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

Over a period of 11 months, 37 patients infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) presenting with symptoms of bronchopulmonary disease were investigated. Patients presented with cough, weight loss, fever and dyspnoea. Investigations included fibreoptic bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage and transbronchial biopsy. In eight patients (22%) Pneumocystis carinii was found. Pulmonary infiltrates were found on chest radiographs of six patients, while in the remaining two patients chest radiographs showed clear lung fields. P. carinii was found in two patients with pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma. Infection with P. carinii often occurred with other pathogens: Streptococcus pneumoniae was found in four patients, Staphylococcus aureus in two and tuberculosis in two. P. carinii pneumonia does occur in patients with HIV infection in Africa and the diagnosis is relatively simple to make provided that transbronchial biopsy and bronchoalveolar lavage are carried out through a fibreoptic bronchoscope and specimens examined after appropriate staining. However, the prevalence of P. carinii in patients with HIV infection in Africa appears to be lower than that found in patients with HIV infection in Europe and North America.
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PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with AIDS in Central Africa. 169 54

Pneumonia caused by common pyogenic bacteria occurs frequently in HIV-infected patients. Its clinical presentation has been described as being similar to that seen in non-immunosuppressed hosts but clearly different to that of opportunistic pneumonias. An atypical presentation has rarely been seen. In a 10-month period, we saw 12 HIV-infected patients who presented with Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia which was clinically and radiologically indistinguishable from Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Ten of the patients were intravenous drug users and were in different stages of HIV disease. The clinical picture was characterized by a prolonged course (median 4 weeks), non-productive cough, dyspnoea, and absence of findings usually present in bacterial pneumonia. Laboratory data frequently showed absence of leukocytosis, increased lactate dehydrogenase levels, hypoxaemia, and decreased CD4+ cell counts. All presented with interstitial or mixed bilateral infiltrates. Resistance to ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole were each found in seven cases. Eleven patients were cured with antibiotic therapy, although five relapsed. H. influenzae pneumonia should be considered in HIV-infected patients who present with pulmonary symptoms and bilateral infiltrates of subacute or chronic onset. Clinical resolution of pneumonia is the usual outcome, but recurrences of infection are frequent.
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PMID:Latent Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia in patients infected with HIV. 177 77

The incidence of HIV related KS has increased 50-fold since it was first recognized in Zambia in 1983. The mean age at diagnosis is 35 years for men and 28 years for women, with a sex ratio of M:F = 5:1. The most common symptoms and signs are weight loss, symmetrical lymphadenopathy, oral plaques, skin plaques in a central distribution, oedema and cough with dyspnoea. Biopsy is needed to confirm the diagnosis if disease is confined to lymph nodes. Objective regression occurs in 80% of patients receiving adequate doses of actinomycin D and vincristine (median survival time greater than 3 years for stage I or II disease and 7.5 months for stage III); epirubicin with vincristine was more effective in a phase II trial. Both treatments give good relief of symptoms, allowing patients to return to work. Clinical, histological and biological features of HIV related KS do not support conclusively its classification as a "malignant tumour". Heterosexual and perinatal transmission of HIV in Africa ensures that KS affects families, not just individuals.
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PMID:Occurrence, clinical behaviour and management of Kaposi's sarcoma in Zambia. 182 24

Arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) was monitored continuously during and immediately after sputum induction in 41 HIV positive patients with respiratory symptoms and in 20 symptomless medical and nursing staff, who acted as control subjects. Arterial oxygen desaturation (defined as SaO2 less than or equal to 92%) occurred during sputum induction and persisted for up to 20 minutes after the end of the procedure in 11 of the 20 patients with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and in nine of the 21 patients with other respiratory diagnoses. None of the control subjects showed oxygen desaturation. Neither the severity of chest radiographic abnormalities, the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (both measured before sputum induction), nor baseline SaO2 prospectively identified the patients who developed oxygen desaturation. Two patients, one with pneumocystis pneumonia, developed dyspnoea and had a fall in arterial oxygen saturation to 84% within 10 minutes of starting sputum induction. The procedure was abandoned in both patients and in two further patients, who developed severe nausea and reaching but no oxygen desaturation. Sputum induction in HIV positive patients with respiratory symptoms may induce a fall in SaO2 that persists after this procedure. This may be important if other procedures are performed soon after sputum induction.
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PMID:Arterial desaturation in HIV positive patients undergoing sputum induction. 185 86

