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)

In order to investigate the clinical oral manifestations associated with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related conditions, 922 male subjects were studied in a closed community (inmates). 669 were drug-abusers, 24 homosexual or bisexual men, 86 drug-abusers and homosexual or bisexual men, 143 without risk behaviour. Only 120 patients had antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type I. All were throughly examined for evidence of oral disorders. The major finding was that almost all with AIDS and AIDS-related complex had oral manifestations one AIDS-patient was affected with hairy leukoplakia.
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PMID:[Stomatologic pathology in HIV infection. Preliminary data]. 271 71

In 23 out of 227 patients with positive serological tests for the human immunodeficiency virus (10%), seen between June 1987 and May 1988, lingual lesions of hairy leukoplakia (HL) were found. HL was present in 16/188 drug abusers (9%) and in 7/19 homosexuals (32%). In 3 cases HL was the only clinical manifestation of disease, in 11 it was associated with other symptoms of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome related complex (ARC), and in 9 it was found in patients with a previous or concomitant diagnosis of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The mean count of CD4 lymphocytes in the 23 patients was 0.22 X 10(9)/l. The diagnosis was made on the basis of the characteristic clinical features. In 3 cases biopsy was carried out, and parakeratosis and vacuolization of the spinous layer cells were found. Remarkably, particles of the herpesvirus group were also found. The lesions oscillated in size or even spontaneously disappeared, at least transiently; however, in the patients treated with zidovudine the improvement appeared to be more significant. The detection of HL discloses a likely infection by the HIV; it is usually associated with other features of ARC and/or severe immune depression, and it requires the institution of antiretroviral treatment.
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PMID:[Hairy leukoplakia: a new disease of the oral mucosa associated with infection by the human immunodeficiency virus]. 274 11

To assess the relationship between oral lesions and antibodies to the human immunodeficiency virus, oral examinations of 803 homosexual males were conducted at the time of serologic testing. Nineteen percent were HIV seropositive. Thirty percent of antibody-positive subjects had one or more oral lesion(s), as compared with 7% of antibody-negative subjects (p less than 0.001). The presence of oral lesions was significantly associated with HIV seropositivity: a subject was 5.7 times as likely to have serum antibodies if he had one or more oral lesions (95% confidence interval, 3.5 to 9.1; p less than 0.001). This significant association with HIV seropositivity was only partially explained by cigarette smoking (adjusted odds ratio 3.1; 1.4-6.8; less than 0.006). Specific conditions that were significantly associated with seropositivity included candidiasis, hairy leukoplakia, periodontal disease, and Kaposi's sarcoma. Other diseases identified included acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis, mucocutaneous ulcerations, and oral warts. Oral findings may occur earlier in the natural history of infection than previously reported.
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PMID:Oral mucosal lesions: association with the presence of antibodies to the human immunodeficiency virus. 275 88

To compare the therapeutic effects of surgical excision and orally administered acyclovir therapy on symptomatic oral hairy leukoplakia, 45 homosexual men who were seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus participated in a 3-month open-label study. In the 14 patients who had surgical excision, pain resolved in four symptomatic patients and the leukoplakia did not recur in the areas of excision. New foci of leukoplakia, however, appeared in 10 patients after 3 months. Of the 16 patients who received acyclovir therapy, 12 had a clinical regression, although recurrences were noted in all patients after 3 months. Three patients had resolution of pain while taking acyclovir; in two the pain recurred after acyclovir was discontinued. No spontaneous remissions of the leukoplakia occurred in the 15 patients who refused therapy. We conclude that surgical excision is effective in patients with symptomatic oral hairy leukoplakia.
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PMID:Comparison of the efficacy of surgery and acyclovir therapy in oral hairy leukoplakia. 280 91

To define the role of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the pathogenesis of oral hairy leukoplakia, 13 human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive men with clinical and histologic evidence of oral hairy leukoplakia were enrolled in an open-label trial of orally administered acyclovir therapy (3.2 g/d for 20 days). Of six patients who received therapy, five exhibited clinical regression. Once therapy was discontinued, recurrences occurred in all responders. Among seven patients who refused therapy, no spontaneous remissions occurred. Before therapy, EBV replication within the leukoplakia was demonstrated by immunofluorescence tissue staining or electron microscopy in five patients who were studied. Human papillomavirus was not detected by immunocytochemistry or electron microscopy from tissue specimens of six patients. After therapy, biopsy specimens from two patients with complete responses revealed a normalization of histologic abnormalities and an inability to detect EBV in previously involved mucosa by immunofluorescence or in situ DNA hybridization assays. It was concluded that EBV replication within the epithelial cells of the tongue is necessary for the development of oral hairy leukoplakia.
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PMID:Regression of oral hairy leukoplakia after orally administered acyclovir therapy. 282 30

