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

The clinical presentation of 60 consecutive Pneumocystis carinii pneumonias in 58 HIV-infected patients (48 men, 10 women, mean age 34 [22-53] years) was prospectively evaluated from April to August 1989 and compared with 60 consecutive P. carinii pneumonias in 59 HIV-infected patients (55 men, 4 women, mean age 37.5 [22-60] years) between 1981-88. Mortality rates within 14 days after diagnosis of P. carinii pneumonia were 50% (8 of 16 patients) until 1985, 20.5% (9 of 44) between 1986 and August 1988, and 1.7% (one of 60) in 1989. The degree of severity of the pneumonias at time of diagnosis was markedly lower in 1989, as shown by following parameters (averages of 1989, compared with averages of 1981-88): lactate dehydrogenase 540 (250-1419) U/l versus 680 (235-1920) U/l (not significant); alveolo-arterial difference of partial oxygen tension (pA-aO2) 22.9 (0.5-73.5) mmHg versus 39.7 (19-70) mmHg (P less than 0.001); score of radiological findings 1.4 (0-3) versus 2.7 (0-4) (P less than 0.001). In 1989, mainly clinical symptoms (dry cough: 57 of 60 cases, dyspnea: 44 of 60 cases, fever: 43 of 60 cases) initiated the diagnostic procedure: chest radiographs, lactate dehydrogenase and pA-aO2 were normal in 13, 25 and 33 episodes, respectively. The lower mortality rate of P. carinii pneumonia could not primarily be explained by therapeutical progress since the treatment of choice did not change fundamentally since 1981. Above all, early diagnosis fundamentally determined the probability of survival.
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PMID:[Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in HIV infection: better prognosis because of early diagnosis]. 222 63

A 24-year-old heterosexual male, HIV-infected intravenous drug addict, with necrotizing pneumonitis and empyema due to Streptococcus cremoris is presented. The patient had fever, severe dyspnea and chest pain. Chest roentgenogram demonstrated pleural effusion on the left side. A thoracocentesis revealed purulent exudate and S. cremoris was isolated. Fever and pleural effusion disappeared with penicillin and clindamycin therapy. The most likely source of the infection was ingestion of unpasteurized milk and cheese.
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PMID:Necrotizing pneumonitis and empyema caused by Streptococcus cremoris from milk. 235 44

Heterogeneity of the CD4 antigen epitopes has been occasionally reported in healthy subjects, in patients affected by autoimmune diseases, such as Graves' disease and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and recently also in HIV-infected subjects. A 63-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of dyspnea, autoimmune thrombocytopenia and serum antinuclear autoantibodies. The clinical course and X-ray films of the chest were consistent with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The evaluation of peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets showed low CD4+ cells by use of OKT4 (Ortho Mune) monoclonal antibody (30%, normal range 35-45) and normal values of the same CD4+ subset by use of OKT4A (Ortho Mune) and Leu3a (Becton Dickinson) monoclonal antibodies (48%, normal range 45-55), which are specific for a different epitope of CD4 molecule. These differences indicate that the patient is heterozygous for the OKT4 epitope deficiency on CD4+ lymphocytes surface. The routine use of a panel of monoclonal antibodies, such as OKT4, OKT4A, Leu3a, which recognize different CD4 epitopes, is suggested in order to perform an accurate evaluation of CD4+ lymphocyte subset in patients affected by immune-mediated disorders other than Graves' disease and SLE.
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PMID:[Heterogeneity of epitopes of the CD4 molecule in a female patient with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis]. 248 2

