RS or RS cell variants was detected with either assay of EBV replication (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0% to 23%). The findings confirm that EBV is detected more frequently in HIV-associated HD when compared with immunocompetent patients with HD. The findings also suggest that EBV is tightly latent within RS and RS cell variants of HIV-associated HD. It appears that factors other than host immune status are important in maintaining EBV latency in HIV-associated HD.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-associated Hodgkin's disease contains latent, not replicative, Epstein-Barr virus. 881 1

In this study of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection prevalence in France, the prevalence of antibodies to HCV (as tested by second generation ELISA, with RIBA-2 confirmation in ELISA 2 positive samples) was found to be low (0.3%) in the healthy general population. HCV infection prevalence increased in the general population in association with African or Asian origin and risk factors such as bisexuality, previous history of transfusion, and intravenous drug abuse. The prevalence of anti-HCV infection was also higher in specific patient groups infected with HIV or a history of transfusion or haemodialysis.
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PMID:Prevalence of hepatitis C virus antibodies in the general population and in selected groups of patients in Limoges, France. 768 15

From a cohort of 837 adult, mainly homosexual HIV-infected patients, 76 bacteremic/fungemic episodes were identified in 63 patients over a 5-year period. Compared with an age-matched reference population with an incidence of 10.3 bacteremias/10,000 person-years, the incidence was 170 among pre-AIDS (p < 0.001) and 3,200 among AIDS patients (p < 0.001). Staphylococcal infections comprised 35% of all episodes, while the HIV-related pathogens Streptococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella spp. and C. neoformans together accounted for 34%. The overall mortality associated with clinical bacteremia was 12%, but nil for Salmonella spp. and S. pneumoniae. Predisposing factors for the infection were: low CD4 count (< 100 x 10(6)/l) in 71%, permanent intravenous line, 44%; neutropenia, 11% and active intravenous drug abuse, 7%. Hence, in this population, intensified hygienic precautions for intravenous lines should be the primary target for intervention. Long-term cotrimoxazole prophylaxis may prevent bacteremia with S. pneumoniae and Salmonella spp.
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PMID:Bacteremia in HIV-positive and AIDS patients: incidence, species distribution, risk-factors, outcome, and influence of long-term prophylactic antibiotic treatment. 774 85

This retrospective study determined the clinical course of lung cancer in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. A total of 23 patients with HIV infection archived as lung cancer were studied: 16 were identified from about 1,000 lung cancer patients entered in the tumor registry and medical records of Jackson Memorial Hospital, 7 were identified from about 1,000 HIV-positive patients entered in the Special Immunology registry of Veterans Administration Medical Center, 4 patients did not have pathologic confirmation of lung cancer, and 19 patients, all men, met the criteria for analysis (histopathologic diagnosis of lung cancer and HIV+ by serology). The median age was 47 (range: 36-66). Risk factors for HIV were homosexuality (6 patients), blood transfusion (3), promiscuity (5), intravenous drug abuse (4), and none (3). Six patients had a history of coexistent pulmonary tuberculosis and 5 had Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Median survival from diagnosis of lung cancer was 3 months. Advanced stages of both HIV infection and lung cancer may account for the poor survival. All patients were men and noted to be younger than other patients with lung cancer.
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PMID:Lung cancer in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 784 61

With the observation of the occurrence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection among leprosy patients in our pilot study carried out in Tamil Nadu, South India, a case-control study was planned to explore whether HIV infection is a risk factor for leprosy and to understand the characteristics of HIV infection and high-risk behaviors among leprosy patients. We screened 556 patients and 1004 nonleprosy controls (matching 502 cases for age, sex and area of residence) for HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies. They also were interviewed for personal information on history of blood transfusion, intravenous drug abuse, high-risk sexual behavior, and sexually transmitted diseases. Of the 1019 total cases screened (of both pilot and extended studies), 5 were found to be position for HIV antibodies (HIV-1 = 4, HIV-2 = 1); of the 1019 nonleprosy controls, 6 were positive for HIV-1 antibodies. An analysis by odds ratio revealed no association between leprosy and HIV infection (OR = 0.824, 95% CI = 0.201-3.593). A strong association was found only between high-risk behavior and HIV infection (OR = 5.186, 95% CI = 1.717-15.667). However, unmarried, unmarried after 30 years of age, exposure to spouses of the leprosy patients, and a history of surgery were all observed to be significantly more common among leprosy patients than the controls.
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PMID:Prevalence of HIV infection and high-risk characteristics among leprosy patients of south India; a case-control study. 786 49

