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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
HIV
epidemic probably arose in Africa at about the same time as in the West, and there is a significant seroprevalence of
HIV
in the central African region. However, the epidemiology and clinical course of AIDS are different in Africa and in the West. In Africa males are infected as often as females, and the commonest means of transmission is heterosexual intercourse. Many
HIV
-infected people are symptomless, but many others present with or progress to generalized lymphadenopathy, pruritus, herpes zoster, herpes simplex, cellulitis, and oral candidiasis. The World Health Organization developed a clinical case-definition of AIDS in Africa, which was found to have a specificity of 90% and a sensitivity of 59% when tested in Zaire. The Kaposi's sarcoma seen in African AIDS patients is more aggressive than that seen in the West and is often visceral. Gastrointestinal AIDS (the "slim" disease) with weight loss and diarrhea is common in Africa, as are oral and
esophageal candidiasis
. In Africa Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is rare, but pulmonary tuberculosis is common. Neurological manifestations include cerebral toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus infection, headache, and terminal encephalopathy. About 60% of infants born to seropositive women are infected and die within the 1st year of life. Lack of drugs and diagnostic facilities make both diagnosis and treatment of opportunistic infections difficult.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of HIV infection in developing countries. 305 40
Of about 40 patients with presumed enteropathic Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS), i.e., oral thrush, diarrhea, and weight loss, admitted to Mulago Hospital medical wards, Uganda, from October through November 985, 23 patients were studied with upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy and stool examination. Those patients chosen for study suffered with diarrhea, weight loss, and oral candidiasis and were willing to tolerate endoscopy. Weight loss was not quantified in most patients, but generally it was profound. 10 of the patients gave a history of genital sores or venereal disease. There were 16 males and 7 females with an age range of 19-47 years. All were sexually active, and all denied homosexuality anal intercourse, and intravenous drug abuse. 4 patients had had blood transfusion. The 23 patients represented a cross-section of the population with most social classes included. 20 patients were seropositive with antibody to
HIV
. Specimens from 2 patients were lost. 1 patient was seronegative. Apart from 5 patients who had been treated with nystatin for oral thrush and clinically presumed
esophageal candidiasis
, all the patients had oral thrush at the time of endoscopy. 20 patients had obvious
esophageal candidiasis
, and 1 patient had the appearance of Kaposi's sarcoma in the esophagus. Stool examination and histology of the upper GI tract showed that 11 patients had cryptosporidiosis and 3 had isosporiasis (total of 61% of patients with coccidian enteritis). 1 case of Mycobacterium avium mycobacteriosis also was identified. The incidence of cryptosporidiosis and isosporiasis is higher in Uganda than in developed countries.
...
PMID:Enteropathic AIDS in Uganda. An endoscopic, histological and microbiological study. 312 96
Six patients with antibodies to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and with persistent gastrointestinal symptoms of
HIV infection
but without cutaneous lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma underwent endoscopy. Four also underwent barium meal examination. In all six cases small lesions were seen in the stomach at endoscopy, and histological examination of biopsy specimens taken from the lesions confirmed the diagnosis of Kaposi's sarcoma. The barium meal examinations were reported as normal in three patients and showed
oesophageal candidiasis
in the fourth. These findings suggest that Kaposi's sarcoma of the upper gastrointestinal tract is common in patients positive for HIV antibody, even those without cutaneous lesions. Endoscopy, with biopsy of suspicious lesions, is necessary to make the diagnosis and is recommended in all HIV antibody positive patients with persistent upper gastrointestinal symptoms.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal Kaposi's sarcoma in patients positive for HIV antibody without cutaneous disease. 312 68
This work, intended primarily for dentists, provides detailed information on the mechanism of action of the AIDS virus, its epidemiology and most common routes of infection, the clinical manifestations of
HIV infection
, and related oral lesions of relevance to the dentist. The work also recommends ways in which dentists can aid in diagnosis, avoid contaminating patients, and avoid being infected themselves by seropositive patients. The article begins by describing retroviruses and their mode of action and then focuses on the pathogenic mechanism of the
HIV