The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a devastating new disease caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This retrovirus causes profound immunoincompetence in its infected hosts, who are thereafter susceptible to develop myriad severe and relapsing protozoal, fungal, bacterial, viral, and arthropodal opportunistic infections, as well as unusual malignancies. The more than 50,000 patients who have developed AIDS in the United States have produced a sudden unexpected deluge of diagnostic dilemmas that are stressing laboratories of pathology everywhere. This paper describes the gross and microscopic pathology of the numerous complications in patients infected by HIV: (a) the prodromal AIDS-related complex with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy, (b) lymphoid infiltration of salivary gland and lung, including the complex of lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis-pulmonary lymphoid hyperplasia, (c) extranodal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, (d) multifocal mucocutaneous and visceral Kaposi's sarcoma, (e) small cell undifferentiated (oat cell) carcinomas, (f) protozoal infections caused by Pneumocystis carinii, Toxoplasma gondii, Acanthamoeba, Cryptosporidium species (sp.), and Isospora belli, (g) the causes of chronic enteritis, (h) mycotic infections caused by Candida sp., Cryptococcus neoformans, Histoplasma capsulatum, Coccidioides immitis, and Sporothrix schenckii, (i) bacterial infections caused by Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare, M. tuberculosis, M. kansasii, Nocardia sp., Listeria monocytogenes, Legionella sp., Treponema pallidum, and others, (j) viral infections caused by cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex and zoster, polyomavirus (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy), hepatitis B, molluscum contagiosum, and papillomavirus, (k) oral hairy leukoplakia, (l) subacute encephalopathy, and (m) Norwegian scabies.
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PMID:The pathology of AIDS. 283 78

Both oral and intravenous acyclovir administration for seven days in the early stages of infectious mononucleosis caused an inhibition of oropharyngeal Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) replication. Minimal effect on clinical symptoms was observed. Development of normal cellular and humoral EBV-specific immunity was seen in all patients. The combination of intravenous acyclovir and prednisolone treatment for 10 days in 11 patients with fulminant mononucleosis caused transient cessation of virus shedding in all patients. A dramatic clinical effect on pharyngeal symptoms and on fever was seen in nine of 11 patients within 72 hours. Treatment with chemotherapy or irradiation is recommended in EBV-associated B cell lymphomas seen in immunosuppressed, transplanted, and human immunodeficiency virus-I seropositive patients. No effect of acyclovir has been reported, but such therapy may be considered in the early stage when EBV induces a polyclonal B cell activation. Acyclovir treatment is effective in the EBV-genome positive hairy leukoplakia in human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive patients. No effect of antiviral therapy has been reported in the X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome. Prophylactic use of immunoglobulin or acyclovir has been suggested in susceptible children.
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PMID:Management of Epstein-Barr virus infections. 284 54

Oral hairy leukoplakia (HL) is a recently described manifestation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in which Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been shown to replicate. To seek evidence for a local defect in mucosal immunity, we assessed the presence of epithelial Langerhans cells (LC) in these lesions and in autologous nonlesional mucosa. We used monoclonal antibodies against HLA-DR, HLA-DQ, and T6 antigens to identify LC in biopsy specimens of HL from 23 homosexual men. In all lesion specimens, LC either were not detected or were present only in greatly reduced numbers with at least 1 of the antibodies. In nonlesional oral mucosa from the same patients, LC were detected with all 3 antibodies in 11/12 specimens (92%) and were found in approximately normal numbers with at least 1 antibody. There was close correlation between the absence of LC and positive staining for EBV, human papillomavirus antigens, and candidal hyphae in the epithelium. We conclude that LC are absent or greatly reduced in the lesions of HL. Absence of normal LC function may be important in the pathogenesis of HL and may reflect an event in the pathogenesis of other features of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
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PMID:Absence of Langerhans cells in oral hairy leukoplakia, an AIDS-associated lesion. 311 Mar

We describe two patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection and oral hairy leukoplakia whose tongue lesions resolved on oral zidovudine therapy. During therapy, each patient had a measurable reduction in human immunodeficiency virus antigen corresponding with clinical regression of oral lesions. The clinical course suggests that zidovudine may have contributed to the resolution of these lesions either indirectly through immunologic improvement or through an antiviral effect.
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PMID:Regression of oral hairy leukoplakia during zidovudine therapy. 234 65

During a prospective investigation of oral lesions of 120 consecutive patients positive for human immunodeficiency virus, belonging to the intravenous drug abuser risk group and other risk categories, we observed hairy leukoplakia (HL) in 23 cases (19%). The median age of the patients was 27 years (range, 20 to 50 years). Twenty patients were men and three were women. All but two of the twenty three patients used intravenous drugs for a median period of 6 years (range, 5 to 18 years) and were involved in several episodes of needle sharing. Eight men were also bisexual, one man was homosexual, and one man was hemophiliac and bisexual. Eleven patients had asymptomatic infection, five had lymphadenopathy syndrome, six had AIDS-related complex, and one had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. In all patients, HL lesions were localized on the lateral borders of the tongue. In twelve patients, the lesion was unilateral, and in eleven patients, it was bilateral. Microscopically, hyperparakeratosis and the presence of koilocytes were observed in all cases. Surface candidiasis could be detected with staining with periodic acid-Schiff in two thirds of the cases. In four cases, electron microscopy showed the presence of intracellular and extracellular hyphae of Candida albicans in the parakeratin layer associated with coccobacilli in the spaces between surface epithelial cells. The spinous layer included koilocytes, which had a clear cytoplasmic matrix, sparse organelles and tonofilaments, and dispersed chromatin. These cells were found to be infected by a herpes-type virus in all cases examined. There was no ultrastructural evidence of human papillomavirus in the nuclei of the epithelial cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Oral hairy leukoplakia among HIV-positive intravenous drug abusers: a clinicopathologic and ultrastructural study. 328 34


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