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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This retrospective study included eight
HIV
-positive patients with a M. genavense infection. Seven of these patients had a CT scan of the abdomen and a US examination, whereas one patient with pulmonary symptoms had conventional chest radiographs and thin-section CT scan of the thorax. Multiple large retroperitoneal and mesenteric lymph nodes were demonstrated in seven patients; low-attenuation centers within enlarged nodes were identified in two patients. On CT scans two cases showed circumferential wall thickening of the proximal small bowel with a deep ulceration in one of these patients. Additional findings included focal lesions in the liver (n = 1), spleen (n = 2), splenomegaly (n = 6), and
hepatomegaly
(n = 4). The CT scans from the thoracic examination demonstrated multiple diffuse nodular infiltrates in both lungs. M. genavense infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of AIDS patients with CD4 counts below 100 cells/mm3 presenting with abdominal lymphadenopathy, multinodular or homogeneous hepatosplenic enlargement and circumferential thickening of the small bowel wall.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium genavense infection in AIDS: imaging findings in eight patients. 1121 13
We report three cases of hepatic steatosis associated with lactic acidosis occurring in
HIV
positive patients and due to a toxicity of antiviral nucleoside analogues. The clinico-pathological presentation was similar associating digestive signs (vomiting and abdominal pain), polypnea, lactic acidosis, a lethal clinical course, and an
hepatomegaly
with a diffuse macrovacuolar steatosis. The ultrastructural study performed in two cases showed mitochondrial alterations in hepatocytes. The toxicity of antiviral nucleoside analogues is due to a mitochondrial DNA polymerase inhibition. The incidence of this disease is actually low but probably underestimated. The diagnosis should be rapidly performed and the treatment immediatly interrupted.
...
PMID:[A rare etiology of hepatic steatosis associated with lactic acidosis: the toxicity of antiviral nucleoside analogues]. 1137 88
Multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD) is a lymphoproliferative disorder that can be defined based upon both clinical and pathological characteristics. The clinical features of this frequently fatal disease include fever, generalized lymphadenopathy, fatigue, splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
, and pancytopenia. Recently, severe forms of this disease have been diagnosed in
HIV
positive patients. Human herpesvirus type 8 (HHV-8) DNA sequences have been detected in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of patients with Kaposi's sarcoma and MCD, regardless of
HIV infection
status. Treatment and outcomes in
HIV
associated MCD are generally unfavorable. We recently treated two
HIV
-positive patients diagnosed with aggressive MCD with daily oral etoposide (50 mg). The first patient had relapsed on several occasions despite previous therapy with doxil, paclitaxel, and oral ganciclovir. The second patient was treatment naive. Both patients had HHV-8 detectable by polymerase chain reaction in PBMCs, widespread tumor, and B-type symptoms when therapy was initiated. In both cases remissions (documented by computerized tomography) have been durable, 1.5 and 6 months, respectively, with minimal side effects. Oral etoposide may be a safe, tolerable, and active agent in MCD.
...
PMID:Treatment of HIV-associated multicentric Castleman's disease with oral etoposide. 1142 Dec 97
HIV
is a very common infection in Thailand, affecting about one million of the population already, with 99,555 persons with full blown AIDS at the end of 1999. The first case of AIDS was reported in Thailand in 1984. Gastrointestinal involvement is very common, the commonest presentations are diarrhea, esophageal symptoms, hepatobiliary symptoms, and weight loss. When the CD4+ T cell count falls below 200, the body becomes highly susceptible to opportunistic infections and neoplasms. Almost all AIDS patients will have GI symptoms at sometime during the course of their illness. This is because the GI tract contains an abundant quantity of lymphoid tissue and is likely to function as a reservoir of
HIV infection
. In chronic diarrhea cases, apart from other investigations, small bowel biopsy and aspiration may help to find the cause. If oral candidiasis is present, one should keep
HIV
in mind and look for oral hairy leucoplakia, dysphagia and odynophagia as one-third of patients with AIDS will develop dysphagia or odynophagia in the course of their disease. Those with esophageal candidiasis will usually have oral candidiasis and odynophagia while 18 per cent of the patients will not have oral thrush. CMV esophagitis and
HIV
ulcer (or idiopathic oesophageal ulcer) are also common. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and biopsy are helpful in finding the exact cause of the oesophageal symptoms. Hepatobiliary manifestations are present with jaundice,
hepatomegaly
, and pain. ERCP is very helpful in diagnosing and classifying these conditions. Papillary stenosis and dominant biliary stricture can be treated by endoscopy but long term results are still poor due to late manifestation of these conditions.
...
