Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was first diagnosed in burundi in 1983 when a large number of patients were registered with Kaposi's sarcoma, cryptococcal meningitis, and disseminated candidiasis. In the 1st phase of the disease the vi rus is dormant. In the 2nd phase seroconversion appears; and in the 3rd phase generalized adenopathy emerges. In the 4th phase the full-blown disease appears as a result of cellular immunity deficit with
emaciation
, fever, sweating, chronic diarrhea, asthenia, blood parameter changes (lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, anemia, and specific immune disorders). The early phases can be diagnosed by serological tests. During 1989 a group of 155 patients with 1st signs of seropositivity were studied in the central hospital of Bugumbura. The available clinical diagnostic markers were: 56 cases of herpes, 26 cases of generalized adenopathy, 25 cases of inflammatory infiltration of paraganglionic zones, 13 abscesses and phlegmons, 8 cases of chronic proctitis, 8 prurigo cases, 7 cases of chronic pneumonia and bronchitis, 4 cases of paresis of the facial nerve, 4 cases of Kaposi's sarcoma, 2 cases of fresh syphilis, 2 cases of anemia, asthenia, dizziness, and weight loss. Tomo- and zonographical X-ray study of the thorax of 80 patients aged 20-65 (51 men and 29 women) was performed. In 62 patients changes in the lungs were evident. In 2 patients tuberculosis of the lungs was diagnosed: miliary TB in a 26-year woman and disseminated TB in a 31-year man. 2 chronic and 3 bronchial, and 10 interstitial pneumonia cases were diagnosed in 15 patients with average age of 30 years. 4 patients had peribronchial and pneumonic infiltrations. In a group of 45 patients magnified picture showed no deformation in the lungs; and only 5 had respiratory organ pathology. Interstitial pneumonia was the most often diagnosed ailment by X-ray inpatients infected with
HIV
.
...
PMID:[X-ray pulmonary manifestations in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus]. 196 22
To elucidate relationship between disease progress and immunologic alteration in feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infection, we classified naturally infected cats into clinical stage groups using the working criteria modified from those for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Among the five distinct stages described for
HIV infection
, the three phases; asymptomatic carrier (AC), AIDS related complex (ARC), and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), were evaluated for concanavalin A (Con A)-induced lymphocyte blastogenic activities by using glucose consumption assay. There was a significant decrease of lymphocyte response in AC phase. The loss of response became marked as the disease progressed to ARC and AIDS, with an almost complete loss of mitogen response in AIDS phase. In addition to the loss of a lymphocyte function, AIDS in FIV infection was characterized by marked
emaciation
, anemia or pancytopenia, and postmortem evidences of opportunistic infections and lymphoid depletion.
...
PMID:Altered mitogen response of peripheral blood lymphocytes in different stages of feline immunodeficiency virus infection. 216 50
Etiologies of infectious diarrhoeas in hospitalised adults have been studied during one year; research of cryptosporidium and isospora oocysts is being made with Henriksen-Pohlenz and Kato methods. Diarrhoea is associated with a positive
HIV
serology in 40% cases. Cryptosporidium spp is found in 38% of cases. In 91% cases of cryptosporidiosis
HIV
serology is positive. Cryptosporidiosis is the main cause of AIDS diarrhoeas in Mali. 3 cases of isosporiasis are associated with cryptosporidiosis in AIDS patients.
Emaciation
and dehydration are the main signs of severity. Diarrhoea's profusion, its chronicity and inefficiency of the treatments explain the heavy death rate of cryptosporidiosis among seropositive patients, which reaches 40% during the first two weeks of hospitalisation.
...
