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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Survival from the time of AIDS diagnosis to death was determined retrospectively among Thai patients (> or = 13 years old) who attended a public tertiary care infectious disease hospital in a suburb of Bangkok, Thailand, from February 1987 through February 1993. An AIDS diagnosis was based on the 1987 Centers for Disease Control (CDC) definition, except Penicillium marneffei infection was included as an AIDS-defining condition. Of 329 AIDS patients, 152 (46.2%) had died. The median age at diagnosis was 31.5 years (range, 18-74) 306 patients (93.0%) were males. Reported risk categories were heterosexual contact (55.2%), injecting drug use (IDU, 22.6%), male homosexual or bisexual contact (9.5%), and unidentified risk or other (12.7%). Median survival time (Kaplan-Meier) for all patients was 7.0 months; 1-year survival probability was 39.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 31.5-46.9%). Cox's proportional hazards model showed three factors associated with survival: age, reported risk category, and presenting diagnosis. Patients aged 26 to 35 years survived longer (median survival time, 10.6 months; relative hazard [RH] = 0.61, 95% CI = 0.44-0.85, referent: others), as did patients in sexual risk categories (median survival time, 7.3 months; RH = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.40-0.78, referent: IDU and other categories). A single presenting diagnosis of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
was also associated with longer survival (median survival time, 19.9 months, RH = 0.55, 95% CI = 0.35-0.86, referent: other diagnoses). AIDS patients in the early phase of the epidemic in Bangkok have much shorter survival times than patients in developed countries, in part perhaps because they are often diagnosed late in the course of
HIV infection
. Increased attention should be given to the early diagnosis and treatment of these patients.
...
PMID:Survival of AIDS patients in the emerging epidemic in Bangkok, Thailand. 852 36
Primary multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis is an important problem in the United States. There is no report in formal literature of this pathogen in Brazilian patients. CASE REPORT--We report a case of ganglionar tuberculosis diagnosed by acid-fast smears in a male,
HIV
positive patient. Mode of acquisition of
HIV
was not determined. Treatment was started, and isoniazid, rifampicin and pyrazinamide were prescribed. The patient and his family reported strict adherence to therapy, but no improvement was observed. After 75 days, the patient was admitted in our hospital because of clinical worsening. Clinical features were the presence of large submandibular and axillar lymph nodes, respiratory insufficiency and complains of abdominal pain. He died six days after admission. Culture obtained from the ganglionar aspirate disclosed M. tuberculosis susceptible to ethambutol, but resistant to isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, ethionamide and streptomycin. DISCUSSION--Although this was a case of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, there is a concern about multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, that has been poorly evaluated in Brazil. Since high lethality and intrahospital transmission have been reported, we discuss the need of performing culture and antibiogram in suspected cases, and the prevention of the spread of M. tuberculosis to patients and health-care workers through the strict adherence to the isolation practices.
...
PMID:[Infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis with primary resistance to multiple drugs: a case report of a patient with AIDS]. 857 41
This article describes the features of active tuberculosis in
HIV
-infected injecting drug users (IDUs) from a low-rate tuberculosis area. The cohort was followed in a hospital-based
HIV
/AIDS registry, and data were extracted from the registry, patient charts, and the Tuberculosis Control Program of the Connecticut Health Department. The setting was an acute care inner-city hospital-based health care system, with a high incidence of AIDS, serving a small-to-medium urban area in Connecticut. The patients were 905
HIV
-infected IDUs whose time of
HIV
diagnosis (TOHD) was between 1984 and 1992. The outcome measures were demographics, clinical characteristics, and morbidity rates of active tuberculosis. Of the 27 IDUs who developed active tuberculosis, none were white, all but one were male, and only one was known to have had a positive purified protein derivative (PPD) reaction prior to TOHD: 59% of cases developed in patients known to be
HIV
infected, 11% occurred in established AIDS patients, and 67% qualified as
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(that is, AIDS defining by pre-1993 definitions). In 22% of cases, both Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. avium-intracellulare were isolated. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was most commonly isolated from a respiratory specimen (67%). The annual incidence rate has been < or = 1.0% since 1988. The cumulative incidence rate was highest for patients with a positive PPD reaction or a history of tuberculosis (1.4 cases/100 patient years; 52 patients; mean follow-up 4.0 years). The demographics and clinical characteristics of active tuberculosis in our
HIV
-infected IDUs are similar to those described elsewhere in the United States; the morbidity rates are low and stable. The implications of our findings on tuberculosis control in
HIV
-infected IDUs may be applicable to health care systems with low tuberculosis rates.
