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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 136 patients, 67
HIV
, 69 diabetes mellitus (DM) with or without (+/-) end-stage renal disease (ESRD), were registered for tuberculosis treatment at the National Tuberculosis Center (NTBC) from May to December, 2003. Ages ranged from 21-78 years (median 57.7 years) in TB/DM patients, and 21-62 (mean 37.6 +/- 8.3 years) in TB/
HIV
patients. TB was significantly found in younger and single
HIV
patients, but in older and married DM patients (p<0.05). Male patients in both groups were strongly associated with TB, while females more commonly had TB with DM (p<0.05). The majority of these patients were Malays, unemployed, and resided in Kuala Lumpur territory; however, no statistically significant difference was found between the 2 groups. Smoking, IVDUs and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were more significantly found in TB/
HIV
patients and further analysis showed that pulmonary TB was strongly associated with HCV infection in these patients (p<0.05). Pulmonary TB (62; 89.9%) was the most common type found in both groups and was a markedly more common disease location in TB/DM patients, while extrapulmonary TB (21; 31.3%) and miliary TB (14; 21%) were significantly higher in TB/
HIV
patients. Cough with or without sputum, fever and
loss of appetite
and/or weight were common clinical presentations in both groups. Nevertheless, fever (54; 80.6%) and lymphadenopathy (17; 25.4%) were significantly related to TB/
HIV
patients (p<0.05). Interestingly, the presence of BCG vaccination and positive tuberculin skin test were stronger in TB/
HIV
(27; 40.3%) and TB/DM (20; 29%) patients, respectively (p<0.05). Overall, regular 6-, 9- and 12-months' anti-tubercular therapy (ATT) were routine practice, and EHRZ+B6 was the most common regimen used. The highest percentage of patients with treatment success were in both groups with 6 months' ATT; however, a significantly higher percentage was found in TB/DM (24; 34.8%) than TB/
HIV
(13; 19.4%) (p<0.05). A success rate of 15 (21.7%) was noted for TB/DM patients with 9 months' ATT, which was similar to both groups with the 12-month regimen. A higher percentage failure rate (lost to follow-up) was seen in TB/
HIV
(19; 28.4%) patients. Nine patients were reported to have anti-tubercular-drug side-effects, such as drug-induced hepatitis, blurred vision, and skin rash. No cases of drug resistance or death were notified among these patients.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis: a resurgent disease in immunosuppressed patients. 1754 73
Vitamin A deficiency has been commonly observed in patients with tuberculosis. Low serum retinol levels return to normal after antituberculosis treatment even when no supplements are provided. The deficiency of vitamin A observed in patients with tuberculosis might have contributed to the development of tuberculous disease in them. Alternatively, deficiency could be the result of
loss of appetite
, poor intestinal absorption, increased urinary loss of vitamin A or acute phase reaction in TB. Vitamin A deficiency lowers immunity while vitamin A supplementation reduces morbidity and mortality, particularly from measles and diarrhoea. Vitamin A supplementation also decreases the mortality rate in
HIV
-infected children and delays the progression of
HIV disease
in infected subjects. A higher incidence of lung cancer and increased mortality have been observed in smokers after beta-carotene supplementation. Zinc deficiency is also common in tuberculosis, which may impose a secondary vitamin A deficiency. Clinical trials have shown conflicting results regarding the effect of supplementation of vitamin A, alone or with other micronutrients, on time taken to sputum conversion in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. Supplementation with multiple micronutrients (including zinc) rather than vitamin A alone may be more beneficial in patients with tuberculosis, but clinical trials on such a combination are lacking.
...
PMID:Role of vitamin A supplementation in the treatment of tuberculosis. 1755 17
Curcumin is the active ingredient of turmeric that has been consumed as a dietary spice for ages. Turmeric is widely used in traditional Indian medicine to cure biliary disorders,
anorexia
, cough, diabetic wounds, hepatic disorders, rheumatism, and sinusitis. Extensive investigation over the last five decades has indicated that curcumin reduces blood cholesterol, prevents low-density lipoprotein oxidation, inhibits platelet aggregation, suppresses thrombosis and myocardial infarction, suppresses symptoms associated with type II diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimer's disease, inhibits
HIV
replication, enhances wound healing, protects from liver injury, increases bile secretion, protects from cataract formation, and protects from pulmonary toxicity and fibrosis. Evidence indicates that the divergent effects of curcumin are dependent on its pleiotropic molecular effects. These include the regulation of signal transduction pathways and direct modulation of several enzymatic activities. Most of these signaling cascades lead to the activation of transcription factors. Curcumin has been found to modulate the activity of several key transcription factors and, in turn, the cellular expression profiles. Curcumin has been shown to elicit vital cellular responses such as cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and differentiation by activating a cascade of molecular events. In this chapter, we briefly review the effects of curcumin on transcription factors NF-KB, AP-1, Egr-1, STATs, PPAR-gamma, beta-catenin, nrf2, EpRE, p53, CBP, and androgen receptor (AR) and AR-related cofactors giving major emphasis to the molecular mechanisms of its action.
