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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It has been suggested that
HIV
plays a role in the generation of myeloproliferative disorders, including polycythemia vera (PV). Seven cases of polycythemia in
HIV
patients have been described in the literature, but only 3 of these met criteria for determining a primary origin (vera) of polycythemia. We report a case of PV in a patient infected with
HIV
. A 45 year old non-smoking homosexual male presented with 15.7 g/dl hemoglobin in 1991, and was diagnosed with
HIV
. After 7 years, he presented with plethora,
splenomegaly
, an erythrocyte mass of 71 ml/kg, and an oxygen saturation of 93.9% (the latter three constituting the major criteria for the diagnosis of PV). Erythrocytes 7.35 x 10(6)/ml hemoglobin, 21.4 g/dl, hematocrit 63%, leukocytes 12,400, erythropoietin < 5 nmoll/ml. These values are all compatible with a diagnosis of PV. The CD4 count was 321 cells/mm(3) and
HIV
viral load was undetectable. The patient was initially treated with zidovudine. He was then treated with didanosine, lamivudine, and saquinavir, but all of them failed to slow the increase in erythrocyte levels. After a diagnosis of PV, he was treated with hydroxyurea and phlebotomy, which normalized the hemogram. CD4 count rose to 474 cells/mm(3) and
HIV
viral load remained at undetectable levels. The patient remains in stable condition with combination treatment after 1 year. We suggest that this is a case of
HIV infection
which may have led to the emergence of polycythemia vera. Treatment of the
HIV
did not prevent the appearance of the myeloproliferative disorder.
...
PMID:Polycythemia vera in a patient with the human immunodeficiency virus: a case report. 1118 68
Visceral leishmaniasis is an endemic infection in Mediterranean countries, where it has become a frequent complication of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The incidence of visceral leishmaniasis is increasing in Spain due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related cases, but some aspects of its epidemiology, clinical features, and management remain unknown. In addition, no comparative clinical studies about the disease in HIV-infected and non-HIV-infected patients have been reported. During a 24-year period, 120 cases of visceral leishmaniasis were diagnosed at our institution and 80 (66%) were associated with
HIV infection
. The mean age at diagnosis was higher in HIV-infected that in non-HIV-infected patients (33.2 versus 23.2 yr; p = 0.002), but the male/female ratio was similar in both groups. The main risk factor for
HIV infection
was intravenous drug abuse (78.7%). The clinical presentation of leishmaniasis was similar in both groups, but HIV-infected patients had a lower frequency of
splenomegaly
than HIV-negative individuals (80.8% versus 97.4%; p = 0.02). HIV-infected patients had a greater frequency and degree of leukopenia, lymphocytopenia, and thrombocytopenia. Most of them were profoundly immunosuppressed (mean CD4+ lymphocyte count, 90 cells/mm3) at the time of diagnosis of leishmaniasis, and 53.7% had AIDS. The sensitivity of serologic studies for Leishmania was significantly lower in HIV-infected than in non-HIV-infected patients (50% versus 80%; p < 0.001), but the diagnostic yield of bone marrow aspirate (67.1% versus 79.4%) and bone marrow culture (62.9% versus 66.6%) was similar in both groups. After initial treatment, the response rate was significantly lower in HIV-infected than in non-HIV-infected individuals (54.8% versus 89.7%; p = 0.001). The relapse rate was 46.2% and 7.5%, respectively (p < 0.001). Secondary prophylaxis with antimonial compounds or amphotericin B seems to be useful in preventing relapses in HIV-infected patients. The mortality rate was higher (53.7% versus 7.5%; p < 0.001) and the median survival time shorter (25 versus > 160 mo; p < 0.001) in AIDS patients than in HIV-negative individuals. Although leishmaniasis could contribute to death in a significant number of HIV-infected patients, it was the main cause of death in only a few of them. The CD4+ lymphocyte count and the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy and secondary prophylaxis for leishmaniasis were the most significant prognostic factors for survival in AIDS patients. Visceral leishmaniasis behaves as an opportunistic infection in HIV-infected individuals and should be considered as an AIDS-defining disease.
...
PMID:Visceral leishmaniasis in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected and non-HIV-infected patients. A comparative study. 1120 3
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
HIV
-infected people in northern Thailand have been devastated by an outbreak of Penicillium marneffei in recent years. The opportunistic infection by the fungus discovered in 1956 has killed thousands of AIDS patients in Thailand. If untreated, it is almost always fatal. Symptoms of infection include fever, chronic coughing, generalized lymphadenopathy,
splenomegaly
, weight loss, diarrhea, and skin lesions. Treatment with intravenous amphotericin B is successful in 75 percent of patients. After initial treatment for P. marneffei, patients must take prophylactic medicine to prevent a relapse. The fungus probably grows in the soil in Southeast Asia, but only people with severely compromised immune systems become infected.
...