PMID:[Role of cryptosporidiosis in diarrhea among hospitalized adults in Bamako]. 228 1
In Bangui (Central African Republic), where seroprevalence of
HIV
is 11% in the adult population, AIDS presents some clinical aspects different from the ones known in the west; the clinical experience reported in this paper is based on 504 cases infested by
HIV
group 4; diagnosis is very often made thanks to the clinical score recommended by World Health Organization (predictive value of 66%). Predominant manifestations (14%) are: asthenia (100%),
emaciation
(100%), fever (88%), diarrhea (42%), pulmonary attacks (37%), adenopathies, cutaneous manifestations (35%), neurological manifestations (14%). Some affections call for
HIV infection
with a significant predictive value: herpes zoster (96%), Kaposi's symptom (68%), mouth candidiasis (71%), pulmonary tuberculosis (56%: as far as some others are concerned,
HIV
has to be suspected: infant denutrition, acute infections, neurological disorders. Development is severe: 45% of the patients examined died in the 4 months coming after diagnosis. Epidemiology speaking, they are young patients (mean age 27.4 years), neither addicted nor "doped", heterosexual with multiple partners, with female prostitution occasionally; sex ratio is 0.95. Recognized transmission by transfusion is the exception (2/504). The transmission due to vaccination or injection is rare and difficult to evaluate. Only radical alteration of sexual behaviour will modify
HIV
dissemination.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in Central Africa: 6 years' experience at a hospital in an endemic area]. 322 83
Recently we encountered a case of pulmonary tuberculosis with
HIV infection
. The patient was 54-years old male. His chief complaints were anemia,
emaciation
and severe diarrhea. He was admitted to our hospital on September 18, 1992. He had been diagnosed in another clinic as having pulmonary tuberculosis before the admission to our hospital. His chest films taken on admission revealed homogeneous infiltrates with cavitation in right upper lobe. Serial chest X-rays consisted with the findings of post-primary tuberculosis. Sputum smear for acid fast bacilli was positive. From his clinical manifestations and life-history, we had a suspicion that he had infected with
HIV
. Laboratory findings were as follows: serum albumin level was 1.9 g/dl, CRP was 10.2 mg/dl, serological tests for
HIV
were positive by EIA, IFA and western blott method, total lymphocyte count was 819/microliters, CD4+ T lymphocyte count was 120/microliter CD4+/CD8+ ratio was 0.2. He was treated with AZT, isoniazid, streptomycin and rifampicin. The disease progressed rapidly and interstitial pneumonia, jaundice and clouding of consciousness appeared at the terminal stage. He expired on October 14, 1992. In this paper, the authors reported a case of pulmonary tuberculosis with
HIV infection
and also reviewed 5 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis associated with
HIV
in Japan.
...
PMID:[A case of pulmonary tuberculosis with HIV infection--review of 5 cases in Japan]. 783 23
A 33-year-old,
HIV
-1 positive, white, homosexual man was hospitalized in May, 1991, because of fever, cough, skin eruptions, anorexia, and weight loss during the previous 2 months. In October, 1990, he had traveled in Sumatra. On examination he was ill, tachypneic, normotensive with a temperature of 39.1 degrees Celsius. The spleen was substantially enlarged. Laboratory investigations showed: ALAT 72 U/I (normal 23 U/1), LDH 508 U/1 (normal 275 U/1). A bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage revealed yeast cells. Gastroscopy showed an ulcer in the hypopharynx and an erosion in the stomach. Biopsies of this ulcer demonstrated the presence of Penicillium marneffei. Biopsies of the liver showed the same organism. The patient was treated with amphotericin B induction therapy (1 dd 0.5 mg/kg for 21 days, total dose of 730 mg) in combination with flucytosine (3 dd 2500 mg, total dose 142 g in 19 days). In the following 2 weeks the temperature became normal, and the dyspnea and the skin eruptions disappeared, except for the mollusca contagiosa. The spleen diminished by 50%. LDH and ALAT became normal. Oral maintenance therapy followed with fluconazole (the first 3 months 400 mg daily, followed by 200 mg a day). 24 months later, no recurrence had been observed. Case 2 was a 28-year-old,
HIV
-infected, homosexual man, born in Suriname, who was hospitalized in October, 1991, with prolonged fever, dyspnea, and a painful throat. In March, 1991, he had traveled in rural Thailand. AIDS was diagnosed on the basis of cerebral toxoplasmosis in August, 1991. A biopsy of the ulcer in the oropharynx showed an active aspecific inflammation and also P. marneffei. Treatment with amphotericin B intravenously (0.5 mg/kg, total dose 1052 mg in 32 days) was commenced. The lesions in the oral cavity and throat, the lymph nodes, and the shortness of breath disappeared within a few days. Ten months later he died from
emaciation
caused by cryptosporidiosis.
...
