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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Aging is associated with changes in body composition and energy and protein metabolism that are due both to the direct effects of aging and to the effect of age-related diseases. We have recently differentiated these changes under three categories: wasting, cachexia, and sarcopenia. We have defined wasting as unintentional loss of weight, including both fat and fat-free compartments. Experience in the HIV epidemic suggests that wasting is driven largely by inadequate dietary intake. Cachexia, on the other hand, refers to loss of fat-free mass, and especially body cell mass, but with little or no weight loss. The metabolic hallmarks of cachexia are hypermetabolism and hypercatabolism, driven by inflammatory cytokine-mediated acute phase responses. Finally, sarcopenia refers to loss of muscle mass specifically, and seems to be an intrinsic age-related condition. In the elderly, wasting as defined here is at the extreme end of the spectrum, but generally develops in the setting of pre-existing sarcopenia and cachexia. The challenges before us now are to better define these conditions, establish guidelines for their recognition, and develop better methods for intervening when appropriate.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of wasting in the elderly. 991 10

The conspicuous increase in the plasma cysteine disulphide/thiol ratio in elderly persons and cancer patients indicates a shift of the plasma redox state. The most important redox buffers in skeletal muscle tissue and blood plasma, i.e. glutathione and albumin, respectively, are significantly decreased in different models of cachexia. Treatment with N-acetyl cysteine, i.e. a thiol-containing antioxidant, was found to increase the plasma albumin level and to ameliorate the loss of body cell mass in cancer patients and healthy individuals. The treatment of HIV infection with N-acetyl cysteine, in contrast, serves mainly as a tool to ameliorate the physiological and immunological consequences of the virus-induced cysteine deficiency.
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PMID:Cysteine and glutathione in catabolic conditions and immunological dysfunction. 1045 52

With the use of more intensive antiretroviral therapies (highly-active antiretroviral therapy, HAART) particularly in first world countries, reductions in the mortality and morbidity of HIV infection are being seen. However, though the prevalence of symptoms may change, symptom control does continue to be a problem for many people with HIV, particularly as their disease progresses. This is the second of 2 CME articles about palliative care and HIV infection. The first gave a background to palliative care, and covered symptom control of pain. This article gives suggestions for the treatment of common gastrointestinal symptoms in HIV infection; nausea and vomiting, cachexia and anorexia and chronic diarrhoea.
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PMID:Palliative care and AIDS: 2--Gastrointestinal symptoms. 1047 Oct 98

We report the observation of AIDS patient with a history of cough, dyspnea, fever, cachexia and bilateral nodular opacities at the chest X-ray. Infectious etiologies were initially suspected but the recovery was not obtained with their treatment. Only lung biopsy established the precise diagnosis of primary pulmonary Burkitt's-like lymphoma (BBL). The sole extranodal site of BBL at the lungs is an unusual finding. Generally, this lymphomatous proliferation is observed at the early period of the HIV infection. Immunodepression and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection are the major pathogenic basis for BL as indicated by the high prevalence of EBV genomes found in malignant cells. The lack of EBV sequences in a significant proportion of Burkitt's lymphoma or BBL and AIDS-associated non-Hodgkin malignant lymphoma suggest that alternative pathogenic mechanisms may be involved. This observation permit to show the difficulties observed before the multiple and bilateral opacities whom the etiologies are varied. The prognosis of AIDS-associated BLL is very severe.
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PMID:[Multiple and bilateral nodular opacities revealing primary pulmonary lymphoma of the Burkitt-like type in AIDS]. 1048 41

Anorexia and cachexia are diagnosed in more than two-thirds of all cancer patients with advanced disease, and are independent risk factors for morbidity and mortality. Anorexia, nausea and vomiting often are described as more significant inhibiting factors for quality of life of cancer patients than even intense pain. In 1986, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main effective constituent of cannabis, was licensed as an anti-emetic drug in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. In addition, in clinical studies THC has shown significant stimulation of appetite and increase of body weight in HIV-positive and cancer patients. The appetite-stimulating effect of cannabis itself has also been well documented in many anecdotal cases. There are strong indications that cannabis is better tolerated than THC alone, because cannabis contains several additional cannabinoids, like cannabidiol (CBD), which antagonize the psychotropic actions of THC, but do not inhibit the appetite-stimulating effect. Therefore, we intend to compare the therapeutic effects of whole-plant extracts of cannabis to those of THC (dronabinol) alone in controlled studies.
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PMID:Cancer cachexia and cannabinoids. 1057 85

