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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1987 and 1988, 340 consecutive patients attended the endoscopy centre of Cochin hospital, Paris, and underwent oesophago-gastroduodenal endoscopy in a search for Giardia lamblia parasitology and histology. Two-hundred and eight of these patients presented with non-ulcer dyspepsia and entered a prospective study aimed at determining the advisability of a systematic search for Giardia lamblia in this population. Six biopsies were positive for giardiasis, including 3 in patients with acquired
immunodeficiency
, 1 in a case of chronic diarrhoea with atrophic villi and 2 in dyspeptic patients. Giardiasis, therefore, cannot be regarded as a cause of non-ulcer dyspepsia, and a systematic search for the parasite is of little interest in such cases. However, giardiasis remains a cosmopolitan
parasitic disease
with a non-negligible prevalence in France among subjects at risk, such as communities, children, travellers, homosexuals and immunodeficient patients.
...
PMID:[Role of giardiasis in non-ulcer dyspepsia]. 182 98
In June, 1986, the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center opened an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome day-care center to provide a quality educational experience for children infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus. A major concern was the possibility of increasing secondary infections among these immunocompromised children by placing them in a group environment. One particular worry was intestinal
parasitic disease
, a serious public health problem in day-care centers throughout the United States. To minimize the risk of parasitic infections, scrupulous hygienic and monitoring procedures were instituted at the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome day-care center. This study reports the incidence of intestinal
parasitic disease
at the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome day-care center during its first 40 months of operation, encompassing 669 child-months of enrollment, with 131 stool specimens examined for ova and parasites. There were 2 cases of parasitic infection: Entamoeba histolytica in an asymptomatic 6-year-old and Giardia intestinalis in a 7-year-old with diarrhea. In neither case was there any secondary spread. None of the 15 children in diapers had a positive specimen, and we found no Cryptosporidium. Our experience suggests that with appropriate precautions human
immunodeficiency
virus-infected children can participate in a group day-care program without excessive risk for
parasitic disease
. Strict adherence to hygienic procedures may also decrease the risk of intestinal
parasitic disease
among healthy children attending day-care centers.
...
PMID:Incidence of intestinal parasitic disease in an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome day-care center. 192 77
Parasitosis
opportunist are becoming clearer thanks to a better knowledge of immunological mechanisms, especially in AIDS. Child immunological immaturity and corticotherapy are the two other main immunodeficiencies among opportunist parasitosis. For the protozoosis, coccidiosis (especially toxoplasmosis), cryptosporidiosis, but isosporosis too and microsporidiosis represent a privileged group among opportunistic infections. Among adult, leishmaniasis caused by L. infantum is an opportunist parasistosis, favoured by corticotherapy or AIDS, but among children, it is the child's immunological immaturity which is involved in the
immunodeficiency
. Babesia occurs among splenectomized people. Giardiasis is more frequent and more severe among IgA immunodeficiencies especially secretories IgA. Among helminthiasis, generalised strongyloidiasis is very severe among patients under corticotherapy, but AIDS is not involved.
...
PMID:[Opportunistic aspects of parasitosis]. 268 97
17 Caucasian patients with aquired
immunodeficiency syndrome
(AIDS) contracted after long stays in Africa are reported. All 17 patients had previously been healthy; AIDS was diagnosed in them in France after July, 1983, except in 2 patients who were admitted to hospital before 1981. AIDS was diagnosed according to the Centers for Disease Control criteria--severe opportunistic infection or Kaposi's sarcoma. After 1983 every patient was given a questionnaire about where he or she had travelled in Africa, his or her profession, previous venereal disease or malaria, and sexual activity. It seems likely that these patients contracted HIV infection in Central Africa. The picture of the disease was similar to that in patients in other AIDS risk groups. Malaria was the only
parasitic disease
found in 2 of the patients, and there was no evidence of correlation between hepatitis B and AIDS in these patients. No patient was a hemophiliac or an intravenous-drug abuser, and only 1 patient had received a blood transfusion. Injections in Africa do not appear to be involved in the transmission of AIDS; in these patients, injections were carried out with sterile equipment. The study confirms that prostitutes constitute a reservoir of HIV, particularly in Central Africa, and suggest that the virus will continue to spread through heterosexual contacts. Public health programs are urgently needed to limit sexual contacts with people at risk of transmitting AIDS in Africa and to promote the use of condoms.
...
PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome after travelling in Africa: an epidemiological study in seventeen Caucasian patients. 288 Nov 42
Gastric anisakiasis was an incidental finding on gastroscopy of a 48-year-old man known to have AIDS. At that time the patient had been symptom-free, the test having been performed to check on an ulcerative Candida oesophagitis. The Anisakis larva was extracted through the gastroscope and there has been no recurrence. The history suggested a chronic course. The unusual absence of symptoms suggests that the
immunodeficiency
had influenced the pathogenesis of the
parasitic disease
.
...
