Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acanthamoeba species and leptomyxid organisms are free-living amebas that cause meningoencephalitis, primarily in immunocompromised patients. We report the isolation and culture of Acanthamoeba species and leptomyxid amebas from four patients with fatal amebic meningoencephalitis. Acanthamoeba species were cultured from
brain abscess
specimens from three immunocompromised patients (including two patients with AIDS). In the case of the fourth patient, who had no identifiable
immunodeficiency
, leptomyxid amebas were cultured from a specimen from a subcutaneous nodule and were identified in amebic granulomas in brain tissue by the indirect immunofluorescence test. Persons with advanced infection due to the human
immunodeficiency
virus may be at increased risk for amebic meningoencephalitis, but the diagnosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any immunocompromised patient with cerebral abscesses.
...
PMID:Culture isolation of Acanthamoeba species and leptomyxid amebas from patients with amebic meningoencephalitis, including two patients with AIDS. 145 33
Although resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection requires intact T cell-mediated immunity, only 20 patients with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and listeriosis (including one patient described herein) have been reported to date. Listeriosis developed before AIDS in five cases. Syndromes included meningitis in nine cases, bacteremia in nine,
brain abscess
in one, and endocarditis in one. Eighteen patients were treated with ampicillin, penicillin, or amoxicillin with or without aminoglycosides. Clinical and microbiologic responses were obtained in one patient with bacteremia treated with vancomycin and in one patient with meningitis treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Three of the nine patients with meningitis died, as did the patient with
brain abscess
. All nine patients with bacteremia and the patient with endocarditis survived. No case of relapse was documented. L. monocytogenes, although uncommon, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of febrile illness, meningitis, and
brain abscess
in patients with HIV infection.
...
PMID:Listeriosis in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 201 9
A retrospective evaluation was performed on 28 cases of paediatric
brain abscess
(male: female ratio 2.5:1; mean age 9.4 years; range 2.8-16 years) diagnosed between 1967 and 1987. In 46%, congenital cyanotic heart disease was identified as a predisposing factor, likewise sinusitis, otitis media or mastoiditis in 29% and
immunodeficiency
in 11%. Pathogenesis remained unclear in 14%. Initial symptoms and signs were predominantly nonspecific; loss of consciousness occurred in 32% of cases, neurological deficit and seizures each in 25%. Since the availability of CT, both diagnostic delay after hospital admission and mortality were substantially reduced: mean delay from 8.4 to 3.0 days, and mortality from 23% to 0%. Seventeen patients (61%) had follow up examinations 9.6 years (mean) after the acute illness (range 1-21 years). Neurological sequelae were diagnosed in 35% of cases, epilepsy in 29%, epileptic potentials during EEG in 12%, and CNS scars in 50%. Psychological testing revealed no statistically significant differences compared to normal populations. CNS scars, and epilepsy and/or epileptic potentials were more common after excision (7 patients) when compared to patients treated by aspiration and/or antibiotics alone (21 patients). It is concluded that excision of
brain abscess
should be avoided whenever possible. Therapy of choice consists of the administration of adequate antibiotics with or without CT-guided needle aspirations.
...
PMID:Brain abscess in childhood--long-term experiences. 202 23
AIDS is a reliably diagnosed disease that is indicative of an underlying cellular
immunodeficiency
with no other cause for the disorder. To date over 2000 cases have been reported in North America and Europe and the number is rising. Patients fulfilling the definition for AIDS have included male homosexuals, IV drug abusers of both sexes, people from Haiti, heterosexual partners of AIDS patients, hemophiliacs, and some patients who fit no particular pattern. The etiology has been attributed to factors acting singly or in synergy namely that repeated exposure to CMV, semen, or other antigens results in progressive cellular
immunodeficiency
, or alternatively, a novel virus has an etiologic role. The epidemiology of the syndrome suggests a horizontally transmissible agent. The spectrum of opportunistic infections observed in AIDS patients is well documented. A higher incidence of KS as well as squamous carcinoma of the oral cavity, cloacogenic carcinoma of the rectum, primary lymphomas of the brain, and systemic Burkitt's-like lymphoma has been noted. Seventy-one patients with AIDS were examined and followed during the course of their disease. Forty-one patients had definite retinal lesions at the time of examination. The most common intraretinal finding was CMV retinitis which displayed the typical white, crumbly areas of retinal necrosis and hemorrhage. Optic nerve involvement was quite common. The development of retinitis was a harbinger of eventual death as it was a progressive and a nontreatable disorder, lasting about 6 months. The second most common retinal finding was cotton wool spots, the lesions were usually present during the course of PCP and were due to microvascular damage in the retina from circulating immune complexes. No organisms were demonstrated in the retina. One AIDS patient who had been an IV drug abuser developed fungal retinitis due to Candida albicans. The patient eventually died from Candida sepsis. One patient had acquired toxoplasmosis retinochoroiditis. Examination revealed a large active intraretinal focus of infection. No other retinal lesion was noted. The patient, a homosexual, died from a toxoplasmosis
brain abscess
. The patient with AIDS is in a continuing struggle for survival against a myriad assortment of opportunistic infectious agents. Careful initial ophthalmological examination and long-term follow-up are mandatory.
...
PMID:The retinal lesions of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 610 Jan 47
The common soil fungus, Fusarium, is rarely pathogenic in man but occasionally causes serious disease, particularly in immunocompromised hosts. A case is reported of Fusarium
brain abscess
and meningitis occurring in a patient with chronic infectious mononucleosis syndrome and
immunodeficiency
. The patient died despite aspiration of the abscess and treatment with amphotericin B. This case demonstrates the importance of identifying the offending pathological organism through abscess aspiration in immunocompromised patients.
...
