Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

While bronchoalveolar lavage has been shown to be more sensitive than brush biopsy (BB) for the diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in AIDS patients, some have reported that BB occasionally is positive in spite of a negative BAL. Many bronchoscopists, therefore, continue to perform routine BB when doing bronchoscopy on AIDS patients. We performed a retrospective study of all fiberoptic bronchoscopies done on human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients over a one-year period at our institution to determine if the use of BB added to the diagnostic yield of bronchoscopy over that of BAL alone. Of 84 bronchoscopies in which BB was performed in addition to BAL, BB yielded no diagnoses that were not obtained by BAL. Brush biopsy added approximately $400 to the cost of bronchoscopy. We conclude that BB should not be routinely done when performing bronchoscopy on HIV-infected patients.
...
PMID:Lack of utility of bronchial brush biopsy in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 154 Nov 32

Pulmonary surfactant is altered in experimental Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Although P carinii is a major causative agent of pneumonia in immunocompromised patients, the pathophysiology of lung injury caused by this organism is poorly understood. Therefore, we studied bronchoalveolar lavage specimens obtained from 19 HIV-infected subjects with PCP compared with specimens from ten healthy control subjects. As iterative BAL was performed, 37 BAL specimens were analyzed for protein and phospholipid. The BAL samples were divided into two groups as follows: 22 BAL samples with the presence of P carinii and 15 BAL samples without P carinii. Compared to control subjects, HIV+ BAL presented a significant increase of PR and a decrease of total PL in both P carinii+ and P carinii- BAL, but in P carinii+ BAL, the fall of PL/PR ratio was significantly more pronounced compared to P carinii- (0.09 +/- 0.02 vs 0.19 +/- 0.04, p less than 0.02). The BAL performed during the recovery of PCP showed an improvement of initial biochemical abnormalities. Surfactant composition was also altered, with a phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol drop and a sphingomyelin and lysophosphatidylcholine increase. The presence, even in P carinii- BAL, of less polar compounds of undetermined nature, was revealed. We concluded that in HIV+ patients, abnormalities of pulmonary surfactant were present before PCP, and that the development of PCP enhances these abnormalities. These surfactant alterations may contribute to the saprophyte-pathogen transformation of P carinii, but this hypothesis requires further investigation that is presently in progress.
...
PMID:Surfactant analysis during Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in HIV-infected patients. 160 Jul 73

The severe immunologic alterations caused by HIV infection is at the base of respiratory tract infections, neoplasms and inflammatory complications which represent the most frequent cause of death in AIDS patients. The etiological diagnosis is difficult and often needs invasive procedures. Among those, BAL is surely the most useful method because of its lesser invasiveness and better tolerability and more for its sensibility and easier repeatability. Besides the etiological evaluation of lung infections, BAL allows to obtain and analyze immunologic and inflammatory cells from alveolar spaces consenting the acquisition of data regarding immunopathogenetic mechanisms related to pulmonary complications during AIDS. We report data about cytoimmunologic study of BAL fluid in 10 patients of ours.
...
PMID:[The role of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in assessing pulmonary compromise in AIDS]. 166 81

51 BALFs from HIV positive patients were analysed. In 16 of them Pneumocystis carinii organisms were found. Two methods detecting Pneumocystis carinii were used: Grocott-Gomori, fluorescence Papanicolaou stain. The best staining method turned out to be Grocott-Gomori. The differential count was carried out in 40 BALFs. In patients with Pneumocystis carinii detected by BAL neutrophilia was always present. In some of these patients lymphocytosis was also present. In 4 patients with high lymphocytosis immunocytochemical examinations with monoclonal antibodies against CD4, CD8 T cells showed a marked decrease of the CD4/CD8 ratio.
...
PMID:[Usefulness of bronchoalveolar gavage in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 184 41

Immunocytochemical examinations using the PAP method with monoclonal antibodies against lymphocytes T (CD3, CD4, CD8) were carried out in 31 BAL's from patients with different interstitial lung diseases. A distinct increase of the CD4 (T "helper"): CD8 (T "suppressor") ratio was found in patients with sarcoidosis and in a patient with pigeon breeder's disease. A profound decrease of the CD4/CD8 ratio was found in HIV positive patients. The authors also discussed the methodological problems of correct typing of T cells in BAL.
...
PMID:[Subpopulations of T lymphocytes in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid of different interstitial lung diseases]. 184 42

To investigate the prognostic utility of the morphologic and immunologic evaluation of BAL cell populations in determining mortality risk, we analyzed BAL data obtained from 115 patients infected with HIV-1. Forty fatal outcomes occurred within 73 patients with OI. The OI patients who died showed a significant increase in neutrophils with respect to surviving patients. Furthermore, the finding of a BAL neutrophilia in HIV-1-infected patients with OI strongly correlated with a high risk of death. Among 42 cases without OI, 11 patients died. Patients without OI who had a fatal outcome showed an increase in CD3+ and CD8+ BAL lymphocytes with respect to the survivors. The presence of a lymphocytic alveolitis was associated with a significant increase in the mortality rate. Taken together our data suggest that the evaluation of the BAL cell populations might be useful in predicting the risk of fatal outcome in patients with HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of the evaluation of bronchoalveolar lavage cell populations in patients with HIV-1 infection and pulmonary involvement. 195 3