Whereas extralymphatic involvement is common in lymphomas associated with HIV infection, there have been few reports of pulmonary lymphoma. In 648 cases of AIDS reported in Colorado, 40 have had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Of these, four have had documented pulmonary involvement and are reported in detail. Clinical manifestations were nonspecific and included fever, weight loss, generalized lymphadenopathy, dyspnea, chest pain and cough. Chest roentgenograms revealed multiple nodules or interstitial infiltrates. Transbronchial biopsy failed to establish the diagnosis in all cases. Three of four patients died four to five months after appearance of pulmonary nodules; one patient with stage IE disease showed slow radiographic progression over 16 months following radiation and chemotherapy and died 18 months after appearance of pulmonary nodules. Pulmonary involvement with lymphoma should be considered in patients with HIV infection, especially if multiple nodules are seen on chest roentgenograms.
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PMID:Pulmonary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in AIDS. 258 39

Major causes of anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa are malaria, iron deficiency, folate deficiency and haemoglobinopathies: now there is added also the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Anaemia is often multifactorial, with the different causes interacting in a vicious cycle of depressed immunity, infection and malnutrition. Anaemia progresses through 3 stages: compensation, with breathlessness on exertion only; decompensation, with breathlessness at rest and haemoglobin (Hb) below about 70 g/litre; cardiac failure, with Hb below about 40 g/litre. Without treatment, over half of the women with haematocrit less than 0.13 and heart failure die. Maternal anaemia, malaria and deficiencies of iron and folate cause intrauterine growth retardation, premature delivery and, when severe, perinatal mortality. Surviving infants have low birthweights, immune deficiency and poor reserves of iron and folate. They have entered already the vicious cycle of infection, malnutrition and impaired immunity. Treatment with blood transfusions is even more hazardous since the advent of AIDS, and should be limited to saving the life of the mother. Treatment of malaria is complex as chloroquine-resistant strains are now common. Prevention remains relatively easy with proguanil and supplements of iron and folic acid and is highly cost-effective in the improvement of maternal and infant health; it is more important than ever as it avoids the unnecessary exposure of women and infants to HIV transmitted through blood transfusion.
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PMID:Tropical obstetrics and gynaecology. 1. Anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa. 269 76

A pneumothorax occurred in a 29-year-old HIV-positive woman with rapidly progressive dyspnoea at rest and left-thoracic pain, dry cough and fever. Sputum test revealed Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Treatment was started with 20 mg/kg trimethoprim and 100 mg/kg sulfamethoxazole, but was poorly tolerated and changed for pentamidine, 4 mg/kg i.v. from the fifth day onwards. A chest drain was inserted, but pleurodesis became necessary after two further lung collapses. After three weeks secondary prophylaxis of the Pn. carinii pneumonia was started with pentamidine inhalations (60 mg every two weeks). The patient gradually improved under this regimen. Pneumothorax is a rare complication of Pn. carinii pneumonia, but should be considered in patients with rapid respiratory deterioration. In addition, Pn. carinii pneumonia should be considered in HIV-positive patients with pneumothorax.
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PMID:[Pneumothorax as a complication of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia]. 280 85

To determine the prevalence of cardiac abnormalities in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography was performed on 70 consecutive patients with HIV infection, including 51 with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), 13 with AIDS-related complex and 6 with asymptomatic HIV infection. Of the 70 patients, 36% were hospitalized and 64% were ambulatory at the time of evaluation. The average age was 37 years; 93% were homosexual men. Echocardiographic findings included dilated cardiomyopathy in eight patients (11%), pericardial effusions in seven patients (10%) (one with impending tamponade), pleural effusion in four patients (6%) and mediastinal mass in one patient (1%). Among the 25 hospitalized patients, echocardiographic abnormalities were noted in 16 (64%), whereas among the 45 ambulatory patients, the only abnormality noted was mitral valve prolapse in 3 patients (7%) (p less than 0.0001). Dilated cardiomyopathy was the only echocardiographic lesion more common in the 25 hospitalized patients than in 20 hospitalized control patients with acute leukemia. Symptoms of congestive heart failure responded to conventional therapy. Cardiac lesions were associated with active Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and low T helper lymphocyte counts. Dilated cardiomyopathy of unknown origin may be more common than was previously recognized in hospitalized, acutely ill patients with AIDS, but is uncommon in ambulatory patients with HIV infection. Echocardiography should be considered in the evaluation of dyspnea in hospitalized patients with HIV infection, especially those with dyspnea that is out of proportion to the degree of pulmonary disease.
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PMID:Cardiac manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection: a two-dimensional echocardiographic study. 292 51

Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia is a common complication of HIV infection in children, but uncommon in adults. It is characterized clinically by the presence of cough and dyspnea, diffuse pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray, restrictive pulmonary dysfunction, and hypoxemia. This constellation of findings usually erroneously suggests PCP, and a lung biopsy is necessary to establish the diagnosis. Typical microscopic findings include diffuse infiltration of the pulmonary interstitium with a mixture of lymphocytes and plasma cells; immunohistologic studies reveal that in association with HIV infection, these lymphocytes are T cells. The pathogenesis of LIP in patients with HIV infection is not known. It is believed that it represents a tissue response to EBV infection, HIV infection of the lung, or both. Although patients with LIP may respond dramatically to corticosteroid therapy, others may improve with no treatment. Unfortunately, most patients eventually succumb to other complications of HIV infection.
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PMID:Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia. 304 82

HIV infection was present in 18 out of 40 (45%) consecutive malnourished children aged 2 to 29 months in pediatric wards of Bujumbura, Burundi. No difference was observed within and between the seropositive and seronegative groups for sex and anthropometric measures. HIV seropositive cases could be explained by a HIV seropositive mother (83%) or by a transfusion history (17%). The onset of marasmus was earlier in the HIV seropositive group (5 cases observed less than 6 months old compared to none of the other group, Fischer's exact test: P = 0.026). A more complex clinical picture was seen in the HIV seropositive cases (12/18 compared to 4/22, Fischer's exact test: P = 0.004) with the presence of hepatomegaly, adenopathy, thrush, dyspnoea and skin disorders. No difference was observed concerning fever and diarrhoea. HIV seropositive group tended to show a higher hospitalisation frequency and did not well respond to high protein-energy diet: 7 were discharged without gain weight compared to none of the other group (Fischer's exact test: P = 0.011). These results suggest a high rate of vertical transmission mother-child for HIV infection and a frequent association of malnutrition and HIV infection in hospitalized children in Burundi. Marasmic children less than 6 months old should be highly suspected of HIV infection.
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PMID:[Malnutrition and HIV infection in children in a hospital milieu in Burundi]. 313 33

We observed 276 HIV-infected patients to determine the frequency, degree, and clinical presentation of the lymphocytic alveolitis in different stages of HIV disease, and also to identify the lymphocyte subsets involved. In 154 patients with proved lung infections or tumors (group A), bronchoalveolar lavage fluid showed lymphocytosis in 78 percent of cases. In 122 subjects (31 AIDS and 91 HIV-infected non-AIDS patients) without evidence of lung tumor or infection (group B), lymphocytic alveolitis was seen in 72 percent of cases. In 61 of 88 (69 percent) group B lymphocytic patients, we observed respiratory symptoms or diffuse interstitial opacities; however, we also observed such alveolitis in 27 of 46 (59 percent) group B patients free of respiratory symptoms and abnormality of chest x-ray film. This alveolitis was seen not only in AIDS or ARC patients but also at earlier stages of HIV infection. T-lymphocyte analysis showed a large majority (40 to 93 percent) of CD8 positive lymphocytes in the 37 patients tested. A dual fluorescence analysis revealed, in 18 subjects, that those cells were phenotypically cytotoxic (CD8 + D44 +). These findings suggest that, regardless of HIV-infection stages and of opportunistic lung infections, a CD8-positive T-lymphocyte alveolitis may be present in HIV-infected patients and could be responsible for cough, dyspnea, interstitial pneumonitis, and abnormalities of pulmonary function tests.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-related lymphocytic alveolitis. 326 11


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