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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most frequent systemic viral opportunistic infection in AIDS, occurring in almost 40% of patients, at a stage of profound
immunodeficiency
, with a CD4 cell count lower than 50/microL. The most frequent localizations are retinal and gastrointestinal. Diagnosis of retinis, which can be totally asymptomatic, is based on fundus examination, which should be performed regularly in patients with AIDS and/or low CD4 count. Diagnosis of
colitis
, as of other rare manifestation (oesophagitis, hepatitis, encephalitis, myeloradiculitis, pneumopathy), relies on the association of suggestive clinical symptoms and CMV inclusions in biopsy specimens and/or CMV positive culture. The 2 drugs available for treatment of CMV disease, ganciclovir and foscarnet, are administered by intravenous route, with 2 infusions per day for induction therapy (usually 2 to 3 weeks), then once a day as lifelong maintenance therapy, to lessen or delay recurrences. Active drugs which could be given orally, combination of 2 drugs, new potent drugs and the development of prophylaxis in at-risk patients should help to improve the prognosis of CMV infection in AIDS.
...
PMID:[Cytomegalovirus infections in AIDS]. 775 12
A case of a patient with a malignant thymoma who developed an unusual form of
colitis
is reported. The patient was a previously healthy 20-year-old man who was referred to the Johns Hopkins Medical Institution for biopsy and resection of a mediastinal mass, which proved to be a malignant thymoma. During this hospitalization and subsequently, the patient developed severe chronic diarrhea, the etiology of which remained uncertain after routine work-up, including cultures. Colonoscopic biopsies revealed only minimal inflammation but numerous, prominent apoptotic lesions within crypt epithelium, suggestive of an autoimmune or graft-versus-host-like
colitis
. The patient, who was immunocompetent and human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) negative, had no known risk factors for graft-versus-host-disease (e.g., no blood transfusions, no transplantation history before diarrheal episodes). Stool cultures for pathogenic bacteria and viruses were negative. The diarrhea and histologic findings eventually improved with steroid therapy yet returned on recurrence of the thymoma. This unusual form of
colitis
has not been previously reported to be associated with thymoma and is interesting in light of the role the thymus plays in immune regulation.
...
PMID:Graft-versus-host-like colitis associated with malignant thymoma. 783 81
Cytomegalovirus disease is an opportunistic infection that is seen in patients with inmunodeficiencies. The group most commonly affected are AIDS and transplanted patients. Only a few cases of cytomegalovirus disease in non-immunocompromised patients have been reported. In localized disease, the gastrointestinal tract is the most frequently affected. We report two cases of acute abdomen caused by cytomegalovirus enteritis and
colitis
(histopathological diagnosis) without any underlying immune disorder. The role that the cytomegalovirus infection might play in the development of the clinical manifestations in these two cases is discussed. Without an established
immunodeficiency
we must be careful to attribute to cytomegalovirus infection the direct responsibility of the lesions. In the reported cases, the existence of intestinal ischemia is more than just a clinical hypothesis and pathological examination is inconclusive. The absence of an immunocompromised state, the presentation as an acute abdomen and the clinical course forwards intestinal occlusion in the first case are not characteristic of cytomegalovirus enteritis and
colitis
. We conclude that the two reported cases are in fact an ischemic enteritis upon which cytomegalovirus enteritis and
colitis
was superimposed, an association that has not been reported before.
...
