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In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 200 children with severe malnutrition and controls matched for age, sex, and area of residence were screened for serological evidence of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) over 5 months in 1988. The prevalence of HIV-1 antibodies in the malnourished group was 25.5% (51 of 200) compared with 1.5% (three of 200) in the controls. The seroprevalence rate was equally high in malnourished children above the age of 18 months (26 of 102; 25.5%), as in those below this age (25 of 98; 25.5%). The prevalence rate was higher in children with marasmus (38.2%) as compared to children with marasmic-kwashiorkor (12.3%) or kwashiorkor (12.2%). The prevalence of clinical features known to be associated with AIDS was higher in the HIV seropositive malnourished children as compared to the seronegative children. The modified World Health Organization clinical case definition of AIDS in children was also evaluated and found to have a low sensitivity and positive predictive value (62.8 and 57.1%, respectively) but a fairly high specificity (83.9%). It is recommended to routinely rule out HIV infection in malnourished children, especially those with marasmus.
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PMID:Prevalence of HIV-1 infection and symptomatology of AIDS in severely malnourished children in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. 191 83

It is important for healthcare professionals caring for HIV-infected individuals to understand the relationship among nutrition, HIV infection, and the immune system. Progressive weight loss is a major component of the clinical syndrome in persons with HIV infection and AIDS. Weight loss occurs for a variety of reasons, which, when recognized, may be preventable or treatable. Malnutrition occurring with weight loss may adversely affect the function of the immune system and further impair the infected individual's ability to avoid or recover from infection. Nursing interventions in nutritional care, outlined in this article, can help these clients improve both the quantity and quality of their lives.
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PMID:Wasting and malnutrition in patients with HIV/AIDS. 191 31

Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the development of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a long-term process in many individuals. The progression of HIV disease is beginning to demonstrate many commonalities with other chronic diseases. Although research has not yet shown clear-out evidence that diet can make a difference in the course of disease in HIV-infected clients, nutrition should be viewed as an important component of holistic care for HIV-infected clients because: 1) wasting and symptoms of malnutrition are common problems associated with these clients; and 2) nutrition has proven to be a beneficial component of care in other chronic conditions. This paper uses the model developed by Winett, King and Altman (1989) to review nutritional support in HIV infection from a multilevel perspective ranging from personal psychology to institutional/societal controls. The author concludes that there is a potential benefit from integrating nutritional assessment, diagnosis and education into the holistic care of HIV-infected clients at the personal, interpersonal, organizational and societal levels.
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PMID:Nutritional support in HIV infection: a multilevel analysis. 191 56

In the United States, the decades preceding the 1980s were characterized by a decline in the incidence of tuberculosis. More recently, the trend has undergone a significant reversal: Case rates have been increasing by 3% to 6% annually. In 1990, more than 25,700 cases were reported to the Centers for Disease Control. In a sense, tuberculosis is adapting to the '90s. The recent increase in its incidence tends to affect populations with identifiable characteristics. Among the most important of these groups are the populations at high risk for infection by the human immunodeficiency virus. The increase is also fueled by cases in populations that are medically underserved, including foreign-born persons from high-prevalence countries, persons with low incomes, and persons living in long-term-care facilities--especially persons with previous tuberculosis infection. Thus, factors such as homelessness, chronic alcohol or drug abuse, malnutrition, and crowded living conditions continue to favor development and transmission of disease. The increase in the incidence of tuberculosis appears to be greatest when subpopulations in such circumstances are also at high risk for HIV infection. Complex issues in the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis arise from these epidemiologic patterns. HIV infection is associated with unusual presentations of tuberculosis. Thus, the clinician must maintain a high index of suspicion for the disease in the setting of HIV infection or risk of the infection. The populations at greatest risk are likely to be mistrustful of the medical system, making the long-term administration of potentially toxic chemotherapy more difficult than it already is. Chronic substance abuse may complicate compliance and add further difficulties to the monitoring of chemotherapy. At the same time, the monitoring becomes even more important in the physician's effort to minimize adverse effects of the medications. Outbreaks of drug-resistant disease have recently occurred, complicating the selection of drugs and affecting the duration of treatment. Despite all of these problems, it is essential to establish a diagnosis and initiate treatment rapidly, both to arrest the disease process and to limit its transmission. Since Mycobacterium tuberculosis is spread to uninfected persons in aerosols generated by coughing or sneezing, the infectiousness of a patient with active disease can be related, at least in part, to the number of organisms seen on sputum smears. Initiation of therapy is followed by a rapid decline in infectivity.
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PMID:Tuberculosis: a disease of the 1990s. 191 97