The value of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) ventilation via a tight fitting face mask was assessed in eight HIV-1 antibody-positive patients with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia who were in hypoxaemic respiratory failure. All patients were conscious, able to protect their airway and not hypercapnic. Treatment was effective in seven patients. Prior to CPAP, mean (range) arterial oxygen tension was 6.7 (4.7-10.5) kPa in seven patients breathing oxygen via a face mask (FiO2 = 0.6), 6.1 kPa in one patient breathing room air and rose to 9.9 (6.8-12.8) kPa with CPAP (FiO2 = 0.6 and PEEP = 1.3 kPa in six patients and 2.6 kPa in one patient); the mean increase in PaO2 was 3.1 kPa (P less than 0.02). These seven patients experienced a rapid reduction in dyspnoea and their respiratory rate fell from a mean of 40 breaths min-1 to 32 breaths min-1 (P less than 0.001). One patient deteriorated rapidly on CPAP and died: no other complications were seen with this technique. CPAP was continued for a mean of 4.5 days and the seven responders all survived the episode of P. carinii pneumonia. We conclude that mask CPAP provides an effective means of improving oxygenation in severely hypoxaemic patients with P. carinii pneumonia.
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PMID:Continuous positive airway pressure ventilation for respiratory failure associated with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. 188 30

A 31-year-old woman, heroin addict since ten years, and infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) since one year, was admitted to the intensive care unit for respiratory failure (PaO2 = 40 mmHg and PaCO2 = 14.8 mmHg, despite breathing pure oxygen). She had been followed up for 6 months for increasing dyspnoea due to chronic cor pulmonale for which no satisfactory explanation had been put forward. Artificial ventilation with 8 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure and 100% oxygen was completely inefficient. She died within a few hours. Postmortem lung biopsy revealed talc particles within interalveolar walls and alveolar macrophages as well as the expected alterations in blood vessels. Pulmonary hypertension due to talc microemboli is a well-known cause of respiratory failure in heroin addicts. Such a diagnosis should not be overlooked in a patient infected with HIV. Respiratory failure may not be only due to opportunist infections, or tumours related to the HIV infection.
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PMID:[Respiratory failure in a HIV seropositive heroin addict female]. 200 73

The authors report a case presenting highly complex symptomatology. In fact, when the patient came under observation he had had a cough, dyspnea, dysphagia and dysphonia for approximately three months. The biopsy, taken by direct laryngoscopy, indicated the presence of candidiasis in the subglottic and tracheal areas. Laboratory tests indicated complete anergy and patient tested serum positive to HIV. During hospitalization acute dyspnea arose requiring emergency tracheostomy.
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PMID:[Acute respiratory obstruction caused by laryngo-tracheal candidiasis in a HIV-positive patient]. 209 10

Thirty cases of a first episode of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with HIV infection were collected in a 32 month period. Most patients had long standing fever, cough and dyspnea. Laboratory findings were nonspecific. Remarkably, LDH activity was high in 88% of patients and the T4 lymphocyte count was lower than 200/mm3 in all patients in whom it was measured. Chest radiogram showed bilateral alveolar-interstitial pattern in 90% of cases. Bronchoalveolar lavage with ultracentrifugation was found to be the most effective diagnostic study, with 95% sensitivity. The frequency of secondary effects to cotrimoxazole which required to change to pentamidine was 13.3%. During hospital admission, 16.6% of the patients died, and the survivors had mortality rates of 4% and 85% after 3 and 20 months, respectively.
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PMID:[Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with HIV infection at a Spanish hospital]. 209 45

On well defined criteria a total of 102 fiberoptic bronchoscopies (FB) were done on HIV-infected patients with pulmonary symptoms. A microbiological agent was identified in 85 patients (83%). Pneumocystis carinii (PC) was histologically verified in 61 patients, bacteria cultured in 22 patients, and cytomegalovirus (CMV) cultured in 17 patients. A histological diagnosis of CMV was only established in 2/17 patients. In the present study, a CMV positive culture from bronchial lavage fluid did not appear related to the clinical picture. Patients with P. carinii pneumonia (PCP) had significantly higher IgA, lower CD4-count, more commonly dyspnea and an X-ray showing diffuse interstitial infiltration than patients without PCP. Patients with bacterial pneumonia had significantly higher CD4-count, lower IgA, more commonly productive cough and an X-ray showing focal infiltration. In more than 75% of the patients, microorganisms identified were responsible for the pulmonary symptoms leading to bronchoscopy. Mainly PC and bacterial pathogens, both of which are treatable, were responsible for these infections. Pulmonary infections of clinical relevance besides PCP and bacterial infections were rare (3%, 95% confidence limit 1-8%).
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PMID:Pulmonary pathogens in HIV-infected patients. 217 Nov 38

A 25-year-old man infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) presented with paroxysmal cough and dyspnea of 4-months duration. An extensive evaluation including bronchoscopy was negative. A nasopharyngeal swab was positive by direct fluorescent antigen detection and culture for Bordetella pertussis. Respiratory isolation, treatment with erythromycin, and prophylaxis of household contacts was used to eradicate the organism and prevent transmission. Pertussis should be considered as a cause of prolonged cough and dyspnea in patients with HIV infection. The course of this patient was consistent with the concept that cell-mediated immunity is necessary for elimination of B. pertussis.
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PMID:Pertussis in an adult man infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 218 11


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