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We report two cases of pancreatic tuberculosis. The first patent (who tested positive for HIV) presented with abdominal pain, fever, weight loss, anorexia and tender epigastric lump. The CT scan revealed multiple small abscesses in the pancreas. The second patients, who had no evidence of immunodeficiency, presented with constitutional symptoms and obstructive jaundice. The CT scan revealed a mass in the pancreatic head with peripancreatic lymph nodes and dilatation of the intrahepatic and extrahepatic biliary tree. None of the patients had Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection of the lung or any other organ. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy clinched the diagnosis in both the patients, with caseation necrosis and plenty of acid-fast bacilli in the first patient, and characteristic granulomatous inflammation of the pancreas in the other. The first patient died during the index hospitalization, while the other responded well to antitubercular treatment with improvement in symptoms and radiological clearance of the initial lesions.
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PMID:Isolated tuberculosis of the pancreas: a report of two cases and review of the literature. 1460 26

We report the case of a 61-year-old homosexual male who came to our observation because of a recent onset occipital and left frontoparietal headache, weakness, anorexia, hyperosmia and hypergeusia and psychomotor slowing, apathy and fatuous behavior. This case, besides the old problem of the differential diagnosis of intracranial mass lesions in HIV-positive patients, induces one to examine more closely the relationship between HIV, brain abscesses and Eikenella corrodens. We suspect that the primary infection was in the oral cavity, since HIV-positive patients have a higher incidence of atypical gingivitis and typical periodontitis due, among others, to Eikenella corrodens.
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PMID:A case of brain abscess by Eikenella corrodens in a HIV-positive patient. 1462 22