...
PMID:Active tuberculosis in HIV-infected injecting drug users from a low-rate tuberculosis area. 860 89
We describe the state of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
in the capital of Antananarivo, a city of high endemicity for tuberculosis but very low endemicity for
HIV infection
. The Laboratory of Mycobacteria in the Institut Pasteur of Madagascar had examined from August 94 to April 95, 543 pathological samples issued from 295 patients clinically suspected of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(64% male and 36% female). The diagnosis of tuberculosis was confirmed for 47.7% of the patients (141/295), using either the culture technique or the histopathological method: 93% of them had an unique localization whereas 7% had a double localization. The most frequent form encountered was the pleural localization (77.8%), followed by the lymphadenopathic form (8,4%) and the abdominal form (6.9%). The confirmation rate on biopsies was 67% by histopathological method compared to 55% by the culture. On the fluid samples, the confirmation rate was 20.9% using the culture. The agreement between histology and culture was 70.3%. Of the 138 strains identified, 135 were M. tuberculosis, 1 M. bovis and 2 environmental mycobacteria.
...
PMID:[Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis in Antananarivo. Principal localizations and biological diagnosis]. 863 85
Persons co-infected with mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) and
HIV
are at increased risk for developing active tuberculosis. While
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
is particularly common in patients with AIDS, tuberculous pericarditis is a very uncommon complication of AIDS in the United States. We present a case of tuberculosis involving the pericardium and review the current literature on this topic.
...
PMID:Tuberculous pericarditis in an HIV-infected patient. 865 82
The problem with the emergence of
HIV
-associated tuberculosis (which usually occurs in young adults) is that attention has been diverted away from the fact that, in the developed world, the elderly represent the biggest pool of tubercular disease and therefore the greatest pool of infection within the community. Although the incidence rate of tuberculosis continues to decline in most countries, there is evidence from parts of the developing world that rates may be beginning to increase. The presentation of the disease in the elderly is often uncharacteristic, e.g. disease tending to be more insidious in onset, pyrexia often absent and haemoptysis less common. Chest x-ray changes may also mislead the clinician in that disease is frequently present in the mid or lower zones. The elderly are probably at greater risk of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, which also presents in uncharacteristic ways. The diagnosis remains based on clinical presentation and the presence of smear and culture positivity, although some patients may be treated in the absence of microbiological proof. Standard treatment is with a combination of isoniazid, rifampicin and pyrazinamide, with or without a fourth drug such as ethambutol. The incidence of adverse effects in the elderly is much greater than that in younger patients, often resulting in the need to change the medication to drugs which are better tolerated. This may require changing to regimens which are less effective and therefore have to be taken for a longer period of time. The presence of concomitant disease such as liver or renal failure may also necessitate the administration of a suboptimal regimen. Mortality in elderly patients with tuberculosis is considerably higher than that in younger patients, even when treatment appears to have been started on time; even in the developed world mortality exceeds 30% in those patients over 70 years of age.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis in the elderly. Epidemiology and optimal management. 873 27
Our objective was twofold: firstly to evaluate the impact of AIDS on the annual increase of tuberculosis morbidity in Brazzaville; and secondly, to show its consequences on the reduced availability of hospital beds for patients treated for diseases nonrelated to AIDS. This retrospective study included 541 tuberculosis patients who were treated from 1988 to 1992 in the Department of Medicine at the Military Central Hospital in Brazzaville. The serum of all patients was tested by ELISA and Western blots for the presence of
HIV
.
