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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
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An expanded "look-back" program has been developed, in which patients who may have been exposed to HIV through blood transfusion were identified via three triggers: the blood that they received was donated by persons who 1) have subsequently been reported to local health departments as meeting the diagnostic criteria for AIDS, 2) have donated since the introduction of anti-HIV screening and tested positive, or 3) have been found to be infected during investigation of reported transfusion-associated HIV infections. In comparing triggers, cross-referencing the list of patients reported to have AIDS (AIDS case list) proved to be the most efficient approach for identifying HIV-infected donors and transfusion recipients. Of the 7973 AIDS patients reported in eight Northern California counties as of December 1988, 316 (4.0%) were determined to have donated at Irwin Memorial Blood Centers between 1977 and 1985. Despite the logarithmic increase in reported cases of AIDS in the San Francisco Bay area over the last 5 years, the rate of detection of previous donors from AIDS case lists remained between 3.3 and 5.4 percent. These persons accounted for 69 percent of the identified infected donors, and their identification led to notification of 60 percent of potentially exposed recipients and 51 percent of known infected recipients. The crossreferencing of AIDS case listings with blood bank records was equally efficient for regions with low and high AIDS prevalence. National adoption of AIDS case list crossreferencing is recommended as an effective means of identifying previously unidentified infected recipients in an effort to limit the secondary spread of HIV infection.
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PMID:Identification of HIV-infected transfusion recipients: the utility of crossreferencing previous donor records with AIDS case reports. 231 95

This report presents a three-stage model (ARRM) that characterize people's efforts to change sexual behaviors related to HIV transmission. ARRM focuses on social and psychological factors hypothesized to influence (1) labeling of high risk behaviors as problematic, (2) making a commitment to changing high risk behaviors, and (3) seeking and enacting solutions directed at reducing high risk activities. The proposed model integrates important concepts from prior behavioral medicine and human sexuality studies, specifies their differential import to achieving the goals associated with each stage of the model, and denotes factors hypothesized to influence people's motivation to continue the change process over time. Current findings are discussed within this three-stage model and directions for further research are suggested. Recent findings from our ongoing studies of gays and heterosexuals in San Francisco are presented.
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PMID:Towards an understanding of risk behavior: an AIDS risk reduction model (ARRM). 231 52

By combining dynamic modeling of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission with mathematical optimization techniques, we calculate values of epidemiological parameters characterizing the early epidemic (1978-1986) among homosexual and bisexual men in San Francisco. The seroconversion fraction data reported by the San Francisco hepatitis B vaccine trials cohort study for this period is accurately simulated by a model assuming varying infectivity among three stages of HIV infection (early antigen stage, HIV antibody-positive stage, and AIDS stage). Using optimization techniques, we generate curves of the annual number of new partners and the annual number of risk contacts as functions of time. We project future case rates using optimized parameter values, and we study the sensitivity of these projections to variations in parameters, including the population size and the incubation period.
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PMID:Model-based optimization of infectivity parameters: a study of the early epidemic in San Francisco. 233 19

A spectrum of renal abnormalities has been described in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) with or without signs of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In particular, attention has been focused on a nephropathy characterized clinically by nephrotic proteinuria and rapidly advancing renal insufficiency, and histologically by focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). To evaluate the relationship between HIV infection and structural renal disease, we reviewed all consultations between January 1982 and March 1988 to the Division of Nephrology at San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH), a municipal hospital treating approximately one-third of AIDS cases in San Francisco. Seventy-three consultation requests were received during this period regarding patients with AIDS (48), AIDS-Related Complex (23), or asymptomatic HIV infection (2). Of these, 27 gave evidence of structural renal disease (Group I): 14 had chronic renal insufficiency, in 10 of whom nephrotic proteinuria was also present. However, progression of renal insufficiency to end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in this group did not follow the rapid course described for HIV-associated nephropathy. Renal tissue was examined in 11 Group I patients and showed FSGS in four and a variety of acute and chronic glomerular and tubulointerstitial changes in the others. In 46 Group II patients, consultation was requested for acute renal failure or fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base disturbances. We also reviewed 91 consecutive autopsies performed in patients dying with AIDS at SFGH between 1981 and 1986.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Renal involvement in patients infected with HIV: experience at San Francisco General Hospital. 234 28

To examine the effect of the revision of the US national AIDS case definition in September 1987, we compared demographic and clinical information for AIDS patients diagnosed and reported to the San Francisco Department of Public Health between 1 September 1987 and 31 October 1989. Of the 3167 patients diagnosed and reported during the study period, 584 (18%) met the revised case definition only, increasing AIDS case reporting in San Francisco by 23%. One hundred and thirty-four of these 584 patients (23%) subsequently developed diagnoses meeting the old definition. After adjusting for this proportion, the revised case definition increased reporting by 17%. The mean time between initial diagnosis with a disease meeting the revised definition and subsequent development of a disease meeting the old definition was 18.5 months. Patients who met the revised case definition only were slightly older and more likely to be Black, female, and intravenous drug users (IVDUs) than those meeting the old case definition. The majority of patients who met the revised case definition only had initial diagnoses of HIV wasting syndrome (26%), HIV encephalopathy (21%), and presumptive Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (19%). The revised AIDS case definition has significantly increased the reporting of severe morbidity associated with HIV infection, particularly among IVDUs.
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PMID:Effect of the revised AIDS case definition on AIDS reporting in San Francisco: evidence of increased reporting in intravenous drug users. 235 Apr 53