...
PMID:Modulation of transcription factors by curcumin. 1756 8
Adherence is integral to improving and maintaining the health and quality of life of people living with
HIV
. Two-hundred
HIV
-positive adults recruited from teaching hospitals and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Rio de Janeiro City were assessed on socio-demographic factors, adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and psychosocial factors hypothesized to be associated with ART. Predictors of non-adherence were analyzed using bivariate and multivariate analyses. Self-reported medication adherence was high (82% had adherence >90%). Non-adherence was associated with personal factors (i.e. sexual orientation, self-efficacy), physical factors (i.e.
loss of appetite
) and interpersonal factors (i.e. doctor-patient relationship). Adherence in Brazil is as good, if not better, than that seen in the US and western Europe, which is noteworthy since the sample was derived predominantly from public healthcare settings. It is possible that the connection to NGOs in Rio de Janeiro City played a helpful role in achieving high levels of adherence in this sample of people living with
HIV
and AIDS. Recommendations, based on study findings, include enhancing and sustaining supportive services for NGOs, promoting patient self-efficacy and behavioral skills for adherence, increasing social network support and having healthcare providers directly address patients' medication beliefs, attitudes and experience with side effects.
...
PMID:Adherence to antiretroviral therapy in a context of universal access, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 1757 93
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is frequent among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, and is often associated with disabling symptoms such as fatigue. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of HCV treatments on the perceived physical, cognitive, and psychosocial impact of fatigue (Fatigue Impact Scale) among HIV-HCV coinfected patients. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 223 adult coinfected patients being followed-up in two clinical centers located in the south of France. Analysis was focused on patients who answered a self-administered questionnaire and who were being treated for their
HIV infection
(n=139). The cognitive, physical, and psychosocial impact of fatigue was significantly worse in patients also receiving HCV treatment (n=24) than in those receiving HIV treatment only (n=115). Along with depression, the number of self-reported treatment-related side effects was independently associated with fatigue scores after adjustment for all other characteristics. This number was significantly higher among patients on HCV treatment than among those who were not (relative risk [95% confidence interval]=1.4 [1.1; 1.7], P=0.002). In particular, skin or hair problems and general symptoms such as
loss of appetite
, loss of weight, fever, and headache were more prevalent among these patients. In conclusion, the combination of HIV and HCV treatments results in more self-reported side effects that exacerbate the perceived impact of fatigue among HIV-HCV coinfected patients. Effective follow-up of HCV-treated HIV-coinfected patients should, therefore, include close consideration and management of patients' subjective experience with treatments to reduce the burden of HCV-associated fatigue.
...
PMID:Adding HCV treatment to HIV treatment in HIV-HCV coinfected patients: the impact on the different dimensions of fatigue and self-reported side effects. 1761 31
Gelatinous bone marrow transformation has been identified in patients with
anorexia
, malignancy, malabsorption, and
HIV
/AIDS. This represents a deposition of gelatinous material within the bone marrow, along with atrophy. We report the case of an
HIV
-seropositive man who presented with low back pain related to his gelatinous bone marrow changes.
...
PMID:Gelatinous bone marrow in an HIV-positive patient. 1763 80
Abdominal tuberculosis (TB) is infrequent in the Western world. This disease occurs more commonly among at-risk populations, mainly among older patients and patients with
HIV infection
. Abdominal TB usually manifests as intestinal TB, peritoneal TB, and mediastinal lymphadenitis. Gastric TB is a rare manifestation of abdominal TB. We present the case of an 80-year-old man, who had been diagnosed with anemia 2 years previously without establishing the etiology. Treatment consisted of oral iron administration without improvement. Symptoms included epigastralgia, nausea and vomiting, as well as asthenia,
anorexia
and weight loss (approximately 20 kg in 2 years). A computed tomography scan showed mediastinal and mesenteric adenopathy, ascites, splenomegaly, and thickening of the gastric wall. Diagnosis was made by endoscopic biopsy of the affected areas in the antral region, the result being granulomatous chronic gastritis suggestive of tubercular origin.
