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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tumor necrosis factor is a cytokine that participates in the mediation of numerous diseases associated with inflammation, cachexia, shock, and tissue injury. Early studies of the biology of TNF delineated its hormonal actions as well as its systemic toxicity. More recent investigations have drawn attention to its paracrine actions that predominate when it is produced locally in the brain or vital organs. For instance, when compartmentalized production of TNF occurs in the central nervous system it directly mediates fever,
anorexia
, and altered whole-body metabolism. Since these changes are mediated within the neural network they occur independently of simultaneously sampled serum TNF levels. These paracrine actions of TNF have implications for diseases associated with production of TNF in tissues (e.g.
HIV
cerebritis, multiple sclerosis, cerebral malaria and cancer), because they may differ markedly from the hormone like-actions associated with systemic release. Since TNF may be beneficial in some diseases yet injurious in others, both the hormonal and paracrine actions must be precisely defined in order to formulate novel treatment strategies based on either enhancing its useful effects, or suppressing toxicity.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor in metabolism of disease: hormonal actions versus local tissue effects. 134 May 27
The physiopathology of malnutrition among AIDS, ARC and
HIV
infected children was reviewed. One-hundred eight-three newborns were studied, 152 of which were born at "La Fe" Maternity Hospital. Of these patients, 29% were LBW and 28% preterm. Transfused and hemophiliac patients were excluded from the study.
Anorexia
, vomiting, fever, infections of the respiratory and GI tracts and drug therapy were the most frequent factors affecting the nutritional status. Fifty-three newborns were infected with the
HIV
(29%). The children were classified into three groups (G). Group-I was formed by HIV+children > 18 months of age, G-II, P-2 class by children < 18 months of age and G-III was formed by those children that died of AIDS. The most common symptoms were chronic diarrhea and infections of the respiratory tract. Of the HIV+children > 18 months of age, 65% had a weight < the 10th percentile and 61% were < the 10th percentile for height. Of the children that died of AIDS, 80% were in the lower 10th percentile for both weight and height. Hemoglobin, T4/T8, total proteins, seroalbumin and calcium were also negatively affected. Those most severely affected were the dead patients, followed by P-2 < 18 months and finally the HIV+ > 18 months of age. The differences between G-I and G-II-G-III were statistically significant, p < 0.01. The biochemical quantification of the nutritional status was difficult due to the limited amount of blood available.
HIV
infected children require nutrition supplementation to maintain an adequate nutritional status. Among these patients, malnutrition is a multifactorial phenomenon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Nutritional status in HIV infection in infancy]. 145 14
Mycobacterium gordonae is considered the least pathogenic of the Runyon Group II mycobacteria, although there are now well-documented reports of infection varying from localized soft tissue infection to disseminated life threatening diseases. We report a 40-year-old Pakistani housewife, treated in childhood for tuberculosis, who presented with severe systemic illness, fever, ascites, hepatomegaly, persistent dysuria with sterile pyuria, pulmonary disease, and
anorexia
with weight loss. Liver biopsy histology showed multiple granulomata and multiple isolation of M. gordonae from sputum and urine, in keeping with disseminated mycobacterial infection. She had dramatic response to antituberculosis therapy with streptomycin, isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide. No evidence existed for disturbed humoral or cellular immunity and
HIV infection
. This represents the fifth reported case of disseminated M. gordonae infection, the first from the Arabian Gulf. It was treated successfully with standard antituberculosis regimen.
...
PMID:Case report: disseminated Mycobacterium gordonae infection in a nonimmunocompromised host. 177 25
A 37 year old male developed fever for 20 days, along with headache,
anorexia
, malaise, sweating, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly. At this stage, Ag p24 was positive and anti
HIV
was negative. The patient recovered fully but 6 months later positive
HIV
titers were demonstrated by immunofluorescence and Western-blot. A retrospective diagnosis of acute retroviral syndrome was made. The difficult differential diagnosis with infectious mononucleosis, cytomegalovirus, measles, rubella, toxoplasmosis and influenza is discussed. Thus, anti
HIV
antigenemia should be investigated in any patient with a mononucleosis like syndrome belonging in a high risk group for AIDS, even if Paul-Bunnell-Davidson or IgG anti VCA-EB reactions are positive.
...
PMID:[Acute retroviral syndrome]. 182 45
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.
...
