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

Since 1985 organ donors are routinely tested for the presence of HIV-antibodies, but prior to that time several patients acquired HIV-infection from grafts. In May 1984 a 65-year-old woman on hemodialysis received a cadaver kidney graft from a young iv drug addict. The transplant functioned perfectly with cyclosporin A immunosuppression. Retrospectively, 22 days after surgery HIV antigen was detected. At this time only a faint band of anti-p24 antibodies was found in the Western blot. Two years after surgery splenomegaly was found in the apparently healthy patient. During the third year thrombocytes fell and she developed lymphadenopathy and constitutional symptoms. Up to this time the immunological parameters were in the range of 10 healthy renal transplant patients with cyclosporin A treatment. In the 4th year T-lymphocytes dropped to values below 200 and the patient developed Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. A few months later a pulmonary node, which later proved to be a B-cell lymphoma, appeared. Slightly less than 5 years after transplantation the patient died from clinically diagnosed pulmonary embolism. The progression of the HIV-Infection in this patient and in one of 18 patients in published reports show that the incubation period is several years shorter in renal transplant patients than in those who acquire HIV from blood products.
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PMID:[HIV infection caused by kidney transplant: case report and review of 18 published cases]. 267 39

In 24 cases of thrombopenic purpura associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection the clinical, immunological and therapeutic features were evaluated. Thrombopenia resulted in clinical manifestations in 20 patients. Splenomegaly was found in only one fourth of patients. Antiplatelet antibodies were found in 9 patients, and thrombopenia was associated with anemia in 37% of cases and with leukopenia in 21%. Bone marrow examination showed megakaryocyte hyperplasia in two thirds of the patients. The major immunological abnormalities were an inverted helper/suppressor T lymphocytes ratio, a reduction in the number of helper T lymphocytes, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, and increased serum concentrations of circulating immunocomplexes. The different therapeutic modalities, steroids, vincristine, danatrol and plasma exchange, resulted in short responses; only two patients had normal platelet counts. The median follow-up was 14 months; during this time three patients fulfilled the criteria of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
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PMID:[Thrombopenic purpura associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Analysis of 24 cases]. 274 29

To establish the indications for splenectomy in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection we retrospectively analyzed 12 patients who underwent splenectomy. Patients with HIV infection who had immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) were excluded as they had no splenomegaly and a definite indication for splenectomy exists in some of these patients. All 12 patients were anemic; 6 were thrombocytopenic and 6 leukopenic. All patients had splenomegaly and all were febrile. At surgery 3 patients were found to have Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI) infection; 2 had splenic abscess due to Salmonella group D; 1 each had cytomegalovirus (CMV) splenitis and localized Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) of the spleen. No definite histopathologic diagnosis could be made in five patients, all of whom had evidence of extramedullary hematopoiesis. The degree of splenic enlargement did not correlate with the outcome. Both clinical and hematologic improvements were achieved in patients with splenic abscess and in patients who had splenomegaly, anemia, and thrombocytopenia. The presence of either of these findings constitutes an indication for splenectomy. Anemia and/or leukopenia without thrombocytopenia failed to improve; the presence of MAI and active CMV infection also resulted in failure. The presence of either of these conditions may be considered a contraindication to splenectomy.
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PMID:Splenectomy in patients with AIDS. 281 11

Prevalence and determinants of HIV infection were assessed in 313 parenteral drug addicts admitted to five Centers for Drug-Addict Assistance and two prisons located in the northeast of Italy (Friuli Venezia-Giulia), an area some distance from the major Italian cities first reached by the AIDS epidemic. The overall prevalence of HIV positivity was also rather high in this area, ie 30% with 24-36% confidence interval. The most important risk factors (besides syringe sharing applicable to all drug addicts), turned out to be of a geographical nature, ie living in Pordenone province (where a US military base is located) or coming from other endemic areas and having travelled long distances in the past three years. Prostitution also seemed to increase the risk of infection, but duration of drug addiction had little effect. In addition to persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (closely linked to HIV infection), reversal of helper:suppressor T-cell ratio was found in 67% of HIV positive individuals, but also in 31% of HIV negative ones. Clinical signs and symptoms strongly linked with HIV positivity were fatigue, weight loss, splenomegaly, fever and nocturnal sweats.
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PMID:Risk factors for HIV infection in drug addicts from the northeast of Italy. 326 Feb 23

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is reportedly transmitted by sexual contact, sharing of infected needles among intravenous drug abusers, blood and blood products, artificial insemination, and kidney transplantation. This study reports on cornea and kidney recipients of two HIV-infected donors. HIV was transmitted to two kidney recipients who developed symptoms of acute HIV infection (i.e., fever, leukopenia, mild thrombopenia, splenomegaly) starting 12 days after transplantation. These signs of acute infection ended with seroconversion of HIV antibodies on approximately the 56th day after transplantation. The three cornea recipients showed no signs of acute infection and no HIV antibodies were detected up to three years after transplantation. The nontransmission observed in our cases, however, may not be representative of cornea transplantations in general. HIV is neurotropic in the later stages of the disease, and transmission of other neurotropic viruses like rabies and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease by cornea transplantation has been reported. All tissue and organ donors should be tested for anti-HIV prior to donation.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus transmission by organ donation. Outcome in cornea and kidney recipients. 329 18