virus, which preferentially attacks T4 helper lymphocytes. The lymphocytes are destroyed by the viruses multiplying in their interiors. The decline in the number of T4 lymphocytes results in diminished capacity of the immune system to respond, favoring in turn the appearance of certain tumors and opportunistic infections that eventually prove fatal. The virus may also affect cells of the central nervous system, producing dementia and other disorders. Although AIDS was initially observed primarily in male homosexuals and drug addicts in the US and Europe, it has had a relatively even sex ratio in Africa, where few victims have been homosexuals or drug addicts. The virus is now found in most of the world's countries and is known to be spread primarily through sexual contact. Other routes of transmission are by contaminated hypodermic needles, prenatal infection, and infected blood transfusions. There is still no good evidence that saliva can be a route of contamination. Lesions of the oral cavity that indicate immune deficiency include Candidiasis, gingivostomatitis, necrosing ulcer, Histoplasmosis, Herpes simplex, papillomas and condylomas, Leukoplasia vellosa, Kaposi's sarcoma, some cancers, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. European and American studies indicate that 75% of AIDS patients have oral or oral-
esophageal candidiasis
, which can occur in 3 forms. Most of these oral manifestations are very rare in the general population. The dentist should wear protective clothing to prevent direct transmission and should carefully discard or disinfect used materials and supplies. Tools and the work area should be carefully decontaminated after each patient is seen.
...
PMID:[Human acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)]. 333 54
We report 15 cases of symptomatic
HIV infection
seen in Paris between June 1983 and June 1985 in Congolese patients. The first signs were diarrhea, weight loss, fever, pruritus. Disseminated lymphadenopathy was frequent. Twelve patients had AIDS, and the opportunistic infections were: isosporosis,
oesophageal candidiasis
, cerebral toxoplasmosis, Kaposi's sarcoma, CNS' cryptococcosis, cutaneo-mucosal.
...
PMID:[Clinical and biological consequences of human immunodeficiency virus (LAV) infection in 15 Congolese subjects]. 364 75
A 37-year-old female patient reported marked weight loss, prolonged alopecia, recurrent infections and watery diarrhoea. Examination revealed Salmonella infection, candidiasis and immunological signs of previous toxoplasmosis. Between 1978 and 1981, the patient had had close sexual relations to a patient with haemophilia A. Due to this fact, AIDS was suspected. Serological tests for
HIV
were not available at the time. The findings in DNA image cytometry (nuclear DNA inclusion bodies, polyploid lymphocyte nuclei and binuclear lymphocytes) suggested a viral infection of the lymphoid cells. Electron microscopy revealed in hepatocytes and cerebral cells intranuclear inclusion bodies whose size and contents were not compatible with an infection caused by cytomegalovirus, herpes virus or Epstein-Barr virus. In autopsy, infections of various organ systems such as pneumonia, tracheobronchitis, urocystitis, pyelonephritis,
Candida oesophagitis
and enteritis were found.
...
PMID:[AIDS in a woman having had sexual relations with a patient with hemophilia A. Characteristic findings in DNA image cytometry]. 379 20
Four hundred and eighty six infected adults (90.7% men) were prospectively followed from 1988 to 1993 at a multiprofessional center in Santiago, Chile. 87.8% of male patients (pts)--84% of them homo/bisexual--and 64.4% of women acquired the infection sexually. At the beginning of the follow up (F/U) 51% of men and 71% of women were asymptomatic and 30% of the total group had AIDS. (AIDS definition: CDC 1993, excluded CD4 lymphocyte count < 200 x mm3). 240/486 (49.4%) had developed AIDS at the end of the study (12/31/93). AIDS defining events (ADE) were: interstitial pneumonia (confirmed or suggestive as caused by P. carinii [PCP]), 25%; tuberculosis (all forms), 22.1%; wasting, 13.8%; Kaposi Sarcoma, 9.2%;
esophageal candidiasis
, 6.7%; isosporiasis, 5.4%. Of all PCP cases, 72% were ADE, the rest, post.AIDS'. As expected, AIDS pts continued having major complications (mainly bacterial pneumonias, PCPs, esophagitis, tuberculosis and diarrhea due to I. belli and Cryptosporidium. Less frequently, but also observed, were toxoplasmic encephalitis and cryptococcal meningitis). Known mortality (excluded abandonment of F/U) was 27% for the whole group and varied from 5.8%, 51.6% to 69.2% for the first, 4th and 6th year of F/U respectively. For II-III CDC pts the mortality was 5% and 57% and for IV CDC pts it was 38% and 100% during the first and 6th year of F/U respectively. 36%, 53%, 74% and 85% of the pts followed for 1, 3, 5 and 6 years respectively had developed AIDS by the end of 1993. Multifactorial causes with either diarrhea, wasting or both were responsible for the death in half the pts in whom this was known, 15% died of respiratory complications and 5.7% of cryptococcal meningitis. 80% of AIDS pts survived their ADE. This study has provided information about the clinical profile of the
HIV infection
and natural history of the disease in Chile.
