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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Open node biopsy was the method of choice for diagnosing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection before serologic testing became available. Currently, the otolaryngologist is often called on to assist in the management of HIV-positive patients with troublesome cervical adenopathy. Today's questions are: what is the place of fine-needle aspiration (FNA), and when is open cervical node biopsy indicated. A retrospective review was undertaken of 93 consecutive cervical node biopsies performed by our department during the 5-year period from 1985 to 1989. Twenty of the patients who underwent biopsy were HIV-positive. Of these twenty, ten carried an established diagnosis of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Seventeen of these patients underwent FNA before biopsy. In the eight patients with persistent generalized lymph-adenopathy (PGL) and nontender, nonenlarging nodes, pathologic analysis revealed lymphoid hyperplasia. Five of these patients had antecedent FNA, none demonstrating any pathologic changes. Of the twelve patients with enlarging or tendon nodes, the diagnosis of mycobacterial adenitis was made in eight, Nocardial infection in two, Burkitt's lymphoma in one, and metastatic Kaposi's sarcoma in one. In four of the patients diagnosed with mycobacterial infections, FNA yielded cytologic evidence of acid-fast bacilli and open lymph node biopsy added nothing. In contrast, FNA failed to reveal the diagnosis in both patients with Nocardial infection, and in the two patients with neoplastic disease. We conclude that cervical node biopsy is not indicated in the HIV or AIDS patient with nontender or nonenlarging nodes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Indications for open cervical node biopsy in HIV-positive patients. 140 19

Lymphadenitis is a common extrapulmonary manifestation of mycobacterial disease in persons with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We compared the clinical, mycobacterial, and diagnostic characteristics of mycobacterial adenitis in 11 HIV-seropositive and 29 HIV-seronegative patients. Ninety-three percent of the HIV-seronegative patients and 54% of the HIV-seropositive patients were foreign-born. In contrast to the HIV-seronegative patients, seropositive patients were more likely to be febrile and have negative purified protein derivative skin tests and abnormal chest roentgenograms. Sputum samples were rarely diagnostic in either group. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was the most commonly isolated organism in both groups, although United States-born patients with HIV infection were more likely to be infected with nontuberculous mycobacteria. In contrast to results for seronegative patients, fine-needle aspiration was usually diagnostic in the HIV-seropositive population, especially in those at risk for M. tuberculosis infection. Similarly, the rate at which smears were positive for acid-fast bacilli was significantly higher in the HIV-seropositive group, a circumstance suggesting a higher burden of organisms in this population. Finally, although preceding opportunistic infections were uncommon in the HIV-seropositive group, both tuberculous and nontuberculous adenitis were associated with advanced immunosuppression.
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PMID:Comparison of mycobacterial lymphadenitis among persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus and seronegative controls. 142 Jun 73

We reviewed the 22 cases of Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI) infection that occurred among 196 human immunodeficiency virus-infected children seen at the National Cancer Institute Pediatric Branch from December 1986 through April 1991, and an additional 65 charts from children with cultures negative for MAI. All patients with proven MAI were receiving antiretroviral therapy with zidovudine, dideoxyinosine, or a combination of zidovudine and dideoxycytidine. All patients had disseminated MAI infection, except one adolescent who had only evidence of localized lymphadenitis. All cases of MAI but one were diagnosed before death. The overall incidence of MAI was 11% in our patients but increased to 24% in patients whose absolute CD4 cell counts were < 100 cells/mm3. Symptoms most commonly associated with MAI infection included recurrent fever (86% of patients), weight loss or failure to thrive (64%), neutropenia (55%), night sweats (32%), and abdominal pain (27%). Children infected with MAI had a mean CD4 percentage of 2% (range, 0% to 7%) and a mean absolute CD4 count of 12 cells/mm3 (range, 0 to 48 cells/mm3), significantly lower than in the remainder of the clinic population or the group of children with cultures negative for MAI. Of 20 patients with MAI infection who were tested, 10 had measurable p24 antigen with a mean value 939 pg/ml (range, 77 to 3270 pg/ml) compared with 19 of 59 patients without MAI infection in whom the mean positive value was 413 pg/ml. There was no difference in survival time between those children with documented MAI infection (median survival time, 45.5 weeks) and those with similarly low CD4 counts and cultures negative for MAI (median survival time, 50.4 weeks). Future improvements in therapeutic options may make screening of pediatric human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients with low CD4 counts a reasonable plan.
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PMID:Defining the population of human immunodeficiency virus-infected children at risk for Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection. 143 13

Chancroid is a mucocutaneous infection caused by Haemophilus ducreyi that produces ulcerative lesions and enhances the efficiency of transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Confirmation of infection by culture of H. ducreyi is essential in therapeutic trials. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics for the isolate should be determined by agar dilution. Patients should be evaluated by appropriate laboratory tests for syphilis, infection with herpes simplex virus, gonorrhea, and (in North America) infection with Chlamydia trachomatis. The clinical history of the disease should be recorded and ulcers, buboes, and lymphadenitis mass described. Whenever possible, study participants also should be tested for HIV infection. Randomized, prospective, double-blind, active-control comparative clinical trials are preferred for evaluation of the safety and efficacy of new anti-infective drugs. Otherwise-healthy men and women should be enrolled in these studies. Patients with active syphilis or genital herpes should be excluded. Microbiological and clinical outcomes are paramount.
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PMID:Evaluation of new anti-infective drugs for the treatment of chancroid. Infectious Diseases Society of America and the Food and Drug Administration. 147 17

