Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The full range and occurrence of medical conditions in persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) before they develop illnesses that define acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have not been systematically or completely described. In a retrospective and prospective cohort study, 1,073 homosexual and bisexual men in three US cities were interviewed and examined twice per year from January 1988 to September 1992. Study participants were from San Francisco, California (273 HIV-seropositive and 432 HIV-seronegative men), Denver, Colorado (107 positive and 129 negative men), and Chicago, Illinois (54 positive and 78 negative men). A total of 305 HIV-positive men had specifiable dates of HIV seroconversion (mean of 15.3 months between the last negative and the first positive HIV antibody test). Besides much increased incidences of thrush (incidence relative risk (IRR) = 23.3) and hairy leukoplakia (IRR = 551), the following conditions also occurred significantly more frequently in HIV-positive men than in HIV-negative men: anal herpes (incidence density (ID) = 10.7/100 person-years; IRR = 7.7); sinusitis requiring antibiotics (ID = 6.2/100 person-years; IRR = 2.1); anal warts (ID = 5.8/100 person-years; IRR = 2.7); seborrhea (ID = 3.8/100 person-years; IRR = 6.6); community-acquired pneumonia (ID = 1.4/100 person-years; IRR = 2.7); skin cancers (ID = 1.0/100 person-years; IRR = 2.2); and seizures, often apparently "breaking through" prior anticonvulsant therapy (ID = 0.8/100 person-years; IRR = 5.6). First episodes of hairy leukoplakia, thrush, and skin cancer occurred at low mean CD4 counts (mean counts were less than 350 cells/microliters) and late in HIV infection (mean times were more than 8 years after HIV seroconversion). Many medical problems, some not widely appreciated, occur in HIV-infected men before they develop AIDS-defining illnesses, signifying considerable morbidity from pre-AIDS HIV infection.
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PMID:The spectrum of medical conditions and symptoms before acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in homosexual and bisexual men infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 853 42

Seborrhoeic dermatitis is a common entity that conventionally is difficult to treat. Recently, topical ketoconazole has been proven successful. To determine if other azoles, and in particular the more modern ones, are also helpful in this condition, a double-blind multicentre randomized controlled trial was performed in patients suffering from seborrhoeic dermatitis involving individuals 16 years and older without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. One hundred patients were enrolled and treated according to a random plan with either bifonazole 1% cream or the corresponding vehicle once daily for 4 weeks. All patients were evaluated at the beginning of the study, as well as after 2 and 4 weeks, i.e. the treatment period proper, and after 6 weeks of follow-up. Clinical evaluation was based on scores of 0-3 for the following parameters: erythema, papules, infiltration, scaling, itch. In addition, mycological evaluation was performed using adequate contact plates for quantitative determination of Malassezia furfur. In the end, 92 patients were at least partially evaluable. In general, the verum preparation tended to be more efficacious, e.g. the score for erythema amounted to 0.75 after 4 weeks as compared with 0.88 in the control group, the baseline values being 2.18 and 2.04 respectively. With itch, the corresponding figures were 0.17 and 0.33 as compared with 1.42 and 1.38 before treatment. While in statistical terms there was significant difference in these parameters, such a difference was demonstrated by clinical judgement at follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparative efficacy and safety of bifonazole 1% cream and the corresponding base preparation in the treatment of seborrhoeic dermatitis. 801 66

It is well known that several dermatoses, such as psoriasis vulgaris and seborrheic dermatitis, present with more extensive and severe disease in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). Except for one report, however, lichen planus (LP) has not been described in patients with HIV infection. In this report we describe the clinical and morphological features of 3 HIV-positive patients who presented with extensive hypertrophic LP. To determine if alteration in the immune status in HIV-positive hosts is reflected in the nature of the infiltrate in LP, we determined the proportion of T-helper and T-suppressor cells in the infiltrate in 1 case. The majority of the infiltrating lymphocytes in the dermis were of the T-helper phenotype. Epidermal lymphocytes, however, were predominantly of the T-suppressor phenotype. We conclude that LP in HIV-positive hosts may present with more extensive disease than in immunocompetent hosts. Based on our immunohistochemical studies, we conclude that, similar to immunocompetent hosts, T-helper cells are the predominant cells in the dermal infiltrate of LP in HIV-positive patients. However, in contrast with reports in the literature on LP in immunocompetent hosts, we found that, in the case studied, the epidermal lymphocytes were predominantly of the T-suppressor phenotype.
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PMID:Hypertrophic lichen planus in three HIV-positive patients: a histologic and immunological study. 818 34