PMID:Seroprevalence of HIV infection in Himachal Pradesh. 191 66
A 33-year-old man with AIDS and pleuro-pulmonary tuberculosis was treated with a combination of antituberculous medications for 12 months and with continuation of isoniazid. A total of 2 months after completing combination therapy the patient developed fever, malaise, and
anorexia
. Mycobacterial blood cultures grew M. tuberculosis and the patient improved with the readministration of rifampicin and pyrazinamide. Phage typing of the patient's isolates of M. tuberculosis confirmed that he had experienced a relapse and not a reinfection. The patient had received 5 months of his treatment while hospitalised. We believe he was compliant with therapy outside the hospital because he attended all of his clinic appointments. Follow-up studies of
HIV
-infected patients with tuberculosis are therefore needed.
...
PMID:Relapse of tuberculosis in a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome despite 12 months of antituberculous therapy and continuation of isoniazid. 194 19
Very few case reports evaluate clinical and laboratory parameters of acute
HIV infection
. This paper describes seven such cases, four being mononucleosis like disease and one lymphocytic meningitis. Clinical manifestations were fever (7/7), lymphadenopathy (7/7), enlarged liver size (7/7) pharyngitis (6/7), malaise (4/7) and
anorexia
(4/7). Inversion of the normal T4/T8 ratio was present in 3/5 patients, all with normal absolute values for T4 cells. Moderate transaminase increases were found in 5/6; 5/7 had atypical lymphocytes in blood smear and 5/5 had abnormal mucoprotein levels. All patients had a total remission of clinical symptoms within two weeks. However, the abnormal lymph nodes and the enlarged liver persisted. Follow-up for ten months showed 4/7 patients with all abnormalities resolved and 3/7 still with persistent enlarged lymph nodes.
...
PMID:[Acute infection associated with HIV: clinical and laboratory picture]. 248 21
Involuntary bodyweight loss is a frequent manifestation of
HIV infection
and ultimately affects the majority of patients. Because it portends a poor prognosis and adversely affects quality of life, nutritional intervention has an important role in the care of all
HIV
-infected persons. The mechanism of
HIV
-related bodyweight loss is multifactorial and includes complex interactions between decreased caloric intake, malabsorption and metabolic and/or hormonal abnormalities. Treatment of reversible and identifiable causes of bodyweight loss such as opportunistic infections and adverse effects of therapy are essential for the maintenance of bodyweight. For patients with
anorexia
of unclear aetiology, there are effective appetite stimulants available. Enteral and parenteral alimentation are under evaluation for their role in maintenance and/or repletion of bodyweight for patients with
HIV infection
.
...
PMID:Management of HIV-related bodyweight loss. 752 Aug 57
Fluvoxamine belongs to the class of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) which have recently gained large popularity as antidepressant agents essentially because they lack the most troublesome adverse effects of older antidepressants (i.e. tricyclic antidepressants) such as anticholinergic effects and cardiotoxicity. Recent studies in the literature suggest that
HIV
-1 infected subjects are affected by depressive episodes with a relatively high frequency, often requiring an antidepressant treatment. Due to its favorable adverse effects profile, we used fluvoxamine as first line treatment for sixteen depressed
HIV
-1 infected subjects. They were administered the drug at a daily dosage of 100 mg in the evening. Fluvoxamine provided a good clinical efficacy for six of these patients, whereas the other ten had to discontinue the drug because of the presence of severe adverse effects such as acute total insomnia, gastro-intestinal disturbances together with
anorexia
, aggressive and impulsive behavior and excessive sedation. The observed fluvoxamine side-effects are not typical or specific for this particular patient group since they are also described in seronegative subjects taking fluvoxamine; however, our findings seem to indicate that they become more frequent and more severe when the drug is administered to
HIV
-1 infected patients.
...
PMID:Notes on the use of fluvoxamine as treatment of depression in HIV-1-infected subjects. 756 71
Five cases of acalculous cholecystitis associated with Cryptosporidium intestinal infection in
HIV
infected patients are reported. Clinical, Biological and Microbiological features as well as imaging studies are described. All the patients were males. Risk factors for
HIV infection
included previous I.V. drug abuse (3), homosexuality (1) and unknown (1). On admission a similar history of weight loss, fever, abdominal pain, diarrhea,
anorexia
and asthenia, together with biological data of cholestasis, was present in all patients. Ultrasound studies showed a distended gallbladder without calculi and a thickened wall, the bile duct being dilated in four of five cases. Cryptosporidium were found in stool specimens of all patients as well as histologically in one of two patients who underwent surgery while CMV was shown in the other one. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography was performed in four cases showing a congestive, edematous and protruded papila in three patients, being normal in the fourth with a choledocal stenosis.
...
PMID:[Acalculous cholecystitis and intestinal cryptosporidiosis: frequent association in HIV patients]. 757 11
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