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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
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Background: Big cities were particularly affected by tuberculosis in the 1990s. Methods: We studied 141 cases of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in patients not infected by HIV in the northeastern suburbs of Paris. Results: A total of 84 men and 57 women were included in the study. Their average age at diagnosis was 42.2 years. Some 73.6% of the patients were foreign-born. A total of 182 sites were identified in 141 patients. There was an association with pulmonary tuberculosis in 38 cases. The sites were: lymph node (48.9%), pleural (25.5%), skeletal (22.7%), genitourinary (5.7%), and meninges (5%). Unfavorable social conditions were frequently observed. The average duration of treatment was 10 months. Twenty-four adverse drug effects were noted. Sixty-eight strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis were isolated. Five cases of primary resistance to at least one antituberculous drug and only one case of multidrug resistance were observed. Some 95.7% of the 93 patients who were not lost to follow up were cured. Conclusion: Independently of HIV infection, extrapulmonary tuberculosis is still present, particularly in the suburbs of big cities, where social conditions are poor. The significant number of patients lost to follow-up demands that measures be adapted for the therapeutic management of these patients.
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PMID:Extrapulmonary tuberculosis in the northeastern suburbs of Paris: 141 cases. 1085 20

CD4 and CD8 lymphocyte counts were determined in 59 HIV seropositive and 41 HIV seronegative newly diagnosed tuberculosis patients in Pune. There were significant differences in the CD4 counts and CD4/CD8 ratios between HIV seropositive and HIV seronegative tuberculosis patients. Majority of the HIV seropositive patients had a CD4 count less than 500 cells/cu.mm, whereas among the HIV seronegative patients, majority had a CD4 count more than 500 cells/cu.mm. In HIV seropositive patients with extrapulmonary and pulmonary tuberculosis, the CD4 counts were lower than in those who had only pulmonary or extrapulmonary tuberculosis. There was no significant differences in the CD8 counts between HIV seropositive and HIV seronegative tuberculosis patients, except for patients with pulmonary cavity, where the CD8 counts were significantly higher in HIV seropositive tuberculosis patients. In HIV seropositive individuals with pulmonary tuberculosis, the CD8 counts in those with pulmonary cavity were higher than in those without any pulmonary cavity. Absence of cavitation and presence of pulmonary with extrapulmonary tuberculosis occurred when immune activation was at a lower level.
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PMID:Preliminary observations on lymphocyte subpopulations in HIV seropositive & HIV seronegative tuberculosis patients in Pune, India. 1096 86

There is little information about long-term follow-up in patients with smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) or extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) who have been treated under routine programme conditions in sub-Saharan Africa. A prospective study was carried out to determine outcome 32 months from start of treatment in an unselected cohort of 827 adults TB inpatients registered at Zomba Hospital, Malawi, in 1 July-31 December 1995. By 32 months, 351 (42%) patients had died. Death rates were 30% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 25-35%) in 386 patients with smear-positive PTB, 60% (95% CI 53-67%) in 211 patients with smear-negative PTB and 47% (95% CI 40-54%) in 230 patients with EPTB. Of the 793 patients with concordant HIV test results 612 (77%) were HIV seropositive: 47% HIV-positive patients were dead by 32 months compared with 27% HIV-negative patients (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 2.3; 95% CI 1.7-3.1, P < 0.001). Smear-negative PTB patients had the highest death rates during the 32-month follow-up (HR 2.7; 95% CI 2.1-3.5, P < 0.001 compared to smear-positive patients), followed by EPTB patients (HR 1.9; 95% CI 1.5-2.5, P < 0.001 compared to smear-positive patients). When analysis was restricted to after the treatment period had finished (i.e., months 12-32), the differences in mortality were maintained for HIV-serostatus and for types of TB. Low-cost, easy to implement strategies for reducing mortality in HIV-positive TB patients in sub-Saharan Africa (such as the use of trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole prophylaxis) need to be tested urgently in programme settings.
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PMID:High mortality rates in tuberculosis patients in Zomba Hospital, Malawi, during 32 months of follow-up. 1097 7

Data were collected on 6578 patients diagnosed with AIDS at 52 clinical centres in 17 European countries during an 1-year period from 1979 to 1989. The centres were divided into four regions, North, Central, Southeast, and Southwest. Differences in the incidence of most AIDS-defining opportunistic infections and malignancies were found. After adjusting for known possible confounders, statistically significant differences between regions remained. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) was more common in Northern Europe, Kaposi's sarcoma and toxoplasmosis in Central Europe, cytomegalovirus retinitis in South-eastern Europe, and extrapulmonary tuberculosis in South-western Europe. These differences we attribute primarily to different degrees of exposure to the respective underlying pathogens. The prevalence of these and other micro-organisms will determine the clinical course of HIV infections in parts of Eastern Europe and elsewhere where the virus now is spreading.
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PMID:Regional differences in presentation of AIDS in Europe. 1105 69

The incidence of extrapulmonary tuberculosis is rising. The patients are predominantly immigrants and HIV-infected persons. Tuberculous lymphadenitis of the neck is the most common presentation, in the Netherlands about 200 patients a year. Fine needle aspiration with auramine/Ziehl-Neelsen stain investigation, culture and cytological examination is the diagnostic procedure of choice. If this fails to be conclusive excision biopsy is the next step. If the diagnosis is suspected on clinical, epidemiological, laboratory and bacteriological (presence of acid-fast bacilli) or cytological/histological grounds, treatment is always started, awaiting culture results. The principles for treatment are the same as for pulmonary tuberculosis. On the basis of the available literature it can be proposed to shorten the duration of treatment from 9 to 6 months.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculous lymphadenitis of the neck]. 1110 67