Recent development of tuberculosis in Japan tends to converge on a specific high risk group. The proportion of tuberculosis developing particularly from the compromised hosts in the high risk group is especially high. At this symposium, therefore, we took up diabetes mellitus, gastrectomy, dialysis, AIDS and the elderly for discussion. Many new findings and useful reports for practical medical treatment are submitted; why these compromised hosts are predisposed to tuberculosis, tuberculosis diagnostic and remedial notes of those compromised hosts etc. It is an important question for the future to study how to prevent tuberculosis from these compromised hosts. 1. Tuberculosis in diabetes mellitus: aggravation and its immunological mechanism: Kazuyoshi KAWAKAMI (Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Graduate School and Faculty of Medicine, University of the Ryukyus). It has been well documented that diabetes mellitus (DM) is a major aggravating factor in tuberculosis. The onset of this disease is more frequent in DM patients than in individuals with any underlying diseases. However, the precise mechanism of this finding remains to be fully understood. Earlier studies reported that the migration, phagocytosis and bactericidal activity of neutrophils are all impaired in DM patients, which is related to their reduced host defense to infection with extracellular bacteria, such as S. aureus and E. colli. Host defense to mycobacterial infection is largely mediated by cellular immunity, and Th1-related cytokines, such as IFN-gamma and IL-12, play a central role in this response. It is reported that serum level of these cytokines and their production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) are reduced in tuberculosis patients with DM, and this is supposed to be involved in the high incidence of tuberculosis in DM. Our study observed similar findings and furthermore indicated that IFN-gamma and IL-12 production by BCG-stimulated PBMC was lower in poorly-controlled DM patients than that in well-controlled DM patients and healthy subjects. Thus, these clinical data suggest that the high incidence of tuberculosis in DM patients is due to the impaired production of Th1-related cytokines. However, direct evidences to prove this possibility remain to be obtained. In 1980, Saiki and co-workers reported that host defense and delayed-type hypersensitivity response to M. tuberculosis was hampered in a mouse DM model established by injecting streptozotocin (Infect Immun. 1980; 28: 127-131). We followed their investigation with the similar observations. Interestingly, levels of IFN-gamma and IL-12 in serum, lung, liver and spleen after infection were significantly reduced in DM mice when compared with those in control mice. Considered collectively, these results strongly suggest that the reduced production of Th1-related cytokines leads to the susceptibility of DM to mycobacterial infection. However, it remains to be understood how DM hampers the synthesis of Th1-related cytokines. In our preliminary study, the production of these cytokines by PBMC from DM patients and healthy subjects was not affected under a high glucose condition. Thus, it is not likely that the increased level of glucose directly suppresses the cell-mediated immune responses. Further investigations are needed to make these points clear. 2. A study of gastrectomy cases in pulmonary tuberculosis patients: Takenori YAGI (Division of Thoracic Disease, National Chiba-Higashi Hospital). Patients who have undergone gastric resection are considered at increased risk of developing pulmonary tuberculosis. I have investigated the role played by gastrectomy in giving rise to pulmonary tuberculosis. Of 654 pulmonary tuberculosis patients admitted to National Chiba-Higashi Hospital from January 1999 to December 2001, 55 patients (31-84 years old, mean 63.5 +/- 12.5 years, 48 males and 7 females) had the history of gastric resection. The incidence of gastrectomy among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis was 8.4 percent. The mean age of gastric resection was 50.2 +/- 16.6 years, and the mean interval from gastrectomy to pulmonary tuberculosis was 13.6 +/- 11.0 years. On admission to our hospital, 34 out of 55 cases were smear positive by sputum examination for acid-fast bacilli and 39 cases had cavitary lesions on chest X-ray. Gastrectomy was done due to carcinoma of the stomach in 31 cases, gastric and/or duodenal ulcer in 21 cases, adenomatous polyp in two cases, and accidental injury in one case. 52 patients improved, but three cases died due to pulmonary tuberculosis. No one had recurrence of carcinoma of the stomach. Body weight, Body Mass Index, Prognostic Nutritional Index (PNI; 10x serum albumin concentration +0.005 x peripheral lymphocyte count) which was proposed by Onodera, serum albumin level and serum total cholesterol level were lower in the gastrectomy group than in the non-gastrectomy group. I calculated the odds of tuberculosis among gastrectomy patients to be 3.8 times that of appropriate controls. This study confirms that gastrectomy is one of the risk factor(s) of tuberculosis. However, whether gastrectomy in itself is a risk factor or whether it is secondarily associated with another risk factor such as underweight status and/or inadequate nutrition following surgery remains unclear. 3. Immunodefficiency and tuberculosis in dialysis patients: Hajime INAMOTO (Division of Dialysis, Keio University School of Medicine). The patients who have renal insufficiency is fatal, but they can live much longer by dialysis. The number of lymphocytes of the patients whose serum creatinine was 10 mg/dl or more has decreased to about 50% of the people who have normal kidney. When the lymphocyte was cultured after it was stimulated with PHA, the DNA synthesis of the patients' lymphocyte was much lower than that of the modest people's. In the dialysis food, the nutrient such as vitamins, minerals, etc. were lacked. The density of the serum albumin of the dialysis patient has decreased. Many of them were thin when their BMI was examined. The size of the patients' erythema by the tuberculin test has become small. There were many patients receiving dialysis with erythema but no induration. It means that the delayed skin reaction specific to Mycobacterium tuberculosis has decreased among the dialysis patients. The morbidity rate, the mortality rate and the prevalence of tuberculosis was much higher than the general population. The anamnesis of tuberculosis was also high. Most of those tuberculosis patients appear the disease from the period immediately before the beginning of dialysis to one year after that. That is also the period that patients' number of peripheral blood lymphocyte decreased and the tuberculin reaction positivity rate fell sharply. During the dialysis patients, pulmonary tuberculosis with cavities was minority and extrapulmonary tuberculosis and miliary tuberculosis were remarkably many. People with large reaction against the tuberculin test were better prognosis than those with smaller reaction. It was thought that anorexia, weakening, and a weight decrease were seen when the immunity decreased. At the end stage of renal failure, kidney shrink, vitamin D activation becomes difficult, and the low calcium blood syndrome appears. The calcification of tuberculoma is absorbed, soft tuberculoma becomes baring, the caseation abscess melts, and the endogenous infection occurs. The cell immunity has decreased, and tuberculosis attacks. It might be such circumstances that tuberculosis happen frequently at the dialysis introduction period. There are a lot of cases that the caseation necrosis is a little, and the formation of tuberculoma is bad in the pathology opinion. Due to the decrease in the cell immunity, cavities are not formed easily. It is easy to stay in the leaching lesion so that anti-tuberculosis drugs are much effective, and the patients recover easily. However, if the treatment is delayed, it is fatally because hematogenous metastasis are easy to occur and become miliary tuberculosis. 4. AIDS and tuberculosis: Hideaki NAGAI (Department of Respiratory Diseases, National Tokyo Hospital). With AIDS patients with tuberculosis, there are the following problems on the treatment. (1) The adverse reactions by antituberculosis drugs tend to occur in AIDS patients. Eleven of 33 AIDS patients with tuberculosis had the adverse reactions (skin rash, fever, liver dysfunction) considered to be due to antituberculosis drugs. It is a very large burden for the HIV infected persons to take simultaneously antituberculosis drugs, medicines for opportunistic infections, and anti-HIV medicines. Since many medicines are taken, it is difficult to determine which drug is the cause once an adverse reaction occurs and all medicines should be often stopped. (2) The combined use with rifampicin (RFP) is difficult for the protease inhibitors and nonnuclear acid reverse transcriptase inhibitors. RFP induces cytochrome P-450 in liver, accelerates the metabolism of some concomitant drug agents, and reduces blood concentration them remarkably. When starting the two above-mentioned medicines during tuberculosis treatment, RFP should be changed to rifabutin (RFB) which has less induction of P-450 than RFP. However, some procedures are required for acquisition of RFB and it is a little complicated in Japan. CDC mentioned the combined use with RFP and efavirenz (EFV) is possible. So, the treatment with EFV and RFP is recently chosen. However, the monitor of the blood concentration of EFV is required, and the dose of EFV should be increased if it is a low value. (3) When a highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is given to AIDS patients with tuberculosis, transient worsening of tuberculosis may develop after about two weeks. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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PMID:[Tuberculosis in compromised hosts]. 1467 50