...
PMID:[Clinical characteristics and natural history of human immunodeficiency virus infection. Study in a Chilean population served at a multiprofessional pilot center]. 756 47
To further characterize the natural history of
HIV infection
in women in the antiretroviral era, we performed a longitudinal, descriptive analysis of demographic features, clinical characteristics, patterns of antiretroviral and prophylactic therapy, disease progression, and survival in a cohort of women followed at a university medical center from 1986 to 1992. Eighty-two women (39 white [non-Hispanic], 33 African-American, 10 Hispanic) were followed for a median of 13 months (range 3-61 months). Sixty-two women received antiretroviral therapy, 34 through participation in a clinical trial.
Candida esophagitis
and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia were the most common AIDS-defining conditions, accounting for 77% of all initial AIDS-defining diagnoses. Gynecologic complications affected 34 women (41%) and included recurrent Candida vaginitis in 26, abnormal PAP smears/cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in 10, and recurrent genital herpes simplex virus disease in seven. Median survival (Kaplan-Meier) from the time of
HIV
serodiagnosis was > 59 months; median survival following an AIDS diagnosis was 27 months. No survival differences were detected based on race, insurance status, or mode of
HIV
transmission. Women who participated in antiretroviral therapy clinical trials had a statistically significantly longer duration of survival compared with nonparticipants. Candida infections and gynecologic diseases were common in this population. Overall survival was similar to that reported for men.
...
PMID:HIV infection in women: an observational study of clinical characteristics, disease progression, and survival for a cohort of women in Chicago. 769 46
We report a 39-year-old male who presented with tuberculous meningitis and was found also to be
HIV
-infected. In the course of his illness, he developed multiple opportunistic infections such as herpes genitalis,
oesophageal candidiasis
, CMV retinitis and finally succumbed to Penicillium marneffei septicaemia.
...
PMID:Penicillium marneffei infection in an AIDS patient--a first case report from Malaysia. 775 60
The two major risk groups for acquisition of
HIV
in the UK are gay men and IDUs. Individuals from these risk groups vary in a number of respects in their life-style, which have the potential to affect the course of their
HIV disease
. This study compares gay men and IDUs from the Lothian Region of Scotland with respect to their AIDS defining diagnosis and subsequent CDC (Centers for Disease Control) stage IV events. Comparisons were made between the two risk groups for their AIDS defining diagnosis by performing chi square tests, Mann-Whitney tests and logistic regression. Subsequent CDC stage IV events were analysed using ordinal logistic regression and Cox regression. 89 IDUs and 56 gay men were included in the analysis.
Oesophageal candida
was a commoner AIDS-defining diagnosis in IDUs than gay men and Kaposi's sarcoma was diagnosed more frequently in gay men than IDUs. Subsequently oesophageal candida was also commoner in IDUs and CMV retinitis was seen more frequently in gay men. The role of prophylaxis and differences in diet are discussed as possible causes of the observed differences in the incidence of oesophageal candida. The higher incidence of CMV retinitis in gay men probably reflects the high level of sexual acquisition of CMV.
...
PMID:A comparison of AIDS-defining events and subsequent CDC stage IV events in IDUs and gay men. 784 20
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