To verify the hypothesis that alveolar macrophages (AMs) from patients infected with HIV-1 could synthesize and release TNF alpha, AMs recovered from the BAL fluid of 11 patients with seropositive HIV-1 (six with AIDS and five with ARC) were tested in vitro for their ability to destroy TNF alpha-susceptible targets. Furthermore, the presence of TNF alpha was assessed in AM-conditioned supernatants on the basis of their cytotoxic activity and by using an immunoenzymatic test and immunoblotting. Transcription of the TNF alpha gene in AMs was also studied by means of the Northern blot analysis. AMs freshly recovered from patients infected with HIV-1 exhibited high levels of cell-mediated cytotoxicity against U937 targets, and the addition of a polyclonal anti-TNF alpha antibody resulted in a significant inhibition of the target lysis. Cell-free supernatants conditioned by unstimulated AMs exerted high levels of cytotoxic activity against TNF alpha-sensitive targets, whereas duplicate, neutralization experiments performed in the presence of an anti-TNF alpha antibody proved that the observed cytotoxic activity was mostly mediated by TNF alpha. The presence of high amounts of TNF alpha in the conditioned media was confirmed by the immunoenzymatic test. In addition, the immunoblot analysis showed that the TNF alpha released by AMs has a Mr 17,000 band, identical to a standard preparation of recombinant TNF alpha. The Northern blot demonstrated that unstimulated AMs express detectable levels of mRNA transcripts for TNF alpha. Taken together, our data support the concept that AMs from patients with HIV-1 infection constitutively release TNF alpha.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Alveolar macrophages from patients with AIDS and AIDS-related complex constitutively synthesize and release tumor necrosis factor alpha. 206 29

This study investigated the significance of detecting cytomegalovirus in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Bronchoscopy with BAL was performed on all patients. Lavage was examined for CMV by cytology, culture, and immunofluorescence. The lavage results were compared to clinical status at the time of bronchoscopy and the outcome of the respiratory event. Cytomegalovirus was detected in 51 percent of the BALs in the patients with HIV infection and 25 percent of the immunosuppressed patients without HIV. No association was found in the HIV infected patients between CMV and hypoxemia, abnormal chest roentgenogram, leukopenia, and increased mortality. As indicated by mortality, CMV did not significantly increase the severity of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. The study also suggested that CMV in BAL fluid reflected bronchopulmonary replication of the virus, and not contamination by virus in the blood. Cytomegalovirus does not appear to contribute directly to the pulmonary disease found in most patients with HIV infection.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of patients with AIDS. 215 78

Published reports indicate that HIV is recovered from BAL fluid of patients with AIDS who have LIP but not with other AIDS-related pulmonary disease. Our experience has been different. Ten BAL specimens from nine patients with AIDS were cultured directly in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and all ten cultures were positive for HIV as indicated by examination of the culture supernatant by reverse transcriptase assay and enzyme immunoassay for HIV antigen. Five of the specimens were also positive for Pneumocystis carinii, and other pulmonary diagnoses included histoplasmosis, lymphoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, and aspiration pneumonia. Five additional BAL specimens were cultured after freezing at -70 degrees C, but only two were culture-positive for HIV (p = 0.022; FET). This study indicates that HIV can be recovered from the BAL fluid in most patients with AIDS, unrelated to the type of pulmonary disease. In contrast to cultures, HIV antigen was detected in the BAL fluid of only one patient, and that patient had LIP with noncaseating granulomas. Therefore, HIV culture is not useful in the diagnosis of LIP, but HIV antigen detection should be studied further. All BAL fluids should be considered potentially infectious.
...
PMID:Recovery of human immunodeficiency virus and detection of p24 antigen in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from adult patients with AIDS. 250 Mar 12

A broad spectrum of lung disease occurs in association with HIV infection. Included are both infectious and neoplastic processes and idiopathic disorders. To insure prompt, accurate, and efficient diagnosis, a logical, staged sequence of tests should be applied. Chest films and, in some instances, pulmonary function tests and gallium-67 citrate lung scans serve to provide objective indications of lung disease. Each of these tests is sensitive but nonspecific. Specific infecting organisms, particularly P. carinii, can be identified by examining sputum induced by inhalation of 3 per cent saline. Bronchoscopic procedures, including BAL and TBB, are highly sensitive and should be performed in patients having nondiagnostic sputum examinations. Tests involving antigen and antibody detection are of little use in the evaluation of individual patients. Detection of recurrent episodes of PCP is difficult because abnormalities in the usual screening tests may be residual from previous episodes. Finding P. carinii in sputum or bronchoscopic specimens soon (within 2 to 3 months) after a confirmed episode of PCP likely represents residual organisms rather than recrudescence of the infection. Empiric diagnosis of P. carinii should be employed only in limited circumstances when specific diagnostic studies are not available, are contraindicated, or are refused.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of pulmonary diseases. 304 85


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>