Data from the national tuberculosis programme show that extrapulmonary tuberculosis is increasing rapidly in Tanzania, most likely caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic. Retrospective data from 271 patients admitted to Muhimbili Medical Centre (MMC), Dar es Salaam between January 1, 1987 and December 31, 1988 with the diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis reveal that in only 18% of the cases a bacteriological or histological confirmation of the diagnosis had been made. This figure is only 3% when the tuberculous lymphadenitis cases are excluded. The most common diagnosis was tuberculous pleuritis (119 cases), followed by tuberculous lymphadenitis (67 cases), tuberculosis of the spine (47 cases), tuberculous pericarditis (16 cases) and others. The mean clinical features are presented. In 79 patients the HIV ELISA test was performed, of which 52% were positive. There is an urgent need for improving the diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis requiring prospective studies.
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PMID:Extrapulmonary tuberculosis--a simple diagnosis? A retrospective study at Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. 181 3

Fourteen human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients with parotid enlargement were reviewed retrospectively in order to elucidate the natural history of this clinical entity. The efficacy of fine-needle aspiration (FNA) in predicting benign nonsurgical disease was evaluated. The most common findings on FNA were proteinaceous fluid and/or epithelial cells consistent with cyst contents in 71% of the patients, followed by reactive lymphadenitis (50%), and chronic or granulomatous inflammation (21%). No evidence of malignancy was seen in any patient. These results correlated well with the histopathologic diagnosis in all operated patients. Surgery did not affect the ultimate clinical outcome. This study suggests that HIV-positive patients with isolated asymptomatic parotid swelling in the absence of other clinical features suggestive of malignancy can be followed conservatively with FNA, avoiding the risks of surgery.
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PMID:Value of needle biopsy in directing management of parotid lesions in HIV-positive patients. 193 57

Mycobacterium haemophilum, previously characterized as an unusual pathogen, is found primarily in immunocompromised hosts. This organism has stringent growth characteristics and may not be isolated using routine techniques. M. haemophilum infects the skin and underlying tissues, a circumstance which reflects the organism's propensity for growth in a cooler environment. Infections have been reported in renal transplant recipients, patients with Hodgkin's disease, and, more recently, patients with AIDS. The organism has also been isolated from children with cervical lymphadenitis in the absence of apparent immunodeficiency. Response to therapy has not been uniform, and in some instances improvement in immune status has been associated with regression of lesions. With proliferation of transplantation surgery, chemotherapy, and AIDS, the number of infections due to M. haemophilum is likely to increase.
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PMID:Mycobacterium haemophilum infection in immunocompromised patients: case report and review of the literature. 196 7

A rapidly enlarging left inguinal adenitis, with positive groove sign, and fever, chills, malaise, hypotension, headache, scarlatiniform rash, choleroid diarrhea, and proteinuria developed in an homosexual man who was positive for human immunodeficiency virus. The needle aspiration of the inguinal mass showed group A beta-hemolytic streptococci and the blood cultures were negative, suggesting group A streptococcal cellulitis-adenitis with toxic strep syndrome. Treatment with penicillin and surgical drainage was successful. Bacterial infections associated with defective humoral immunity appear to be common in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and some of these infections have a remarkable extensive and lethal evolution. Therefore streptococcal adenitis should be considered in any patient with AIDS or AIDS-related syndrome in whom rapidly enlarging inguinal nodes develop.
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PMID:Group A streptococcal cellulitis-adenitis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 199 49

Adult T-cell leukaemia is the first blood disease caused by a retrovirus: HTLV-1. The authors report the first French series of 15 patients, of whom 9 came from the classical endemic areas--the Antilles and outer Caribbean Islands--and 6 from Africa where the serological prevalence of HTLV-1 is high but few cases of adult T-cell leukaemia have been reported. Emphasis is laid on the importance of immunodeficiency (refractory strongyloidiasis, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, polyclonal B lymphoproliferative syndrome) and of other pathologies associated with the retrovirus (polyarthritis, lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia). The authors also describe the presence of adenopathy in healthy carriers: either adenitis suggestive of retroviral infection, or Castelman's disease adenopathy. These clinical presentations are similar to those described in lymphadenopathy syndromes due to the human immunodeficiency viruses. Aggressive lymphomas require chemotherapy, but sooner or later resistance develops, and the prognosis is very poor. The indications for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation are still to be determined. The diagnosis of adult T-cell leukaemia must be considered in all patients with blood disease coming from the endemic areas.
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PMID:[Adult T-cell leukemia and non-malignant adenopathies associated with HTLV I virus. Apropos of 17 patients born in the Caribbean region and Africa]. 214 Jan 59

Based on immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and electron microscopy, lymphatic tissue changes in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other retroviral infections represent different stages of a dynamic process progressing from hyperplasia to atrophy. The germinal centers (GC) function early as a virus reservoir in both HIV and feline leukemia virus infection, which also produces lymphadenopathy, severe immune impairment, and death from opportunistic infections. Core proteins of HIV can be detected on the surface of follicular dendritic cells, electron microscopy reveals cell-free HIV and virus replication in the same location, and in situ hybridization shows that the majority of cells with mRNA of HIV can be found in germinal centers (GC). Double immunohistochemical labeling of lymphocyte populations suggests that one of the most important events in HIV lymphadenitis with explosive follicular hyperplasia is the accumulation of CD8+CD45R0+ lymphocytes in the lymph nodes. Their clustering in the vicinity of the FDC network could play a key role in disintegration of GC and lymphocyte depletion as the disease progresses.
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PMID:Lymphatic tissue changes in AIDS and other retrovirus infections: tools and insights. 217 Jul 78


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