Between November 1986-March 1990, microbiologists from the Indira Gandhi Medical College in Shimla in Himachal Pradesh, India used the ELISA technique to test 2645 serum samples for HIV. HIV positive samples were confirmed with the Western Blot technique. The samples were classified into 4 groups: individuals at sexually transmitted disease clinics, voluntary blood donors, hospital staff who handle blood and blood products, and foreign nationals. 77% were males. 1 individual sampled was a eunuch. Only 2 people tested positive for HIV. Both were male Canadians. 1 was a heterosexual with multiple partners and had been in Africa, China, France, Nepal, and Tibet. He went to the outpatient department of the Indira Gandhi Hospital in Shimla with a 4 month history of bloody diarrhea. Hospital staff found lymphadenopathy and consolidation of the right paracardiac border. The 2nd HIV positive foreign national presented at the District Hospital in Kullu with loss of appetite and weight. He later developed persistent diarrhea. Clinicians had earlier diagnosed cancer of the stomach, gross malnutrition, and peripheral neuropathy. Hospital staff did not follow up on these 2 Canadians. Even though none of the people from Himachal Pradesh tested positive for HIV, the fact that 2 foreign tourists were HIV positive poses a potential threat for the spread of HIV among these people. Other studies has shown the HIV infection has indeed been introduced in India from foreign nationals from USA, Canada, Germany, and Africa.
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PMID:Seroprevalence of HIV infection in Himachal Pradesh. 191 66

Sixteen human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-seropositive children aged 5 to 12 years (nine girls and seven boys), born to HIV-1-infected mothers, were diagnosed between 1984 and 1987 in Kigali, Rwanda. They were compared with a group of age- and sex-matched HIV-1-seronegative children consecutively selected from the outpatient department. Two subjects were asymptomatic. Chronic cough was the most frequent symptom (seven of 16 patients). The most common signs were short stature (12 of 16 patients), low weight for age (seven of 16 patients), chronic parotitis (eight of 16 patients), persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (seven of 16 patients), and pulmonary tuberculosis (four of 16 patients). Lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis was diagnosed on radiologic grounds in five of 16 patients. Evidence of perivasculitis in the fundus was noted in three of 16 patients. Two children died during the study period (mean duration of follow-up, 40 months; range, 27 to 62 months); none of the other children had life-threatening infection or loss of developmental milestones. Immunologic assessment in the 16 children revealed high levels of IgG, decreased CD4+/CD8+ ratio, and skin test anergy. Endocrinologic investigations revealed normal thyroid function and normal basal human growth hormone levels but low basal insulinlike growth factor I levels (0.21 +/- 0.07 vs 0.44 +/- 0.20 U/mL for controls). In Kigali, perinatally HIV-1-infected children surviving beyond 5 years of age often present with moderate signs and symptoms, principally pulmonary involvement, chronic parotitis, and persistent generalized lymphadenopathy. Short stature is the major clinical manifestation in these patients and may be due, in part, to low growth hormone secretion rather than to malnutrition.
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PMID:Clinical and endocrinologic manifestations in perinatally human immunodeficiency virus type 1--Infected children aged 5 years or older. 195 Dec 15

Patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) frequently develop hepatic dysfunction. Although hepatic injury may indirectly result from malnutrition, hypotension, administered medications, sepsis, or other conditions, the hepatic injury is frequently due to opportunistic hepatic infection, directly related to AIDS. Infection with Mycobacterium avium intracellulare typically occurs in patients with advanced immunocompromise and with systemic symptoms due to widely disseminated infection. In contrast, hepatic tuberculosis often occurs with less advanced immunocompromise. Cytomegaloviral infection may produce a hepatitis. Cytomegaloviral and cryptosporidial infections have been implicated as causes of acalculous cholecystitis and of a secondary sclerosing cholangitis. About 10-20% of patients with AIDS have chronic hepatitis B infection. These patients tend to develop minimal hepatic inflammation and necrosis. The clinical findings in patients with hepatic cryptococcal infection are usually due to concomitant extrahepatic infection. Hepatic histoplasmosis usually develops as part of a widely disseminated infection with systemic symptoms. Hepatic involvement by Kaposi's sarcoma is rarely documented ante mortem because an unguided liver biopsy is an insensitive diagnostic procedure. Patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the liver typically have lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, and systemic symptoms. As a pragmatic approach, patients with liver dysfunction and HIV-related disease should have a sonographic or computerized tomographic examination of the liver. Patients with dilated bile ducts should undergo endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography because opportunistic infection may produce biliary obstruction. Patients with a focal hepatic lesion should be considered for a guided liver biopsy. Patients with a significantly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level should be considered for a percutaneous liver biopsy. When performed for these indications, liver biopsy will demonstrate a significant disease involving the liver in about 50% of patients with AIDS and in about 25% of patients who are HIV seropositive but who are not known to have AIDS. The clinical impact of a diagnostic biopsy is blunted by a lack of efficacious therapy for many opportunistic infections.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary manifestations of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 198 33

Intestinal malabsorption is a recognized cause of malnutrition in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. However, the relationships among human immunodeficiency virus infection, morphological changes in the intestine, and development of intestinal malabsorption are not well established. Nine patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus underwent tests of intestinal absorption and jejunal biopsies for morphometric measurements, enzyme assays, and virus detection by in situ hybridization. Steatorrhea and low lactase activities were found in more than 85% of the patients. All biopsy specimens were abnormal with reversal of the ratio of villus length to crypt depth in seven and enlarged enterocyte nuclear size in nine. Human immunodeficiency virus was detected in five jejunal biopsy specimens, within villus enterocytes of one patient who had the most severe malabsorption of the group and in four other biopsy specimens in mononuclear infiltrating cells of the lamina propria. These results suggest that human immunodeficiency virus infection of the small intestinal mucosa is an early event that is associated with altered enterocyte differentiation and function.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection of enterocytes and mononuclear cells in human jejunal mucosa. 201 58

Fluconazole, a new triazole derivative, was evaluated in a pilot study of 34 episodes of candidiasis in 24 children. All the patients had predisposing conditions, such as human immunodeficiency virus infection, cancer, organ or bone marrow transplantation, neonatal age and malnutrition, and obstructive uropathy. The drug was administered at 6 mg/kg (body weight) once daily either orally or intravenously. Two patients with fungemia due to Candida parapsilosis required an increased dosage of 12 mg/kg. Clinical and microbiological success was achieved in 30 of 34 cases (88%). Drug-related transaminase increases were observed in two cases (6%). Fluconazole may represent an effective alternative to amphotericin B in the treatment of candidiasis in children. Comparative trials are necessary to assess optimal dosages and efficacy.
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PMID:Fluconazole in the treatment of candidiasis in immunocompromised children. 202 68

To investigate recent trends in pediatric HIV-1 infection and the early impact of a blood screening program begun in 1 hospital in Kinshasa, Zaire, the authors evaluated 1110 consecutive children seen in the pediatric emergency ward of the city's largest hospital in November 1988. The HIV-1 seroprevalence was 5.0%, not significantly higher than the 3.8% rate found in 1986 (p=0.2). The seropositivity rate was bimodally distributed; children 6 months of age had a higher rate (12.6%) than children 6-11 months old (1.9%; OR+7.6; p0.0001) and children 1-13 years old (4.1%; OR+3.4; p0.0001). Seropositive children or= 1 year of age were more likely than seronegative children to be anemic and to have signs of malnutrition. A previous blood transfusion was associated with HIV-1 seropositivity among children or= 1 year of age (OR=5.4, p0.0005), but not among younger children. 52% of seropositive children or= 1 year of age had received a transfusion (etiological fraction=42%). The association with seropositivity was higher for those who had received a transfusion before 1987 than for those who received 1 since that time (OR=4.8, p=0.01). These findings suggest a relatively stable, high pediatric HIV-1 seroprevalence in Kinshasa and a decreased but continuous risk of transfusions. Expansion of currently limited blood transfusion screening programs and the development of new strategies for limiting transfusions and anemia prevention are necessary.
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PMID:Trends and risk factors for HIV-1 seropositivity among outpatient children, Kinshasa, Zaire. 208


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