For the past two decades the incidence of tuberculosis has been increasing, especially in developed countries. This is due to immigration from endemic countries, newly developed drug resistance, poor hygienic conditions for citizens of low socioeconomic status, and the spread of HIV-related immunodeficiency. Cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis is the most common form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis. In relation to the patients' age and immunocompetence, it is caused by typical or atypical mycobacteria. Within a period of 2 1/2 years we have treated 6 patients for mycobacterial infections in our department. We present an up-to-date guideline for management based on this experience. It combines well established diagnostic management with new criteria of ultrasonography, fine needle aspiration and mycobacterial cultures.
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PMID:[Cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis--an up-to-date guideline for management]. 1114 38

To identify antigens that would improve the accuracy of serological diagnosis of active tuberculosis, we cloned the genes encoding nine potentially immunogenic secreted or surface-associated proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Recombinant proteins were reacted with sera from HIV-negative individuals with extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EP-TB) or HIV-positive individuals with pulmonary tuberculosis (TBH). Specific and high level antibody responses were obtained for four recombinant proteins, of which antigen GST-822 was recognized by 60% of EP-TB and 42% of TBH and antigen MBP-506 was recognized by 45% of EP-TB and 61% of TBH. These results suggest that these proteins are strong candidates as subunits in a polyvalent serodiagnostic test.
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PMID:Assessment of the serodiagnostic potential of nine novel proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 1132 50

A case study of an HIV-infected Caribbean male with extrapulmonary tuberculosis details his diagnosis, treatment regimens, and follow-up. His presenting symptoms included epigastric pain and fever. Endoscopy and gastric biopsy showed gastritis and helicobacter infection, which were treated symptomatically, and TMP-SMX was given for possible salmonellosis. Serologic tests for common opportunistic infections were negative. After all other expected conditions were ruled out, concurrent symptoms were diagnosed as extrapulmonary tuberculosis, and multi-drug treatment was successfully conducted. The problem of interactions between protease inhibitors and anti-tuberculosis drugs in treating HIV and tuberculosis concurrently is discussed. Three options are addressed: (1) discontinue (or delay starting) the protease inhibitor until at least 6 months of a standard rifampin-containing tuberculosis regimen is completed; (2) discontinue (or delay starting) the protease inhibitor until 2 months of a standard rifampin-containing regimen are completed; and (3) use of rifabutin rather than rifampin.
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PMID:Pursuing a diagnosis in a Caribbean man. 1136 79

Parietal thoracic abscess formation of a tuberculous nature is a rare form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, usually described in cases of severe tuberculosis encountered in HIV-infected patients. We report 13 cases of parietal tuberculosis in patients without HIV infection who were investigated between October 1988 and December 1999. During this period, we cared for 2 663 patients with tuberculosis. The series included 9 women and 4 men age 17 to 60 years, mean age 39 years. The clinical aspect of the parietal abscess was variable. Cold fluctuating abscess was dominant in 10 cases. In 3 cases, the parietal abscess had a hard consistence simulating a malignant tumor. The parietal abscess was in a posteriosuperior or posteriobasal location in 4 cases, and in an anterosuperior, anterobasal or axillary location in 6. Multiple thoracic abscesses were observed in only 3 cases. The size of the abscess varied from 2 to 2.5 cm. Radiologically, rib damage was present in 4 cases, scapular damage in 1, with bone lysis in 3 cases. Other localizations of tuberculosis were observed in 4 cases. one patient had multiple peripheral node enlargement, another had parenchymal lung damage and a third had a vertebral localization. Culture of abscess pus provided the diagnosis in 10 cases. the diagnosis was confirmed by pathology in 8 cases on a biopsy of the abscess border. Anti-tuberculosis drugs allowed successful recovery in all patients. We analyzed the clinical aspects of cold thoracic abscesses and discuss differential diagnosis. Early diagnosis and treatment is essential.
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PMID:[Parietal thoracic tuberculosis in the absence of immunosuppression by HIV infection]. 1146 92

The number of patients co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and tuberculosis (TB) in our hospital is increasing year after year. Although most patients were HIV tested because of miliary tuberculosis or extra-pulmonary tuberculosis, some patients were found HIV seropositive by chance. In order to determine the incidence of HIV seropositivity among TB patients, HIV testing was carried out in TB patients for two years from January 1998 with the consent of patients. TB patients who received anti-HIV antibody examination were 164 in 1998, and 149 in 1999 and among them HIV seropositive TB patients were 4 in 1998 and 6 in 1999. The incidence of HIV seropositivity was 3.2% in all TB patients, 28.6% in miliary TB patients, and 1.0% in typical TB patients. The number of patients co-infected with HIV and TB in Tokyo was estimated by using these HIV seropositivity, it was 23 cases/year among miliary TB patients and 16 cases/year among typical TB patients. As there were many HIV-infected persons and many TB patients in Tokyo, it was thought that HIV testing in TB patients was important for the early detection of HIV infection and the early initiation of HIV treatment.
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PMID:[HIV seroprevalence in patients with tuberculosis]. 1176 58


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