PMID:Disseminated Penicillium marneffei infection as an imported disease in HIV-1 infected patients. Description of two cases and a review of the literature. 820 1
The case of a 25-year-old male agricultural laborer with
HIV infection
and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is described, whose radiological lesions simulated pulmonary tuberculosis. He presented with loss of weight and appetite of 6 months' duration, cough with expectoration and minimal hemoptysis for 2 months, chest pain, diarrhea with fever, and odonophasia for 1 month. He had received antitubercular treatment (rifampicin 450 mg and isoniazid 300 mg) 2 months prior to admission. He had been promiscuous, having had multiple sexual contacts with prostitutes. General examination demonstrated marked
emaciation
, pallor, dyspnea, and oral candidiasis. Auscultation indicated fine medium pitched crackles in both infraclavicular regions. Blood for ELISA and immunocomb test were positive for
HIV
-1 antibodies. Hemogram revealed Hb 6 gm%, and TLC with polymorphs 63%, lymphocytes 30%, eosinophils 5%, and basophils 2%. The total lymphocyte count was 2100/cu. mm. Chest roentgenography revealed bilateral diffuse homogenous infiltrative lesions involving both lungs, with evidence of multiple bilateral cavitation. Therapy included antitubercular treatment with ethambutol, isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide, along with Gentian violet mouth paint and ketoconazole orally, 200 mg bid. The patient developed progressive respiratory distress and died on the 7th day after admission. Limited autopsy of both lungs showed foamy eosinophilic material filling the alveolar space, and Grocett's methenamine silver staining showed cyst walls of P. carinii as black. There was no evidence of pulmonary tuberculosis. In the present case, the diagnosis of PCP should have been kept in mind to increase median survival time (25.9 vs. 12.6 months without treatment) with the treatment of choice of trimethoprim plus sulphamethoxizole in doses of 20 and 100 mg/kg/day. Early diagnosis and treatment will improve the mean survival time in cases of PCP with
HIV infection
.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia simulating as pulmonary tuberculosis in AIDS. 901 80
Although pneumothorax is a well-known complication of AIDS related Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, simultaneous bilateral pneumothorax has not been reported in Japan. A 54-year-old homeless man was admitted with
emaciation
and dyspnea. Chest X-ray showed diffuse ground glass opacity. Computed tomography of the chest demonstrated ground glass opacity and cyst-like lesions in both upper lobes of the lung. The patient was
HIV
positive. Grocott's stain of a bronchial lavage specimen demonstrated Pneumocystis carinii microorganisms. Intravenous trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazol and steroid administration was started. Seven days later, the patient developed tension pneumothorax of the right lung. Immediately after the thoracostomy, contralateral pneumothorax developed. Another chest tube was inserted. Subsequently, the patient died from bilateral pneumothorax. The endemicity of
HIV
infections among the homeless population is already a significant problem in Western countries. We should be aware that
HIV infection
may become a problem among the Japanese homeless as well.
...
PMID:[Simultaneous bilateral pneumothorax complicating Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in a homeless man with AIDS]. 1168 Oct 27
Cryptococcus neoformans affections during
HIV
-infection are frequent and serious. The aim of this study was to analyse the epidemiological, clinical, biological and therapeutic characteristics of cryptococcal meningitis in
HIV
-positive patients, admitted into the Center for Tropical Diseases Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam), during a 5-month period (May-September 2001). Twenty-one patients (20 men and one woman) were included (identification of C. neoformans from the cerebrospinal fluid). The mean age was 28 years. The majority of patients had been living in Ho Chi Minh City (48%). The use of drugs and unprotected sexual relations were the principal risk factors of
HIV
-infection. The paucity and the confusion of clinical signs and symptoms, along with a high frequency of meningitis have been analysed. Clinical presentation features included: headache (95%),
emaciation
(90%), oro-pharyngeal candidiasis (90%), stiff neck (80%), nausea/vomiting (70%), fever (67%), coughing (38%), diarrhoea (33%), skin lesions (5%), convulsion (5%), photophobia (5%), and hemiparesis (5%). The severity of the prognosis was mainly linked to the delay before hospitalization, to the possible association with other opportunistic infections, and to the availability of appropriate treatment.
...
PMID:[Cryptococosis and HIV/AIDS: a review of 21 cases reported in the Tropical Diseases Centre, Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)]. 1504 39
Infection disease due to Listeria monocytogenes, which is a ubiquitous positive Gram bacillus to the essentially alimentary transmission, listeriosis happens on patients presenting an immunodeficiency. The authors report the two first cases of listeriosis diagnosed at Hopital Principal de Dakar. The first case was observed on a 73 years old man, hospitalised for a feverish coma scored at 9 using Glasgow scale, with neither meningitis syndrome, nor sign of neurological localisation. The analysis of the RLC reveals a hypercytosis at 126 GB/mm3, with prevailing neutrophile polynuclears, a hyperproteinorachia at 3.2 g/l. The culture of the RLC was sterile but the blood culture showed the presence of L. monocytogenes. The other paraclinical tests has revealed a glycaemia at 2.45 g/l, an imporant hepatic cytolisis with ASAT at 13 N and ALAT at 20 N. The patient was also presenting a cerebromeningitis and hepatic listeriosis on a diabetic field. The second case was observed on a 58 years old patient admitted for headaches, fever and an important degradation of the general state with an
emaciation
of 17 kg in 5 months. The physical screening revealed a bad general state, a fever at 38 degrees 2 and was without other particularity. The analysis of the RLC showed a hyperproteinorachia at 1.35 g/l with neither hypercytosis nor germ at the culture. Haemoculture isolated Listeria monocytogenes.
HIV
serology was positive. CD4 were counted to 61/mm3. and the viral charge was at 110.000 copies / mm3. The patient was presenting a Listeria monocytogenes at meningo-encephalitis on
HIV
-1 field. stade B of the CDC classification. This ubiquitous anthropozoonosis should be searched through early haemocultures before antibiotherapy. in case of long lasting fever, endocarditis, meningo-encephalitis, localised infections on children. pregnant women, diabetic persons, and people infected with
HIV
and some others presenting immunity troubles.
...
PMID:[Listeria disease. The first 2 cases reported at the Principal Hospital of Dakar]. 1577 52
1
2
Next >>