PMID:[Cytomegalovirus enteritis and colitis in nonimmunodepressed patients, a primary disease or superinfection?]. 798 12
We report on eight children with severe diarrhea beginning in the first 6 months of life (< 1 month in six cases), who had a number of features in common. All were small for gestational age and had an abnormal phenotype, including facial dysmorphism, hypertelorism, and woolly, easily removable hair with trichorhexis nodosa. Two were products of consanguineous marriages. Severe secretory diarrhea persisted despite bowel rest (n = 7). Jejunal biopsy specimens showed total or subtotal villous atrophy with crypt necrosis, and inconstant T-cell activation in some cases (n = 3). Colon biopsy specimens showed moderate nonspecific
colitis
. All the patients had defective antibody responses despite normal serum immunoglobulin levels, and defective antigen-specific skin tests despite positive proliferative responses in vitro. Three had monoclonal hyper-immunoglobulinemia A. The course was marked by diffuse erythroderma in two cases and mental retardation in three. Treatment included bowel rest, intravenous administration of immune globulins, administration of corticosteroids (n = 6) and cyclosporine (n = 2), and bone marrow transplantation (n = 1). Five patients died between the ages of 2 and 5 years (of sepsis or cirrhosis), two are being fed enterally, and one continues to receive total parenteral nutrition. The cause of the combined low birth weight, dysmorphism, severe diarrhea, trichorrhexis, and
immunodeficiency
is unclear. These features may constitute a specific syndrome within the group of intractable diarrheas of infancy.
...
PMID:Intractable infant diarrhea associated with phenotypic abnormalities and immunodeficiency. 802 82
Endoscopic pathological findings in human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-positive patients have never been reported from the Midwest. We review the endoscopic and histologic findings in HIV-positive patients referred for endoscopy. The major symptoms that prompted referral to the gastroenterology service were: diarrhea (26%), esophageal symptoms (26%), abdominal pain (19%) and hematochezia (12%). One hundred and twenty-nine symptomatic episodes in 90 patients were retrospectively reviewed. Overall, a diagnosis was reached in 57% of the symptomatic episodes, but in only 32% was a specific infection or neoplasm detected. The most common lesions responsible for diarrhea, esophageal symptoms and pain were Histoplasma
colitis
, Candida esophagitis and cytomegalovirus
colitis
. The majority (81%) of the lesions were treatable. The diagnostic yield was significantly higher (44%) for evaluations of patients who were CDC class IV (median CD4, 30 cells/mm3), compared with 14% of patients of other classifications (median CD4, 424 cells/mm3). In addition, evaluation of diarrhea, esophageal symptoms and pain yielded a diagnosis in 41% of the episodes, vs. 11% for evaluation of other symptoms. We conclude that gastrointestinal symptoms are common in HIV-positive patients in the Kansas City area, but are often minor, and that specific infections or neoplasms are diagnosed more commonly in CDC class IV patients and in patients with diarrhea, esophageal symptoms and abdominal pain.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal endoscopic pathology in patients seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus. 809 8
We present a case of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection complicated by Streptococcus bovis meningitis and bacteremia and severe Strongyloides stercoralis
colitis
. The association between S. bovis infection and strongyloidiasis has not been described previously. This case highlights the importance of searching for larvae of S. stercoralis as part of the evaluation of the gastrointestinal tract of patients with bacteremia or meningitis due to certain enteric organisms. The role of HIV infection in the development of severe S. stercoralis
colitis
in association with S. bovis bacteremia and meningitis is unclear.
...