PMID:[Atypical anisakiasis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 337 5
Female genital schistosomiasis has been neglected as a disease entity during a period when considerable progress has been achieved for schistosomiasis as such. The pathophysiology and immunology are imperfectly understood, appropriate diagnostic tools are not at hand, therapeutic rationales do not exist, the natural history is not well known and women's perception of their illness has never been studied. Based on the findings of a systematic analysis, made by an inventory of research needs on women and tropical diseases, it has been possible to highlight individual and public health hazards of female genital schistosomiasis, such as the disease being a possible cofactor for te spread of the human
immunodeficiency
virus. This paper gives an example of how a gender perspective on a well-known
parasitic disease
can bring new challenges to the research community and the public health sector.
...
PMID:Female genital schistosomiasis. New challenges from a gender perspective. 761 12
Zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis (ZVL) is an important emerging
parasitic disease
. This article reviews the recommended control methods for the disease and concludes that they have only been partially effective. The continued endemicity of ZVL, its recent appearance in urban areas of Latin America, and its increasing importance as an opportunistic infection among persons infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus indicate that present control methods for the disease are ineffective and that new control strategies are needed. Prevention of the disease in dogs appears to be the best approach for interrupting the domestic cycle of ZVL. The most feasible approach would seem to be a canine vaccine that protects dogs from developing parasitemia and from becoming peridomestic reservoirs of the parasite.
...
PMID:Control of zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis: is it time to change strategies? 769 73
Elevation of IgE has been associated with T-cell dysregulation and with the occurrence of opportunistic infections in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The precise cause of IgE overproduction during the early stages of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-1 disease, however, has not been established. In light of reports demonstrating that IgE production may be affected by vitamin E levels in an animal model, we evaluated nutritional status in relationship to plasma IgE levels and immune parameters in 100 asymptomatic HIV-1-seropositive and 42 HIV-1-seronegative homosexual men. Approximately 18% of the HIV-1-seropositive population demonstrated biochemical evidence of plasma vitamin E deficiency (< 5 micrograms/ml). Subsequent analysis of available samples indicated a dramatic elevation of IgE levels (308 +/- 112 IU/ml) in vitamin E-deficient seropositive subjects (n = 9) as compared with age and CD4-matched HIV-1-seropositive persons with adequate vitamin E levels (n = 16, 118.1 +/- 41.1 IU/ml) and significantly lower levels (59.5 +/- 15.7 IU/ml) in HIV-1-seronegative men (n = 20, p = 0.01). This effect, which was independent of CD4 cell count, did not appear to be influenced by atopic or gastrointestinal
parasitic disease
. The low plasma vitamin E levels were related at least in part to dietary intake (r = 0.552, p = 0.01), suggesting that supplementation may be warranted in HIV-1-infected persons in whom vitamin E deficiency develops. Analysis of covariance revealed a strong relationship between IgE levels and CD8 cell counts (p < 0.006), and between IgE level and vitamin E deficiency (p < 0.039).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Elevated IgE level in relationship to nutritional status and immune parameters in early human immunodeficiency virus-1 disease. 772 70
The larvae of Mesocestoides are rarely encountered in nonhuman primates, with most cases reported in baboons. Infection of macaques has been occasionally diagnosed, but Mesocestoides in the lung parenchyma is extremely rare. We have previously demonstrated that in macaques with terminal AIDS, simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV)-infected leukocytes are rarely found in cellular infiltrates associated with opportunistic infections or preexisting disease. Here we describe larvae (tetrathyridia) of the cestode Mesocestoides in the lung of an adult, pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina) during acute SIV infection in which virus-positive cells are present within the cellular infiltrates. These results describe a rare
parasitic disease
in pigtailed macaques and demonstrate that lentivirus-infected leukocytes can be associated with inflammatory sites during acute infection.
...
PMID:A case of pulmonary cestodiasis in a simian immunodeficiency virus-infected pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina) in which virus-infected leukocytes are present within the lesion. 890 3
Leishmaniasis is a
parasitic disease
caused by a protozoon (Leishmania), with different clinical forms that are endemic in certain countries. The association of this disease in patients who are seropositive to human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) has recently been described. Leishmaniasis can develop in any stage of HIV infection, although the clinical manifestations - and hence the diagnosis - tend to coincide with the periods of maximum immune depression. We present the case of a HIV-positive, ex-intravenous drug abuser (in stage B2 of the CDC, 1992) with concomitant hepatitis C infection who presented with palatinal pain and bleeding for the past 2 months. Exploration revealed a vegetating tumoration of the hard palate. Hematoxylin-eosin and Giemsa staining of the biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of leishmaniasis. The definitive diagnosis was mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL), for a bone marrow aspirate proved negative, and no further lesions could be established. The patient was treated with meglumine antimoniate (Glucantime), followed by improvement of the lesions.
...
PMID:Oral leishmaniasis in a HIV-positive patient. Report of a case involving the palate. 1193 58
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