A patient's nutritional support is a critical part of his general health care scheme. It aims to prevent or correct malnutrition, reduce morbidity, length of hospital stay and treatment costs. It equally optimises the patient's convalescence and quality of life. An optimal support requires the nutritional evaluation of the patient which includes determination of the energy expenditure. Once the energy needs have been evaluated, the clinician is then able to treat any nutritional deficiencies. This article therefore looks at the different methods available for predicting and measuring energy expenditure. The clinical limitations of these techniques and particular cases encountered (intensive care unit, anorexia and severe obesity, geriatrics, HIV infection, etc) will also be discussed.
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PMID:[Determination of energy expenditure in the clinical setting]. 1509 79

Lactic acidosis is an uncommon but potentially life-threatening adverse effect of didanosine. When given concomitantly with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (DF), the area under the concentration-time curve of didanosine is increased by 48-60%. A 63-year-old man with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection tolerated several didanosine-containing antiretroviral regimens. He developed generalized weakness, loss of appetite, weight loss, nausea, and vomiting 1.5 years after tenofovir DF was added to his didanosine-containing regimen. He was diagnosed with lactic acidosis and died after a 13-day hospital stay, when his lactate level increased to 189.7 mg/dl and his arterial blood gas pH value fell to 6.75. Health care providers should maintain a high index of suspicion for lactic acidosis in patients with HIV infection who receive didanosine and tenofovir DF concurrently. For patients receiving antiretroviral regimens containing this drug combination, it would be prudent to monitor lactate levels periodically. This is especially important when patients experience symptoms suggestive of lactic acidosis, such as weakness, abdominal pain, weight loss, nausea and vomiting, and shortness of breath.
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PMID:Fatal lactic acidosis associated with coadministration of didanosine and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate. 1533 57

Forty-three hemophiliacs with AIDS or ARC received a daily dose of 334 or 500 mg didanosine (2',3'-dideoxyinosine or ddI) orally in 2 divided doses in phase I/II, open-label clinical trial conducted in Japan. Twenty-eight patients completed 6 months of therapy. There was an increase in circulating CD4(+) cells in 19 valuable patients from 91 +/- 25 (mean +/- SE) at entry to 131 +/- 38 at 24 weeks of therapy P = 0.01; Wilcoxon signed rank). Fourteen of 37 patients met the criteria for CD4 rise >/= 50/mm3 rise or >/= 50% increase from entry values) for more than 4 consecutive weeks. Twenty patients were p24 positive at entry. Nine out of the 10 evaluable patients (90%) showed a decline in p24 antigen at weeks 20-24 (P = 0.02). Thirty-five patients had symptoms related to HIV-1 infection at entry. Twenty-seven patients reported improvements in constitutional symptoms during therapy. Nine patients presented with possible drug-related adverse effects, and didanosine was discontinued in 6 patients (one each with edema; abdominal pain with anorexia; hematuria with edema and rash; sense of abdominal distension with anorexia; diarrhea and abdominal pain; and irritability). One patient had a transient increase in serum amylase level to twice the upper limit of normal, but he continued to receive the drug. These data suggest that didanosine was generally well tolerated in hemophiliacs with AIDS or ARC, and its administration correlated with improvement in constitutional symptoms and laboratory findings. The adverse effects of didanosine seen in this population were moderate to mild, and no complications related to hemorrhagic diathesis were observed, although the relative risk of acute pancreatitis in this population (while not seen in the present study to date) requires more study.
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PMID:Phase I/II trial of didanosine (2',3'-dideoxyinosine) in hemophiliac patients with AIDS or AIDS-related complex. 1556 38