HIV
and tuberculosis coinfection were very frequent (more than 30% of all AIDS cases), particularly among young people (20-45 years old).
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
cases (37%) have become almost as frequent as pulmonary tuberculosis forms (42.8%) among
HIV
positive patients, and the clinical picture is often atypical. Tuberculosis morbidity is increasing annually because of AIDS. The longer the tuberculosis patients with AIDS remain in the hospital, the fewer beds are available for other patients. For the public health programs against AIDS in developing countries, this is becoming an urgent problem to resolve.
...
PMID:[Impact of AIDS on the resurgence of tuberculosis and reduced availability of hospital beds in Brazzaville (Congo)]. 877 40
In order to describe the clinical features of AIDS, particularly injection drug use (IDU) related AIDS in patients attending the Regional Infectious Diseases Unit in Edinburgh a prospective review of the 680
HIV
-positive patients, 30% of whom were women and 68% were infected via IDU was undertaken. The commonest AIDS-related clinical problem in Edinburgh was Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP). Whilst gender differences were not apparent in terms of clinical problems, differences were observed in risk groups as previously reported; Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), cytomegalovirus (CMV) and toxoplasmosis were commoner in homo/ bisexuals whilst oesophageal candidiasis was commoner in drug users.
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
was uncommon unlike cohorts from the USA or Italy. Each patient with AIDS can expect 1-2 AIDS-related clinical events per year of survival. Considerable differences in mortality rates by risk group but not by gender were observed and explanations for this difference need to be considered further. The mortality rates for drug users were however remarkably similar to published rates from Amsterdam and the Bronx, New York.
...
PMID:Clinical features of AIDS in the Edinburgh City Hospital cohort. 879 81
A method based on DNA amplification and hybridization has been used for the rapid detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in blood samples from 38 hospitalized patients (15 human immunodeficiency virus [
HIV
] positive and 23
HIV
negative) in whom localized or disseminated forms of tuberculosis were suspected. In 32 of these patients, the diagnosis of tuberculosis was eventually confirmed by conventional bacteriological or histological procedures. M. tuberculosis DNA was detected with the PCR technique in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 9 of 11 (82%)
HIV
-infected patients and in 7 of 21 (33%)
HIV
-negative patients (P < 0.01), while M. tuberculosis blood cultures were positive in 1 of 8 (12.5%) and 1 of 18 (5.5%) patients, respectively. PCR was positive in all cases with disseminated disease in both
HIV
-negative and
HIV
-positive patients and also in the
HIV
-positive patients with
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. Seven samples from patients with documented illness other than tuberculosis and 12 specimens from healthy volunteers, including seven volunteers with a recent positive purified protein derivative test, were used as controls and had a negative PCR. These results suggest that detection of M. tuberculosis DNA in peripheral blood mononuclear cells may be a useful tool for rapid diagnosis of disseminated and extrapulmonary forms of tuberculosis, especially in an
HIV
-positive population.
...
PMID:Rapid diagnosis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteremia by PCR. 890 4
In 191 Tanzanian patients admitted to hospital with suspected
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(TB), TB was diagnosed in 158 patients; the remaining 33 patients had neither microbiological nor clinical evidence of TB. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was detected in the blood of 25 patients, in 92% by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique and in 52% by culture of buffy coat cells. The presence of mycobacterial DNA or Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria in peripheral blood (positive culture) was significantly associated with
HIV infection
; it was detected in 22 (21.4%) of 103
HIV
-seropositive patients compared to only 3 (3.5%) of 55
HIV
-seronegative patients (p < 0.009). In two-thirds of the patients with mycobacteraemia, TB can be detected by simple smears from other organ sites. In patients with suspected
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
in whom smears from the infected site are negative or not available, PCR on blood will confirm the diagnosis within 24 hours in one third of the cases.
...
PMID:PCR detection of mycobacteraemia in tanzanian patients with extrapulmonary tuberculosis. 895 May 60
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