Motor tests comprising the analysis of postural tremor, most rapid voluntary alternating index finger movements (MRAM) and the rise time of most rapid index finger extensions (CT) allow us to quantify HIV-associated minor motor deficits electrophysiologically. The electrophysiological results in 57 HIV-positive individuals who acquired HIV infection by intravenous drug abuse (IVDA) were compared with those of 57 matched HIV-positive homosexuals and 98 HIV-negative controls to evaluate a possible additional influence of IVDA on motor performance. Motor deficits showed no differences between HIV-positive i.v. drug abusers and homosexuals, revealing a highly significant slowing of MRAM and prolongation of CT to an almost identical extent. Thus, in HIV-infected individuals minor motor deficits are characteristic early signs of subclinical central nervous system involvement regardless of the mode of HIV infection.
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PMID:HIV-specific changes in the motor performance of HIV-positive intravenous drug abusers. 789 48

Some 456 patients with HIV-associated skin disorders were documented in the HIV follow-up clinics at the Department of Dermatology, University Medical Center Steglitz, Berlin, during the years 1982-1992. Males comprised 91% of the patients. The most important risk groups for HIV infection were homosexual and bisexual men (77.9%) and individuals with intravenous drug abuse (12.7%). The most frequent dermatological diagnoses were oral candidosis (44.5%), seborrhoeic dermatitis (38.6%), folliculitis (32.9%) and Kaposi's sarcoma (23.5%). Altogether, 138 of the patients died during the time of observation. The most frequent cause of death was disseminated Kaposi's sarcoma (26.8%). A significant proportion of the patients developed skin diseases before significant reduction of the circulating CD4+ lymphocytes. In a still satisfactory immune situation, predominantly infections of the skin with dermatophytes (tinea), human papilloma viruses (warts) and bacteria (pyodermas) were observed. A considerable number of the HIV patients who developed zoster were also still in a favourable immune status; another 50% of these cases, however, developed the disease with reduced CD4+ lymphocyte count (< 300/microliters). Skin manifestations that tended to occur later in the course of HIV infection were oral candidosis, oral hairy leukoplakia, herpes genitoanalis, mollusca contagiosa and Kaposi's sarcoma, in spite of their early appearance in some cases. In the large majority of these patients the immunological parameters were already clearly reduced. Fungal, bacterial and viral infections of the skin, especially with extended skin involvement, may manifest themselves during the early phases of HIV infection. The number and severity of the skin manifestations increase with progressing immunosuppression, and treatment is often a difficult challenge for the dermatologist.
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PMID:[HIV-associated dermatoses and their prevalence in 456 HIV-infected patients. Relation to immune status and its importance as a diagnostic marker]. 796 Jul 70

A 31-year-old male who presented with a true aneurysm of the ascending aorta had for 5 years been seropositive for HIV-1 following intravenous drug abuse. Elective aneurysmectomy was refused. Controls by computerized tomography and echocardiography gave evidence of a progressive dilatation during the following 8 months. In February 1992 a further increase of the aneurysm with severe thoracic pain necessitated an emergency graft implantation. Histopathology of the resected aorta revealed a granulomatous giant cell mesaortitis. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient remained free of cardiovascular symptoms, but died 25 months later due to multiple HIV-associated opportunistic infections. The differential diagnosis (Marfan's syndrome, vasculitis due to tuberculosis, syphilis and other infectious agents, rheumatological diseases, HIV-associated vasculitis) and the etiopathological considerations are discussed.
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PMID:[True aneurysm of the ascending aorta in HIV disease]. 773 49


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