Patients with HIV can often present a diagnostic challenge and may have atypical presentations of more common diseases. This case demonstrates such a scenario; we describe a 35-year-old man with a recent diagnosis of HIV infection complaining of backache, anorexia and weight loss. On investigation he was found to have bilateral tuberculous psoas abscesses. A review of the literature shows that this is a rare presentation of an already unusual problem, with subtle signs requiring a high index of clinical suspicion. However, with HIV-positive patients more likely to present with extrapulmonary tuberculosis, there is need for increased awareness of this diagnosis.
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PMID:Bilateral psoas abscesses in an HIV-positive patient. 1560 93

Cachexia is metabolic disorder characterized by anorexia, an increased metabolic rate, and loss of lean body mass. It is a relatively common disorder, and is a pathological feature of diseases such as cancer, HIV infection, and renal failure. Recent studies have demonstrated that cachexia brought about by a variety of illnesses can be attenuated or reversed by blocking activation of the melanocortin 4 subtype receptor (MC4-R) within the central nervous system. Although the potential use of central MC4-R antagonists for the treatment of cachexia was supported by these studies, utility was limited by the need to deliver these agents intracerebroventricularly. In the current study, we present a series of experiments demonstrating that peripheral administration of a small molecule MC4-R antagonist can effectively stimulate daytime (satiated) food intake as well as decrease basal metabolic rate in normal animals. Furthermore, this compound attenuated cachexia and preserved lean body mass in a murine cancer model. These data clearly demonstrate the potential of small molecule MC4-R antagonists in the treatment of cachexia and underscore the importance of melanocortin signaling in the development of this metabolic disorder.
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PMID:The regulation of feeding and metabolic rate and the prevention of murine cancer cachexia with a small-molecule melanocortin-4 receptor antagonist. 1577 57

Different types of samples from a 27-year-old female patient who was diagnosed AIDS after presenting an acute respiratory picture caused by Pneumocistis carinii, in 1997, were studied. From that moment on, the patient continued having respiratory pictures repeatedly, until she was admitted at "Pedro Kouri" Institute of Tropical Medicine with a chronic diarrheical picture, significant loss of weight and extreme anorexia, together with a constant wet cough, fever, etc. The necessary complementary tests were made and a hyperergic Mantoux and very low levels of CD4 cells (under 200 cells/m3) outstood. Microbiological studies were also conducted with samples from sputum, hemocultures and cerebrospinal fluid to discard the presence of acid-alcohol resistant bacilli (AARB). As a result of these studies, the repeated isolation was obtained in all types of worked samples from a slow-growth, creamy and non pigmented strain corresponding to Runyon's group III, which was classified as from the Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex. The patient was treated with antibacillary drugs without results, since she dies 4 weeks later due to the total dissemination of this infection. It should be stressed that it is the first case reported and microbiologically diagnosed of a generalized mycobacteriosis in a HIV positive patient due to Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare.
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PMID:[Disseminated mycobacteriosis associated with Mycobacterium avium-intracellular (MAI) complex in HIV infected patients]. 1584 72

Mycobacterium kansasii infection has been reported to be about 20 percent of non-tuberculous mycobacteriosis, and its disseminated type is uncommon and the prognosis is reported to be generally poor. We experienced one case of disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection. A 81 year-old man who had been short-bowel syndrome due to the operation for superior mesenteric artery occlusion since 1998 was admitted on April 24th, 2001 to our hospital because of slowly progressive consciousness disturbance and anorexia. He had shown progressive productive cough and respiratory failure and laboratory findings were C-reactive protein elevation and pancytopenia. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibody was negative. Chest X-ray and computed tomography showed diffuse miliary nodules and infiltrative shadow. Sputum examination was positive for mycobacteria. The cultured isolate was identified as Mycobacterium kansasii. Bone marrow aspirations revealed inflammatory granuloma with necrosis. He was diagnosed as disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection and heart failure, and was treated by anti-tuberculosis drugs and diuretics. Treatment was very effective and Chest X-ray findings and respiratory failure had been completely improved. In this case we speculated that the malnutrition due to short-bowel syndrome could be one of the most suspected reasons of Mycobacterium kansasii dissemination. Disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection has been rarely reported comparing with the other mycobacterial infections in Japan. However, due to the increasing numbers of immunocompromised hosts with aging, HIV infection, cancer, and steroid therapy, this type of infection will become more common and its earlier diagnosis and adequate treatment will be important to improve the prognosis.
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PMID:[A rare case of disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection]. 1599 1


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