Cutaneous involvement with disseminated histoplasmosis occasionally occurs in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. We describe a profoundly immunocompromised patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who had concomitant psoriasis, seborrheic dermatitis, and disseminated histoplasmosis, each with similar features. Findings of a skin biopsy specimen from a lesion on the forehead showed an infiltrate of histiocytes filled with Histoplasma capsulatum. In disseminated histoplasmosis involving the skin, lesions may have features more characteristic of a papulosquamous dermatosis than an infectious disease. In patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus, especially those with low numbers of CD4+ cells, serious infectious diseases may have unusual features and may assume the appearance of concomitant inflammatory diseases.
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PMID:Concomitant psoriasis, seborrheic dermatitis, and disseminated cutaneous histoplasmosis in a patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus. 834 May 5

Superficial mycotic infections such as seborrheic dermatitis, tinea pedis, tinea corporis, and onychomycosis are common in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In communities where HIV infections are frequent, some of these clinical presentations serve as markers of the stage of HIV infection. The diagnosis of superficial fungal infection in HIV-positive patients may be difficult because of atypical clinical manifestations. Therefore, to ensure a correct diagnosis, skin scrapings should be collected for potassium hydroxide preparations and cultures. Most forms of dermatophytosis in HIV-positive patients respond well to many topical antifungal agents, such as azoles, terbinafine, and ciclopirox olamine. If the disease is chronic and extensive, then ketoconazole, fluconazole, and itraconazole are each effective.
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PMID:Common superficial fungal infections in patients with AIDS. 872 40

A prospective study was conducted for 13 months to determine the prevalence of skin disease in AIDS patients in the Lome teaching hospital. 99 of the 120 AIDS patients (75 males, 49 females) examined during this period had skin diseases (82.5% of the cases). This prevalence was 59.99% during 1 to 3 months of AIDS evolution, 81.77% during 4 to 6 months, and 100% after 6 months. The principal skin diseases were: pruritic papular eruption (33.33%), oral candidiasis (25%), herpes zoster (16.16%), hair dystrophies (13.13%), xeroderma (14.60%), furuncle (10%), seborrheic dermatitis (6.66%), Kaposi's sarcoma (5%) and recurrent folliculitis (4.16%). Thus, the skin diseases were common in AIDS patients in Lome, Togo, and tended to be more frequent as immunodeficiency progressed. Dermatological examination remains important in the detection of HIV infection and AIDS.
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PMID:[Prevalence of skin manifestations in AIDS patients in the Lome-Tokoin University Hospital (Togo)]. 878 37

A cross-sectional study of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive patients who attended the HIV clinic in Brighton over a 4-month period was carried out to describe the prevalence and severity of skin manifestations in HIV-positive patients and to elucidate their association with the peripheral CD4 cell count and with the HIV disease stage. The subjects were consecutively examined by an experienced dermatologist. Skin manifestations were classified into infections, dermatoses, pruritus and neoplasm. A severity index was derived by scoring each condition as either absent, mild, moderate or severe. One hundred and fifty-one patients were enrolled with a mean age of 38.3 years. One hundred and thirty-nine were homo/bisexual men; 58 were asymptomatic and 35 had acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS); 37 had CD4 counts below 200. Skin conditions were present in 138 of the 151 subjects (91.4%). The total number of events was 331. The most frequent problem was infection followed by dermatoses, pruritus and malignancy. The most frequent condition was seborrhoeic eczema followed by tinea and xerosis. We have demonstrated a statistically significant association between CD4 count, disease stage and skin manifestations in HIV-positive individuals.
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PMID:The prevalence of skin disease in HIV infection and its relationship to the degree of immunosuppression. 976 73