...
PMID:[Gastric tuberculosis. Review apropos of a case]. 1766 16
Our aim was to describe the frequency of
HIV infection
among patients with tuberculosis and compare their characteristics with patients with TB but not infected with
HIV
. Patients with cough >3 weeks duration attending 8 hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria were screened with smear microscopy and culture and tested for
HIV
. Chest X-rays were graded by 2 readers. 731 (62%) of 1186 patients had positive cultures and 353 (48%) of these 731 patients were smear positive. 1002 (85%) patients were tested for
HIV
and 546 (55%) were positive. 53% (329/625) of the culture positive patients and 58% (217/377) of the culture negative patients were
HIV
positive.
Anorexia
, weight loss, low BMI (<18.5), haemoglobin (<11 gm/dl) and albumin and high ESR and liver enzymes were more frequently observed among patients with TB coinfected with
HIV
than in patients without
HIV
. Coinfected patients had less cavitations and lung involvement on X-rays than patients without
HIV
. In conclusion, the prevalence of
HIV
is very high among patients with TB in Abuja, Nigeria. The presence of
HIV
decreases the sensitivity of smear microscopy and complicates the diagnosis of TB. Selected clinical and laboratory parameters could be used to identify individuals with TB who are likely to be coinfected with
HIV
.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of adults with pulmonary tuberculosis with and without HIV infection in Nigeria. 1785 13
The chemokine receptor, CXCR4, plays an essential role in guiding neural development of the CNS. Its natural agonist, CXCL12 [or stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1)], normally is derived from stromal cells, but is also produced by damaged and virus-infected neurons and glia. Pathologically, this receptor is critical to the proliferation of the
HIV
virus and initiation of metastatic cell growth in the brain.
Anorexia
, nausea and failed autonomic regulation of gastrointestinal (GI) function cause morbidity and contribute to the mortality associated with these disease states. Our previous work on the peripheral cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, demonstrated that similar morbidity factors involving GI dysfunction are attributable to agonist action on neural circuit elements of the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) of the hindbrain. The DVC includes vagal afferent terminations in the solitary nucleus, neurons in the solitary nucleus (NST) and area postrema, and visceral efferent motor neurons in the dorsal motor nucleus (DMN) that are responsible for the neural regulation of digestive functions from the oral cavity to the transverse colon. Immunohistochemical techniques demonstrate a dense concentration of CXCR4 receptors on neurons throughout the DVC and the hypoglossal nucleus. CXCR4-immunoreactivity is also intense on microglia within the DVC, though not on the astrocytes. Physiological studies show that nanoinjection of SDF-1 into the DVC produces a significant reduction in gastric motility in parallel with an elevation in the numbers of cFOS-activated neurons in the NST and DMN. These results suggest that this chemokine receptor may contribute to autonomically mediated pathophysiological events associated with CNS metastasis and infection.
...
PMID:CXCR4 receptors in the dorsal medulla: implications for autonomic dysfunction. 1833 61
We report a case of gastrointestinal histoplasmosis in a 45-year-old
HIV
positive man who was misdiagnosed as a case of colonic cancer. The patient presented with low-grade fever, pain in lower abdomen,
anorexia
and weight loss of six months duration. On examination a lump in the left iliac fossa was detected. Colonoscopy revealed stricture and ulcerated growth in the sigmoid colon. Radiological investigations suggested malignant/inflammatory mass in the sigmoid colon with luminal compromise. Patient was operated and ulcerated tissue was sent for histopathological examination, which revealed numerous intracellular, 2-4 microm, oval, narrow-based budding yeast cells suggestive of Histoplasma capsulatum. Subsequently, the patient developed fluffy opacities on X-ray chest. Examination of sputum revealed presence of acid-fast bacilli and yeast forms of H. capsulatum. Patient was started on amphotericin B but died on the seventeenth postoperative day. The diagnosis of histoplasmosis was made retrospectively. Atypical presentation and rarity of the disease led to this diagnostic pitfall. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of gastrointestinal histoplasmosis presenting as colonic pseudotumour from India.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal histoplasmosis presenting as colonic pseudotumour. 1844 63
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