PMID:Rare disease strikes AIDS patients in SE Asia. 1136 86
Toxoplasma gondii is a unicellular protozoan. The definitive hosts, cats, produce hardy oocysts and sporozoites. Ingestion by a nonfeline leads to the formation of tachyzoites acutely, which cause parasitemia and further dissemination, and bradyzoites, which lead to latent infection with the formation of tissue cysts in skeletal muscle, heart muscle, and central nervous system (CNS) tissue. Toxoplasmosis can be transmitted to humans by ingestion of tissue cysts in raw or inadequately cooked infected meat or in uncooked foods that have come in contact with contaminated meat, by inadvertent ingestion of oocysts and sporozoites in cat feces, or transplacentally. Immunocompetent adults and adolescents with primary infection are generally asymptomatic, but symptoms may include mild malaise, lethargy, and lymphadenopathy. Specific treatment for nonpregnant adults and adolescents is not required. Immunosuppressed patients may experience more severe manifestations, including
splenomegaly
, chorioretinitis, pneumonitis, encephalitis, and multisystem organ failure. These patients are also prone to reactivation of latent infection involving the CNS. All patients with
human immunodeficiency virus infection
and CD4 counts <100 cells per cubic millimeter should be treated prophylactically with pyrimethamine-sulfonamide. Congenital toxoplasmosis is marked by the classic triad of chorioretinits, intracranial calcifications, and hydrocephalus. Current studies have determined that prolonged treatment (1-2 years) of neonates with fansidar is important to prevent serious sequelae. Diagnosis of acute toxoplasmosis is mainly by antibody detection and generally only undertaken in pregnant patients with risk factors for transplacental transmission. All positive screening tests in pregnant women must be confirmed at a toxoplasma reference laboratory. Recent studies have shown that polymerase chain reaction testing of amniotic fluid is useful for identification or exclusion of fetal T. gondii infection. Ultrasound can be used as an adjunct to serological screening but cannot itself definitively diagnose disease. Early-first-trimester maternal infections are less likely to result in congenital infection, but the sequelae are more severe. Transplacental passage is more common when maternal infection occurs in the latter half of pregnancy, but fetal injury is usually much less severe. Typically, infected pregnant patients are treated with pyrimethamine-sulfonamide for positive PCR-amniotic-fluid testing and with spiramycin for negative PCR-AF testing.
...
PMID:Toxoplasmosis. 1137 31
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
Primary
human immunodeficiency virus infection
is a distinct medical syndrome which is often not diagnosed. The importance of its early recognition lies in the potential for early therapeutic intervention for the individual, with consequent public health benefits for the community at large. Diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion in a person with a history of potential exposure. Early treatment with combination antiretroviral therapy should be considered once the diagnosis has been established. We report a local case of primary
human immunodeficiency virus infection
in a patient who presented initially with fever, lymphadenopathy, generalised skin rash, dry cough,
splenomegaly
, and aseptic meningitis.
...
PMID:Primary human immunodeficiency virus infection: heightened awareness needed. 1151 59
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
Homozygosity or compound heterozygosity for beta(0)-thalassemia mutations most commonly results in a transfusion-dependent thalassemia major phenotype. In this report, we describe a 55-year-old male, from Guinea-Bissau, that had been asymptomatic and never transfused until being admitted to hospital with anemia, fever,
splenomegaly
, and asthenia. Following hospital admission,
HIV
-2 and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections were diagnosed, and biochemical and molecular studies revealed homozygosity for beta(0)-thalassemia. At the molecular level, this is the first description of homozygosity for the beta(0)-Black 1,393-bp deletion. In this case, the complete absence of beta-globin gene expression seems to be compensated by an unusually high fetal globin gene expression (Hb F 96%). Beta-globin haplotyping results were compatible with the propositus being homozygous for the Black 2 haplotype and for the absence of the XmnI polymorphism at -158 of (G)gamma-globin gene (-/-). Co-inheritance of genetic factors usually associated with high Hb F levels was not detected. Otherwise, the propositus is a heterozygote for the alpha-globin gene 3.7-kb deletion that is a beneficial modulating factor but not sufficient to explain this extremely mild phenotype. This unusual genotype/phenotype association is discussed in terms of the mechanisms underlying hemoglobin switching during development.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic homozygous deletional beta(0)-thalassemia in an African individual. 1211 69
Four men were diagnosed with
human immunodeficiency virus infection
(AIDS) and autoimmune hemolytic anemia (
HIV
-AIHA) during the years 1997-2000 at Cook County Hospital, Chicago. All patients presented with the acute onset of severe hemolytic anemia, fever, and
splenomegaly
. The direct and indirect antiglobulin tests were positive in all, and three patients had mixed warm and cold autoantibody hemolytic anemia. Two patients responded to prednisone therapy and remain in remission from AIHA for 15 and 30 months, respectively.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hemolytic anemia in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus-1. 1211 60
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