The efficacy of primary prophylactic treatment for opportunistic infections can be estimated in an observational cohort study by adjusting for clinical and laboratory markers of the immunodeficiency (e.g., oral candidiasis, CD4%, lymphocyte cell counts) as time-dependent co-variates (providing that the treatment does not directly alter the markers). However, the CD4 cell count provides an incomplete measure of the protective immune response, and the efficacy of treatment may be underestimated if there is inadequate adjustment for the severity of immunodeficiency. Unlike prophylactic therapies, the efficacy of which remains relatively constant over time, antiretroviral therapy may produce only transient or time-limited benefits. This problem can be minimized by allowing the effect of antiretroviral therapy to vary over time in Cox proportional hazards models (i.e., to allow the antiretroviral therapy coefficient to change over time). Another difficulty is that CD4 cell counts may underestimate the degree of immunodeficiency after prolonged zidovudine (AZT) monotherapy. If post-antiretroviral therapy CD4 cell counts are used to adjust for the stage of immunodeficiency, it may therefore be helpful to adjust for the duration of antiretroviral therapy with the CD4 cell count at the time of starting antiretroviral therapy. It is interesting to consider statistical models of progressive HIV-induced immunodeficiency in the context of the evolution of host immunity. HIV infection results in the loss of the relatively recently evolved adaptive CD4 T cell-mediated immunity to intracellular parasites. The infected host may compensate for this by making greater use of phylogenetically ancient, more innate protective responses. Because these compensatory responses are polymorphic, this results in the appearance of differences between individuals in the immune response to HIV as the disease progresses. Data from the Western Australia HIV Cohort Study support a two-stage model of immunopathology. The first stage of this model involves a loss of mucosal immunity and occurs at a variable CD4 cell count (of between 400 cells/mm3 and zero), and is marked by a loss of cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity responses and oral candidiasis, seborrheic dermatitis, and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. The second stage of the model involves a loss of systemic immunity and requires profound CD4 T-cell lymphopenia (CD4 cell count <50 cells/mm3), and is marked by infections such as cytomegalovirus and disseminated Mycobacterium avium infection. The influence of HLA type on the risk for such opportunistic infections becomes apparent during this late phase.
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PMID:The Western Australian HIV Cohort Study, Perth, Australia. 958 48

Several prospective studies on dermatological findings in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 infected patients have been published, mostly in populations in which the predominant risk factor for HIV infection is homosexuality. We attempted to identify cutaneous diseases associated with HIV-1 infection and to assess disease progression in a cohort of Spanish patients in whom the predominant cause of HIV infection was intravenous drug abuse. We prospectively examined 1161 HIV-1-positive patients for 38 months. Seventy-four per cent of patients were intravenous drug abusers, whereas heterosexual contact was the only risk factor in 14% and homosexuality in 9%. Centers for Disease Control stage II disease predominated (51%), whereas stage IV disease was less frequent (39%). The mean CD4 count was 353/mm3. We took patients' past and present medical history and performed a complete physical examination as well as taking photographs and carrying out the necessary diagnostic procedures. CD4 counts/mm3 were measured at each visit. A diagnosis of cutaneous disease was made in 799 patients (69%). Oral candidiasis and seborrhoeic dermatitis were the most common skin disorders, followed by xerosis, drug eruptions, dermatophytosis and the papular eruption of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Condyloma acuminatum, herpes zoster and herpes simplex were the most frequent viral infections. Conditions that have a statistically significant association with advanced stage and low CD4 levels include drug eruptions, xerosis, light reactions, diffuse alopecia, herpes simplex, oral candidiasis, psoriasis, oral hairy leucoplakia, molluscum contagiosum, Kaposi's sarcoma, furuncles, candidal intertrigo, folliculitis and ungual infection, as well as onychomycosis and tinea pedis or manuum. Dermatoses commonly associated with homosexuality, such as Kaposi's sarcoma and oral hairy leucoplakia, were rare in our patients.
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PMID:Dermatological findings correlated with CD4 lymphocyte counts in a prospective 3 year study of 1161 patients with human immunodeficiency virus disease predominantly acquired through intravenous drug abuse. 976 46

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is unique among the cutaneous fungal infections caused by defects of the cell-mediated immune system. A complex interplay exists in the host between fungal virulence factors favoring disease, and immune and non-immune host mechanisms defending against disease. Cell-mediated immunity appears of paramount importance in defense against histoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, mucocutaneous candidiasis, and dermatophytosis. Mucocutaneous candidiasis is especially common in patients with HIV infection. Anti-fungal medicines were effective against candidiasis. However, anti-fungal medicine-resistant candida has been observed. Anti-fungal ointment was effective against dermatophytosis and seborrheic dermatitis. No cases of cutaneous fungal infection resistant to anti-fungal medicine have been observed.
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PMID:[Mucocutaneous fungal infection in AIDS patients]. 979 68


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