PMID:Streptococcus bovis bacteremia and meningitis associated with Strongyloides stercoralis colitis in a patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 816 38
During childhood, many people acquire primary infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV), one of the herpes viruses. If they later become immunosuppressed, such as occurs with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection, CMV is likely to become reactivated. Severe disease caused by CMV is life-threatening in the HIV-infected population. CMV retinitis, gastritis,
colitis
, pneumonia, encephalitis and hepatitis have all been reported, but oral lesions due to infection with CMV are rarely reported. We report a case of oral CMV infection which at first was clinically indistinguishable from HIV-associated periodontal disease.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection presenting as acute periodontal infection in a patient infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 838 96
In order to assess the value of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) DNA amplification of gastrointestinal biopsies, we studied 57 human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected patients with and without gastrointestinal HCMV diseases. After DNA extraction, a 406-bp fragment from the unique short region of the HCMV genome was amplified by 35 cycles of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and semiquantified from 80 to 80,000 HCMV genomic copies. Among 12 non-AIDS patients, the PCR assay was negative for 11 of 12 duodenal and 8 of 8 colorectal samples. It was also negative for 28 of 31 duodenal and 12 of 15 colorectal samples from 31 AIDS patients without gastrointestinal HCMV diseases. Among 14 AIDS patients with gastrointestinal HCMV diseases, the PCR assay was positive for 12 of 12 patients with HCMV duodenitis and for 13 of 13 patients with HCMV
colitis
. Results were dichotomized between high and low HCMV-DNA copy numbers. For duodenitis, sensitivity was 92% and specificity was 100%. For
colitis
, sensitivity was 92% and specificity was 93%. Specificity and sensitivity were not influenced by shedding status for HCMV or by other gastrointestinal infections. HCMV DNA amplification of gastrointestinal biopsies is a sensitive and specific tool for the diagnosis of gastrointestinal HCMV diseases in AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Diagnostic value of amplification of human cytomegalovirus DNA from gastrointestinal biopsies from human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients. 839 87
Pooled human immunoglobulin labeled with indium-111 (111In-HIgG) was used to identify the presence and extent of infection in patients positive for human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), presenting with either symptoms and/or signs of acute chest infection or with pyrexia without localizing signs or symptoms. Fifty-five studies were performed in 51 patients with suspected chest infection or pyrexia without localizing signs. Of these, 111In-HIgG identified intrapulmonary accumulation in 17 patients with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, eight with bacterial pneumonia, five with cytomegalovirus pneumonia, three with pulmonary Mycobacterium avium intracellulare infection and one with a fungal pneumonia. There was no intrapulmonary accumulation of 111In-HIgG in five patients with bronchopulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma and in three patients with intrathoracic lymphoma. Quantification of lung/heart activity was significantly increased (p < 0.05) in patients with active chest infection compared with those with intrapulmonary tumor or no active lung pathology. Indium-111-HIgG scintigraphy also localized at 14 sites of extrapulmonary infection, including six patients with
colitis
. There were no false-negative studies but false-positive uptake was seen in four studies. These results confirm that 111In-HIgG correctly identifies the presence and extent of infection in patients positive for HIV antibody.
...
PMID:Indium-111-labeled polyclonal human immunoglobulin: identifying focal infection in patients positive for human immunodeficiency virus. 841 Feb 71
Of 427 human
immunodeficiency
virus-seropositive patients admitted to the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital from January 1986 through August 1992, seven had Clostridium difficile enteric infection documented by the presence of cytotoxin B in the stool, without other enteric infection. All seven patients had AIDS, and all had recently received antibiotics. These patients had a severe clinical presentation of C. difficile infection. All patients had profound watery diarrhea, with a mean of 20 +/- 14 (SD) bowel movements per day. Four had fever > 38.5 degrees C, and another had hypothermia. Three patients had borderline hypotension, and another was orthostatic. The mean pulse was 119 +/- 26 (SD) beats/min. Five patients had abdominal pain and tenderness. Two had occult blood in the stool. Four had metabolic derangements such as hyponatremia, hypokalemia, or prerenal azotemia. Three of four patients undergoing abdominal roentgenography had radiographic findings consistent with severe
colitis
of colonic dilation, mural thumbprinting, or mural thickening. Sigmoidoscopic findings ranged from diffuse erythema to prominent pseudomembranes. During a mean interval of 14.3 +/- 6.2 (SD) days before institution of specific antibiotic therapy, the diarrhea spontaneously resolved in only one of the seven patients. In the others, the diarrhea resolved on average 7.3 +/- 4.0 (SD) days after instituting antibiotic therapy. During a mean follow-up of 4.4 +/- 6.3 (SD) months, only two patients redeveloped diarrhea. Both patients had recurrent C. difficile
colitis
; the symptoms again rapidly resolved after repeat antibiotic therapy. We conclude that in patients with AIDS C. difficile may present as a severe enteric infection with profound diarrhea due to immunosuppression, that the diarrhea may be prolonged and not remit spontaneously, and that the diarrhea usually rapidly resolves with specific antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Clostridium difficile infection is a treatable cause of diarrhea in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus infection: a study of seven consecutive patients admitted from 1986 to 1992 to a university teaching hospital. 850 86
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