PMID:Endoscopy in HIV infected patients. 1152 42
The clinical and epidemiological characteristics of 111 consecutive cases of visceral leishmaniasis identified from 1980 to 2000 in a Sicilian pediatric hospital were analyzed retrospectively. The mean age of the patients was 1.7 years. All children were
HIV
negative, but 15% were severely malnourished. Fever and splenomegaly were present in all cases and
hepatomegaly
in 101 (90.1%) cases. Thrombocytopenia and anemia were both observed in 78 (70.2%) cases and leukopenia in 47 (42.3%) cases. A bone marrow aspirate was obtained in all cases; Leishmania amastigotes were detected in 89 (80.2%) cases. Initial treatment consisted of meglumine antimoniate in 99 (89.2%) patients and amphotericin B in 12 (10.8%) patients. Only two children treated with meglumine antimoniate relapsed. The findings highlight the differences between the cases of visceral leishmaniasis observed in the Mediterranean basin and those observed in other regions. The use of the term "Mediterranean visceral leishmaniasis", rather than the term "kala-azar", is proposed for cases observed in the Mediterranean area.
...
PMID:Pediatric visceral leishmaniasis in Western Sicily, Italy: a retrospective analysis of 111 cases. 1207 38
Pleuropulmonary amebiasis is the common and pericardial amebiasis the rare form of thoracic amebiasis. Low socioeconomic conditions, malnutrition, chronic alcoholism, and ASD with left to right shunt are contributing factors to the development of pulmonary amebiasis. Although no age is exempt, it commonly occurs in patients aged 20 to 40 years, with an adult male to female ratio of 10:1. Children rarely develop thoracic amebiasis: when it does occur there is an equal sex distribution. The infection usually spreads to the lungs by extension of an amebic liver abscess. Infection may pass to the thorax directly from the primary intestinal lesion through hematogenous spread, however. Lymphatic spread is one possible route. Inhalation of dust containing cysts and aspiration of cysts or trophozoites of E histolytica in the lungs are some other hypothetical routes. The lung is the second most common extraintestinal site of amebic involvement after the liver. Usually the lower lobe, and sometimes the middle lobe of the right lung, are affected, but it may affect any lobe of the lungs. The patient develops fever and right upper quadrant pain that is referred to the tip of the right shoulder or in between the scapula. Hemophtysis is common. The diagnosis of thoracic amebiasis is suggested by the combination of an elevated hemidiaphragm (usually right),
hepatomegaly
, pleural effusion, and involvement of the right lung base in the form of haziness and obliteration of costophrenic and costodiaphragmatic angles. Infection is usually extended to the thorax by perforation of a hepatic abscess through the diaphragm and across an obliterated pleural space, producing pulmonary consolidation, abscesses, or broncho-hepatic fistula. Empyema develops when a liver abscess ruptures into the pleural space. Rarely, a posterior amebic liver abscess can burst into the inferior vena cava and develop an embolism of the inferior vena cava and thromboembolic disease of the lungs with congestive cardiac failure or corpulmonale. Diagnosis by finding E histolytica in stool specimens is of limited value. In a limited number of cases amebae might be found in aspirated pus or expectorated sputum. "Anchovy sauce-like" pus or sputum may be found. Presence of bile in sputum indicates that the pus is of liver origin. Serological tests are of immense value in diagnosis. Liver enzymes are usually normal and neutrophilic leucocytosis may or may not be found. ESR is invariably elevated. Anti-amebic antibodies can be detected by ELISA, IFAT, and IHA. Amebic antigen can be detected from serum and pus by ELISA. Detection of Entamoeba DNA in pus or sputum may be a sensitive and specific method. Pleuropulmonary amebiasis is easily confused with other illnesses and is treated as pulmonary TB, bacterial lung abscesses, and carcinoma of the lung. A single drug regimen with metronidazole with supportive therapy usually cures patients without residual anomalies. Aspiration of pus from empyema thoracis may be needed for confirmation and therapeutic purposes. The pericardium is usually involved by direct extension from the amebic abscess of the left lobe of the liver, sometimes from the right lobe of the liver, and rarely from the lungs or pleura. An initial accumulation of serous fluid due to reactive pericarditis followed by intrapericardial rupture may develop either (1) acute onset of severe symptoms with chest pain, dyspnea, and cardiac tamponade, shock, and death, or (2) progressive effusion with thoracic cage pain, progressive dyspnea, and fever. Chest radiograph, ultrasound examination, and CT scan usually confirm the presence of a liver abscess in continuity with the pericardium and fluid within the pericardial sac with or without the fistulous tract. Echocardiography may demonstrate fluid in the pericardial cavity. Patients should be cared for in the ICU and ambecides should be started without delay. Pericardiocentesis usually confirms the diagnosis and improves the general condition of the patient. Aspiration of the accumulated fluid should be performed urgently in cardiac tamponade; repeated aspiration may be needed. Surgical drainage should be done if needed. Acanthamoeba, a free-living ameba, may also infect the lungs in the form of pulmonary nodular infiltration and pulmonary edema in association with amebic meningoencephalitis in immunocompromised patients. It usually spreads to the meninges of the brain by way of the blood from its primary lesion in the lung or skin. Early diagnosis and institution of treatment may be life saving for these patients. A literature review shows that
HIV
/AIDS patients are not prone to infection with E histolytica. It is now clear that there are an increasing number of
HIV
-seropositive patients among amebic liver abscess patients, however, which suggests that although the incidence of intestinal infection is not high among
HIV
-seropositive or AIDS patients they are more susceptible to an invasive form of the disease.