PMID:Fusarium brain abscess. Case report. 682 55
The successful management of nocardial
brain abscess
remains problematic. The authors report 11 cases of nocardial
brain abscess
treated between 1971 and 1993 and review 120 cases reported since 1950. The clinical findings included focal deficits in 55 patients (42%), nonfocal findings in 36 (27%), and seizures in 39 (30%). Extraneural nocardiae were present in 66% of the cases; pulmonary (38%) and cutaneous/subcutaneous (20%) locations were the most frequent. The abscesses were single in 54% of the patients, multiple in 38%, and of unknown number in 8%. Forty-four of 131 patients (34%) were immunocompromised; since 1975, 18 of 40 immunocompromised patients (45%) were transplant recipients and six (15%) had human
immunodeficiency
virus. The mortality rate was 24% after initial craniotomy and excision (11/45), 50% after aspiration/drainage (17/34), and 30% after nonoperative therapy (7/23); 29 cases (22%) were diagnosed at autopsy. The mortality rate was 33% in patients with single abscesses and 66% in those with multiple abscesses (P < 0.0003). There was no difference in the mortality rates of immunocompromised and nonimmunocompromised patients treated before computed tomography (CT) was available; since the advent of CT, however, the mortality rate has been significantly higher in immunocompromised patients (55% vs. 20%, P < 0.05). Although the mortality rate for nocardial brain abscesses has dropped almost 50% since the advent of CT, it has remained virtually unchanged in immunocompromised patients and is three times higher than that of other bacterial brain abscesses (30% vs. 10%). The authors recommend image-directed stereotactic aspiration for diagnosis; however, craniotomy and total excision are necessary in most cases, because nocardial abscesses are usually multiloculated. Patients with minimal neurological deficits or small abscesses may be treated initially with antibiotics alone. Sulfonamides, alone or in combination with trimethoprim, are most effective and should be continued for at least 1 year. Minocycline, imipenem, or aminoglycoside in combination with a third-generation cephalosporin may be used with reasonably good success as second-line agents in cases of allergy or nonresponsiveness to sulfa agents.
...
PMID:Nocardial brain abscess: treatment strategies and factors influencing outcome. 780 4
A 29-year-old human
immunodeficiency
virus-negative intravenous drug abuser with a right hemispheric staphylococcal
brain abscess
underwent PET imaging of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) brain uptake. Diffuse right cortical hypometabolism was noted, as well as crossed cerebellar diaschisis. Unlike previous PET findings on FDG uptake in a
brain abscess
, however, the most intense uptake of FDG was found within the abscess and not in the contrast-enhancing walls.
...
PMID:Discordance between F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose uptake and contrast enhancement in a brain abscess. 840 2
Although intracranial mass lesions that occur as a result of infection have commonly been reported in patients infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus, polymicrobial pyogenic
brain abscess
has not been described in this setting. We report the first case of a patient with a polymicrobial
brain abscess
involving Streptococcus bovis, Fusobacterium necrophorum, Peptostreptococcus, and group G Streptococcus, and we review the relevant world literature.
...
PMID:Polymicrobial brain abscess in a patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 911 98
Salmonella focal intracranial infections are unusual in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients. Six such infections have been reported in the world literature. We report a case of salmonella subdural and epidural cerebral empyema with concomitant osteomyelitis of the frontal bone. Such a complication in the course of salmonellosis is reported for the first time. In previously published case reports, four patients had
brain abscess
and two had subdural empyema. Salmonella typhimurium was isolated from two patients, and different serotypes were recovered from the others. All patients had advanced HIV disease, and all but two had had opportunistic infections before the diagnosis of salmonella intracranial infection. Surgical drainage combined with systemic antibiotic therapy resulted in the recovery of four of five patients. No regression of the lesions occurred in one patient treated only with antibiotics for multiple cerebral abscesses.
...
PMID:Nontyphoidal salmonella intracranial infections in HIV-infected patients. 940 68
Admitted medical records, from January 1988 to December 1995, of 28 symptomatic amebic patients who lived in the east-southeast area of Tokyo were studied retrospectively, in order to find the present characteristics of symptomatic amebiasis due to Entamoeba histolytica in this area. Categorized by disease, there were 14 cases of colitis, 9 cases of liver abscess, 4 cases of colitis with liver abscess, and 1 case of liver abscess with
brain abscess
. Patients consisted of 26 Japanese males, 0 Japanese females, 1 non-Japanese male and 1 non-Japanese female. The mean age of colitis patients and liver abscess patients was 55.4 years old and 41.3 years old, respectively. The presumed place of contraction was Japan in 64% of the patients. Forty-eight percent of male patients indicated that they engaged in homosexual or bisexual practices, and 36% of male patients who denied such sexual practices or did not answer the question had no history of marriage. Positive rate of serum titre for Treponema pallidum hemagglutination test (TPHA) and human
immunodeficiency
virus antibody was 42.9% and 0%, respectively. Sixty-seven percent of TPHA-positive patients indicated that they engaged in male homosexual or bisexual practices. Zymodeme patterns of E. histolytica isolated from 4 colitis patients were XIV in 1 case and II in 3 cases. Symptomatic amebiasis in the east-southeast area of Tokyo is a disease which predominantly afflicts males, especially those in their middle age, and most patients contract the disease in Japan. The high rates of patients who engaged in male homosexual or bisexual practices and the high rates of patients with positive TPHA suggest that amebiasis is likely to be sexually transmitted disease in homosexual and bisexual men in the east-southeast area of Tokyo, and zymodeme II may be the predominant type in symptomatic amebic colitis in this area.
...
PMID:Present characteristics of symptomatic amebiasis due to Entamoeba histolytica in the east-southeast area of Tokyo. 944 Apr 41
1
2
3
4
Next >>