During HIV infection, individuals experience multiorgan disorders such as adenopathy, splenomegaly, and lung and brain diseases. There is an increasing body of evidence that the HIV trans-activating tat gene product possesses multiple activities. First, it can activate several cellular genes; second, in its extracellular soluble form, it plays the role of growth factor in some cells such as Kaposi's sarcoma cells. Thus, we introduced the HIV tat gene, under the control of the cellular proteolipoprotein promoter, into the germline of mice and demonstrate that, when expressed, the tat gene product induces lymphoid hyperplasia in spleen, lymph nodes, and lung, as is observed in AIDS patients, but not in the brain or testes. Our findings indicate that HIV, through some of its genes, directly participates in the pathogenesis of AIDS.
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PMID:Development of lymphoid hyperplasia in transgenic mice expressing the HIV tat gene. 753 11

It has been suggested that acquired abnormalities of the red cell membrane due to various injuries [azidothymidine (AZT) therapy, immunoglobulin coating of red cells, differentiation abnormalities of erythroid precursors] contribute to the onset of anaemia in HIV-infected patients. In vitro proteolysis of erythrocyte membrane proteins is regarded as a molecular marker of membrane damage induced in vivo by different agents. We therefore investigated in vitro proteolysis of ghosts derived from red blood cells of 30 HIV-infected patients. Considered collectively, there was no significant increase in in vitro proteolysis in ghosts from anaemic HIV patients. However, a significantly higher degree of in vitro self-digestion of RBC membrane proteins was evident in HIV-infected patients with spleen enlargement, but not in splenomegalic patients suffering from liver cirrhosis. Neither AZT therapy nor the presence of a positive direct antiglobulin test seemed to be directly associated with increased in vitro protein breakdown. The results seem to suggest damage of the red cell membrane in HIV infection, induced by injuries on red cells during their prolonged retention inside an enlarged spleen, while it seems unlikely that AZT therapy or immunoglobulin coating of red cells play major roles in red cell damage.
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PMID:In vitro proteolysis of the red cell membrane in patients with HIV infection. 754 74

The epidemiological pattern of visceral leishmaniasis in north-eastern Brazil is changing. The disease was typically seen in rural, endemic areas, but is now occurring as an epidemic in the city of Natal where 316 cases have been reported since 1989; 49% were in children less than 5 years of age. The principle clinical and laboratory findings were weight loss, fever, hepato-splenomegaly, anaemia, leucopenia and hypergammaglobulinaemia. Elevated transaminases and hyperbilirubinaemia were also observed. The diagnosis was confirmed in 87% of cases by identifying amastigotes in aspirates from bone marrow or spleen. Five isolates were identified as Leishmania (L.) chagasi by isoenzyme analysis. The mortality rate was 9%; all deaths occurred during the first week in hospital. One person had concurrent human immunodeficiency virus infection. Among 210 household contacts and neighbours of patients from the endemic area examined for evidence of L. (L.) chagasi infection, 6 additional cases of visceral leishmaniasis were diagnosed. Thirty-eight percent of house-mates and neighbours gave a positive Montenegro skin test reaction, indicating prior subclinical infection.
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PMID:An urban outbreak of visceral leishmaniasis in Natal, Brazil. 757 Aug 12

Persons with hemophilia or other HIV-1 risk factors may be more likely to have idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia (ICL). We determined the frequency of ICL in prospectively followed cohorts of HIV-1 seronegative hemophilic men and seronegative female sex partners of HIV-1 infected hemophilic men, and examined factors potentially associated with ICL. Seven of 304 (2.3%) seronegative hemophilic men and one of 160 (0.6%) female partners met the ICL definition, but the condition resolved for two of the men and for the sole female partner. All five men with persistent ICL had lymphocytopenia (< 1,200 total lymphocytes/microliters) and < 300 total CD4+ lymphocytes/microliters; only one had a low CD4+ percentage. On the most recent measurement, 14.5% of the 304 seronegative hemophilic men had lymphocytopenia. Compared with matched hemophilic controls, men with persistent ICL more often had a history of liver disease (3/5 cases, 0/21 controls, P = 0.007) or splenomegaly (3/5 cases, 4/21 controls; P = 0.04), but not severe hemophilia, greater clotting factor concentrate exposure, high alanine aminotransferase levels, hepatitis B virus antigenemia, or detectable hepatitis C virus RNA in plasma. All five cases and 20/21 controls had antibodies to hepatitis C virus present in their serum. In this cohort of hemophilic men, ICL was related to lymphocytopenia associated with liver disease rather than selective loss of CD4+ lymphocytes.
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PMID:Idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia in HIV seronegative men with hemophilia and sex partners of HIV seropositive men. Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study. 760 13

Rare cases of low-grade lymphomas have been described in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. However, this is the first reported case of mantle-cell lymphoma, a type of low-grade lymphoma, in a patient who also had HIV infection. Salient clinical features included lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and involvement of the bone marrow and meninges. The disease proved to be unusually aggressive and response to chemotherapy was insignificant. The patient survived only 4 months.
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PMID:Mantle-cell lymphoma in a patient with human immunodeficiency viral infection. 763 49


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