The tenacious effort to develop new, specific agents to treat HIV infection is currently accompanied by a reconsideration of existing drugs on the basis of their known or putative effects on the retroviral life cycle and/or the tuning of immune mechanisms. Three specific 'older' compounds that interfere with HIV infection by both a direct antiviral activity, and a modulation of T-cell activation and proliferation have received the most attention. Hydroxurea, a classical chemotherapeutic agent, inhibits retroviral reverse transcription by targeting a cellular enzyme responsible for the synthesis of deoxynucleoside triphosphates. It may also have a role in reducing viral load while maintaining low numbers of potential target T cells. Beneficial effects of hydroxyurea in combination with didanosine and/or stavudine on viral load have been shown in a number of clinical trials. Cyclosporin, a known immunosuppressant, blocks the activation of T cells, hence reducing the permissivity to HIV, and also prevents proper HIV virion maturation. However, clinical studies have produced conflicting results in HIV-infected patients with regard to immunological and disease effects and toxicity. Thalidomide may have antiretroviral effects as a result of its primarily inhibitory effects on the production of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha). TNFalpha induces expression of HIV from chronically infected cell lines by stimulating a cellular transcription factor, and blocking of TNFalpha-stimulated HIV replication by thalidomide has been shown in vitro and ex vivo. However, the effects on TNFalpha production in vivo have been inconsistent. Thalidomide has shown potential in treating some AIDS-related conditions [cachexia (weight loss and muscle wasting), and aphtous oral, oesophageal or genital ulcers]. However, because of its numerous and major adverse effects, thalidomide should always be used cautiously. In summary, some older drugs have potential as anti-HIV agents and offer the advantage of extensive clinical experience in other therapeutic areas. They should be considered as potential partners for the products emerging from more recent research and development.
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PMID:New uses for old drugs in HIV infection: the role of hydroxyurea, cyclosporin and thalidomide. 1065 84

The medical inequalities between countries of the North and South (infrastructure, drug availability, medical techniques) are particularly marked in terms of the challenge posed by HIV infection. We propose a strategy for monitoring adult patients in West Africa that is appropriate to the situation in the field and to economic constraints. The aim of this strategy is to increase the quality of life and the life expectancy of HIV-infected adults and to prevent the overcrowding of hospital departments with patients in the terminal phase of AIDS. We analyzed the biological and clinical spectrum of HIV infection before the onset of the diseases that define AIDS (excluding pulmonary tuberculosis). We found that it was particularly important to diagnose B-stage diseases early, especially atypical chronic cutaneous and mucous diseases. Careful analysis of data from a routine hemogram (total lymphocyte count 2500/ml; paradoxical eosinopenia), even in the absence of a CD4 lymphocyte count, should also enable clinicians from a wide variety of health structures to identify the HIV-infected patients most likely to benefit from more detailed clinical follow up, prophylaxis of opportunistic infections using cotrimoxazole, nutritional checkups and prevention of wasting. Cachexia is the most common AIDS-associated disease in West African patients. It involves an overall decrease in calorific intake, diarrhea, immune system activation, an increase in TNFalpha production and greater energy expenditure when resting. Recent nutritional studies have shown that it is vital to optimize the calorific intake of HIV-infected patients presenting with chronic diarrhea, before the onset of severe immune deficiency, to prevent wasting. So, spontaneous calorific intake should de routinely determined in HIV-infected patients and an optimal diet provided. Specific training in nutrition is required for doctors and nurses, as is consideration of the logistic organization required to provide nutritional support to HIV-infected adults. Despite the large number of individuals infected and the lack of sophisticated paraclinical facilities, we feel that it is possible to establish rational management "a minima" of HIV infection in West Africa, whilst waiting for antiretroviral drugs to become more widely available. This strategy could be of direct benefit to patients without swallowing up the financial resources of the health system in expensive biological follow up. Such basic management is also required before the new antiretroviral drugs become widely available. Research should be carried out in parallel in several reference centers in West Africa to determine the most effective associations of antiretroviral drugs and the optimal timing of treatment during the course of infection and to assess the potential side effects of these drugs in HIV patients exposed to recurrent antigenic stimulation by a wide diversity of pathogens.
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PMID:[Prevention of wasting and opportunistic infections in HIV-infected patients in West Africa: a realistic and necessary strategy before antiretroviral treatment]. 1065 73