Sexual promiscuity often is part of the lifestyle of teenagers who are delinquent and abuse drugs, and that behavior puts them at increased risk of contracting HIV infection/AIDS. Many of these juveniles are runaways or live in disorganized homes, and as a result they are hard to reach and it is extremely difficult to provide health and other services to them. Indeed, these youths at risk most frequently may be identified and helped when they run afoul of the law and enter the judicial system. With that in mind, concerned professionals in San Antonio have developed an innovative program to provide primary care, drug abuse treatment and rehabilitation, and AIDS prevention education to the youthful offenders admitted to the Juvenile Detention Center of Bexar County. They hope it will give some of these youngsters the help and the opportunity they need to grow up, become productive citizens, and stay alive.
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PMID:Pediatric AIDS: adolescence, delinquency, drug abuse, and AIDS. 237 73

Crack cocaine, a smokable form of cocaine hydrochloride, is now widely available in American inner cities. Reports of high rates of unprotected sexual activity among crack users, coupled with reports of high rates of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), have raised fears that this population of drug users may soon be contracting and disseminating sexually transmitted HIV. In a study of 205 black adolescent crack users conducted in Oakland and San Francisco, California, 101 respondents (49% of the sample) who reported using crack in combination with sexual activity were examined. Those respondents who reported having a history of one or more STD were compared using discriminant analysis (DA). A successful discrimination (canonical correlation = 0.61, p = 0.000) identified five variables that distinguished those with a STD history from those with no STD history: gender (being female) (p = 0.000), frequency of marijuana use (p = 0.005), response to the question; "Do you plan for sex or does it just happen?" (p = 0.002), response to the statement, "I use drugs to get away from my problems" (0.029), and response to the question, "Do you agree that sex doesn't feel as good when you use a condom?" (p = 0.006). The selection of these variables was thought to represent an underlying passivity in the way that crack users who combine crack use with sex approach sexual activity.
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PMID:Crack users: the new AIDS risk group? 238 74

In our ongoing cohort study of homosexual men, the ratio of new Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) cases to new opportunistic infections (OI) during the periods 1982-1985, 1986-1987, and 1988-1989 fell from 0.75 (9 KS: 12 OI) to 0.57 (12 KS:21 OI) to 0.27 (4 KS:15 OI), respectively. To examine factors associated with the development of KS as compared to OI, we compared antecedent risk factors in 25 KS cases and 48 OI "controls." In univariate analyses, several classical HIV risk factors including numbers of sexual partners and receptive anal intercourse were higher in the KS than the OI group. The strongest associations were found with an elevated number of sex partners in high-risk areas (San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York) in the 5 years prior to enrollment and with elevated use of nitrite inhalants. Logistic regression revealed the latter two variables and an elevated number of partners contacted in washrooms/parks to be significant, independent risk factors for KS relative to OI. Any or all of these variables could be related with early HIV infection. However, the association with early sexual contact in high-risk areas raises the more intriguing possibility that this variable is an indicator of an increased exposure either to a particular strain of HIV that is more pathogenic for KS, or, more likely, to a sexually transmitted KS cofactor that may have been more highly concentrated in these areas at this early point in the epidemic. The present study supports an independent association with use of nitrite inhalants, which could be hypothesized either to have an independent biologic effect on KS or to enhance the efficiency of transmission of the cofactor virus.
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PMID:Risk factors for Kaposi's sarcoma in the Vancouver Lymphadenopathy-AIDS Study. 239 81

To develop a model for predicting acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) morbidity in San Francisco, Calif, through June 1993, we combined annual human immunodeficiency virus seroconversion rates for homosexual and bisexual men and for heterosexual intravenous drug users with estimates of the cumulative proportion of the population with AIDS by duration of human immunodeficiency virus infection and with estimates of the size of the at-risk populations. We projected AIDS mortality by applying Kaplan-Meier estimates of survival time following diagnosis to the projected number of cases. The median incubation period for AIDS among homosexual and bisexual men infected with the human immunodeficiency virus was estimated to be 11.0 years (mean, 11.8 years; 95% confidence interval, 10.6 to 13.0 years). The model projects 12,349 to 17,022 cumulative cases of AIDS in San Francisco through June 1993, with 9,966 to 12,767 cumulative deaths.
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PMID:Projections of AIDS morbidity and mortality in San Francisco. 230 86

When faced with the ever-increasing demand for the rapid laboratory diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), as well as a variety of fungal, parasitic, and bacterial opportunistic infections in Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)-infected individuals, the Chest Service and the Clinical Microbiology Laboratory at San Francisco General Hospital developed a coordinated plan for the collection and rapid examination of specimens to allow presumptive diagnoses to be made as quickly as possible. Clinical studies have been performed to determine the efficacy of different specimens and diagnostic systems for the provision of clinically useful information. Our approach has been to provide medical care on an outpatient basis using less invasive diagnostic systems that do not require direct physician participation. Direct laboratory examination of a single specimen submitted to microbiology often yielded presumptive or final diagnoses that were directly communicated to the physician. The evolution of PCP diagnosis in AIDS patients is described. Our current procedure of examining mucolysed, concentrated induced sputum stained with a rapid Giemsatype stain, Diff-Quik (Baxter/Scientific Products, McGaw, IL), has a sensitivity for P carinii detection of 74% to 77%. We have found that the use of commercially available immunofluorescence staining diminishes screening time and increases the sensitivity of P carinii detection in mucolysed concentrated induced sputum. We also describe the appearance of bacterial, fungal, and parasitic agents seen on direct examination and the usefulness of antigen detection, serology, and various microbiologic culture systems for diagnosing infections caused by these organisms.
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PMID:Organization of microbiology laboratory services for the diagnosis of pulmonary infections in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 247 7


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