...
PMID:Thoracic amebiasis. 1209 41
Although 40% of infants with
HIV
die by age 12 months and more than half by age 2 years, proper care can increase the length and quality of life in infected children. Laboratory diagnosis is not accurate until the child is 18 months old, so clinical diagnosis is often used. Because treatment of childhood illnesses would be the same in the presence or absence of
HIV
, diagnosis merely identifies those children who require closer monitoring. Health workers must also consider the implications of an
HIV
diagnosis on a child's family. Common symptoms of
HIV
in infants to 6 months old are severe bacterial infections, swollen lymph glands,
enlarged liver
and spleen, failure to thrive, and persistent fungal infections. In babies 6-15 months old, growth faltering is common, and persistent diarrhea and respiratory infections are frequent. The usual symptoms are seen in children over 15 months old. Because infections in
HIV
-positive children are often common illnesses which simply last longer and are more difficult to cure, key points for care are maintaining good nutrition, treating illnesses as early as possible, emphasizing early diagnosis for tuberculosis, using oral rehydration therapy during bouts of diarrhea, monitoring growth, treating the child as normally as possible, and providing appropriate pain relief. The World Health Organization has developed guidelines for the clinical diagnosis of
HIV
in children based on cardinal findings, characteristic findings, associated findings, and epidemiological risk factors.
...
PMID:Diagnosing HIV. 1228 22
50 children under the age of 15 years were studied who had been hospitalized in two hospitals in the Dominican Republic with
HIV
diagnosed by the presence of biphasic hyperbilirubinemia and elevation of glutamic-pyruvic and glutamic-oxalacetic transaminases. The sera of the patients were examined for the presence of leptospirotic immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies by means of the enzymatic immunoassay method (UREASA-ELISA). The Leptospira-positive sera were also investigated for the presence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and for the IgM antibody (ab) of the hepatitis A virus (ab-HAV) by ELISA. 5 cases were positive for IgM Leptospira antibodies (10%), not finding in this percentage the presence of HBsAg; 3 of the 5 Leptospira-positive samples demonstrated the presence of ab-HVA-IgM. Only 2 cases (4%) presented IgM Leptospira antibodies. Out of the 5 cases with IgM antibodies, males predominated (3/5). When compared to negative cases, however, there were more rural elements among them than in negative cases: regarding origins (10% vs. 16%), agricultural workers (40% vs. 20%), contact with cattle and fresh water (80% vs. 40%), and daily contact with humid soil in living quarters (60% vs. 48%). The clinical picture of the 5 positive cases featured myalgia (p = 0.05) and abdominal pain (p = 0.05). The stiffness of neck was relatively more frequent in positive cases (20%) than in negative cases (7%); also, fever (100% vs. 80%), vomiting (60% vs. 22%), headache (80% vs. 56%), constipation (20% vs. 9%), and
hepatomegaly
(100% vs. 71%). There was clear evidence that leptospirotic infection must be watched and also its association with acute infectious hepatitis.
...
PMID:[IgM Leptospira antibodies in acute infectious hepatitis cases in children]. 1229 May 51
Case records of
HIV
infected patients were analyzed for identifying neurological manifestations. Eight patients (7 males) were identified to have probable HIV encephalopathy (in a period of 24 months) as per the CDC revised classification system. Their ages ranged from one year to ten years. The neurological manifestations noted included-developmental delay (2 cases), seizures (6 cases), acute onset alteration of sensorium (4 cases), aphasia (2 cases), loss of vision (2 cases), focal neurological deficits (6 cases), brisk deep tendon reflexes (7 cases), extensor plantar responses (5 cases) and signs of cerebellar dysfunction (2 cases). Other clinical features included growth failure, microcephaly, fever, lymphadenopathy,
hepatomegaly
, splenomegaly, pneumonia, otorrhea and oral candidiasis. Cerebrospinal fluid studies were normal. The neuroimaging features included cerebral atrophy and ventricular dilatation, cerebral infarction, basal ganglia calcification and cerebellar atrophy. Childhood
HIV infection
may have a variety of neurological abnormalities.
HIV infection
should be suspected in children presenting with unexplained neurological manifestations and growth failure.
...
PMID:Neurological manifestations of HIV infection. 1265 56
A 30-year-old homosexual man presented with anemia and a several months history of recurrent fever, night sweats and weakness. His travel history included several stays in mediterranean countries during the recent years. Abdominal ultrasound showed massive splenomegaly,
hepatomegaly
and abdominal lymphadenopathy. A bone marrow aspirate revealed the presence of numerous Leishmania amastigotes, and bone marrow culture and polymerase chain reaction were also positive for Leishmania. In this case report epidemiological, immunological, diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of
HIV
-Leishmania coinfection are discussed with special emphasis on the impact of liposomal amphotericin B and highly active antiretroviral therapy on the treatment of
HIV
-leishmania-coinfection.
...
PMID:[HIV positive patient with pancytopenia and massive splenomegaly]. 1467 17
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