Malnutrition is common among individuals suffering from hypoxemic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), advanced HIV disease, and in patients with chronic, severe congestive heart failure. Although increased morbidity and mortality has been associated with weight loss in these conditions, the pathophysiology of malnutrition remains somewhat unclear for each. In COPD, the primary postulated mechanism is hypermetabolism resulting in elevated total caloric expenditure arising from increased airway resistance, increased O2 cost of ventilation, increased dietary induced thermogenesis, inefficient substrate use and perhaps, increased levels of proinflammatory cytokines. In AIDS, postulated mechanisms include hypermetabolism arising from increased activation of proinflammatory cytokines, along with futile cycling of fatty acids and de novo lipogenesis early in the course of HIV infection; intestinal malabsorption and anorexia also play a role in many inflicted individuals. In cardiac cachexia, dietary and metabolic factors, and levels and activity of cytokines, thyroid hormone, catecholamines and cortisol have been suggested as being responsible for causing weight loss in a most cases.
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PMID:Tissue wasting in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 1065 78

AIDS pathogenesis results from a complex array of immune alterations which include, among others, changes in the pattern of cytokine production. Some monocyte-derived cytokines, like TNFalpha play a major role in HIV pathogenesis. TNFalpha transactivates HIV NF-kB thereby inducing viral replication, potentiates HIV replication in lymphomonocytes TNFalpha is one of the main factors of HIV-induced cachexia and might be involved in HAART-associated lipodystrophy. In addition, monocytes are infectable by HIV in vitro and infected monocytes can be recovered from the blood of HIV infected patients. For these reasons, we tested whether renewal of the pool of circulating monocytes by selective monocyte apheresis may improve the immune reconstitution which follows treatment with highly active anti-retrovirals (HAART). HIV-infected HAART receiving (> 1 year) patients who were either virologically non-responders (HIV-1 RNA >50,000 copies/ml) or immunologically non-responders (CD4 counts < 200) were treated with a novel monocyte apheresis device (G-1 Adacolumn). Plasma HIV viral load, proviral DNA and phenotypic and functional immunological analyses were performed. G-1 apheresis was well tolerated, not accompanied by adverse responses, and followed by clinical improvement. TNFalpha production was suppressed and CD4 T cell counts increased. In one G-1 patient with elevated HIV-1 proviral DNA a significant reduction (from 1,500 to 40 copies/10(5) cells) was observed. Neither immunologic nor virologic parameters were modified in the control patients who received HAART alone. Thus, purging of circulating monocytes by G-1 apheresis has a dramatic suppressive effect on TNFalpha production and is followed by both clinical and immunovirological improvement. G-1 apheresis should be considered in patients in whom HAART is only partially effective.
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PMID:Ex-vivo purging of circulating monocytes results in immunovirologic improvement in partially HAART responder HIV-infected patients. 1076 88

Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder among adolescent girls and young women which, though common, often goes undetected and untreated. Anorexia nervosa is a response for young people with psychological conflicts who try to win love by having a body corresponding to the present-day image, symbolising strength, beauty, attraction, power and success. Anorexia nervosa involves inadequate calorie intake leading to marked cachexia with metabolic and endocrinological disturbances. We investigated dermatological changes in 21 young female anorectics aged 19-24 in an attempt to find dermatological markers which mirror the dynamics of the disease and thus obtain helpful signs for early diagnosis with its important bearing on the outcome. Extensive histories were taken and whole-body examinations performed. Seven sex- and age-matched persons served as a control group. The most common dermatological findings were xerosis (71%, controls 29%), cheilitis (76%), bodily hypertrichosis (62%), alopecia (24%), dry scalp hair (48%), acral coldness (38%), acrocyanosis (33%), periungual erythema (48%), gingival changes (37%), nail changes (29%) and calluses on dorsum of hand due to self-induced vomiting (67%). Our study documented for the first time that a body mass index of < or = 16 (kg/m2) can be considered a critical value at which skin changes are more frequent. There are remarkable similarities between cutaneous manifestations in anorexia nervosa and in HIV infection. Patients with anorexia nervosa develop early stereotype skin changes which are cardinal diagnostic symptoms and pointers to the diagnosis of eating disorders. During training at the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in Solothurn one of us (C. H.) was once more able to observe most of the above-described cutaneous and mucocutaneous changes in anorexic adolescents. This paper is intended to stimulate further basic research on this topic. We hope our study will facilitate early diagnosis of anorexia nervosa by the family physician and enable him or her to institute immediate treatment for the eating disorder and thereby improve the prognosis.
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PMID:Cutaneous manifestations in anorexia nervosa. 1084 72


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