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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A group of central nervous system neoplasms, previously known as reticulum cell sarcoma or
microglioma
, and recently classified as malignant lymphoma, histiocytic type, not infrequently occur in patients with
immunodeficiency
, either primary or induced by immunosuppressant drugs. The authors report such a neoplasm in a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura immunosuppressed with azathioprine and prednisone. The neoplasm was studied with several immunological techniques and by electron microscopy. The neoplasm had B lymphocyte membrane markers and showed plasmacytic differentiation. These features suggest that it was a tumor of transformed B lymphocytes (immunoblasts).
...
PMID:Immunoblastic sarcoma (histiocytic lymphoma) of the brain with B cell markers. Case report. 36 88
The incidence of
primary central nervous system lymphoma
(PCNSL) is increasing, not only in
immunodeficiency
states, but also in apparently normal individuals. The most common presentation of PCNSL is that of an intracranial mass lesion. Ocular involvement is associated in 20% of patients. CT/MR scan typically shows one or several periventricular tumors with indistinct margins that diffusely and densely enhance following contrast infusion. The diagnosis relies on lumbar puncture, vitreous biopsy, or stereotactic biopsy of a brain lesion demonstrating lymphomatous cells. If possible, corticosteroids should be used only after definite diagnosis. Corticosteroids have a cytotoxic effect responsible for transient remission in 40% of patients. Whole brain radiation therapy induces a complete or partial response in 80% of patients but recurrence always occurs and the median survival does not exceed 14-18 months. The addition of systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy seems to substantially improve the prognosis with median survival exceeding 3 years in some studies. PCNSL associated with AIDS generally occurs at a late stage of the disease and is the fourth cause of death in AIDS patients. Radiation therapy is useful but the median survival does not exceed 5.5 months because patients most often die of opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:[Primary non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma of the central nervous system]. 129 53
A prospective series of 50 neurologically symptomatic human
immunodeficiency
infected patients with intracranial lesions who underwent image-guided stereotactic brain biopsy is presented. Patients were diagnosed with
primary central nervous system lymphoma
(14 patients), progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (14 patients), toxoplasmosis (13 patients), human
immunodeficiency
virus encephalitis (3 patients), infarction (2 patients), and 1 patient each with metastatic adenocarcinoma, metastatic melanoma, cryptococcoma, and atypical mycobacterial infection. Two of the patients with toxoplasmosis had a second intracranial abnormality. Two biopsies resulted in either descriptive diagnosis only or were nondiagnostic; the definitive diagnostic efficacy of image-guided stereotactic biopsy was thus 96%. No deaths were incurred as a result of biopsy. Four intraoperative or postoperative hemorrhages occurred; in only 1 patient was there a residual neurological deficit related to the surgery. Image-guided stereotactic biopsy may thus be considered both safe and effective in this patient population.
...
PMID:The efficacy of image-guided stereotactic brain biopsy in neurologically symptomatic acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients. 154 85
The human
immunodeficiency
virus infected persons frequently have manifestations of central nervous system disfunction. These can be primary involvement or secondary processes such as infections or tumors. The present paper presents a short review of radiologic CNS findings in patients with AIDS as seen on CT and or MRI. The radiologic findings of HIV-1 encephalitis, toxoplasmosis,
primary CNS lymphoma
, PMLE, cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, CMV encephalitis, HVS and varicella are presented. We expect this will ultimately help in the management of the AIDS patient.
...
PMID:CNS involvement in AIDS patients as seen with CT and MR: a review. 181 9
Since the recognition of Kaposi's sarcoma as a manifestation of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, subsequent malignancies such as non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphoma and
primary central nervous system lymphoma
have been found to be associated with individuals infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). The epidemiology, clinical manifestations, and current concepts of pathogenesis are reviewed in this article. In addition, the relation between HIV and other malignancies, including Hodgkin's lymphoma, T-cell lymphomas, and anorectal carcinoma, is discussed. In general, HIV-related malignancies are more aggressive, respond poorly to treatment, and are associated with an extremely high rate of mortality.
...
PMID:HIV-related malignancies. 187 28
Epstein-Barr virus has been implicated in the pathogenesis of primary brain lymphoma in patients with congenital or acquired
immunodeficiency
states. To examine its role in central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma in the immunocompetent host, Epstein-Barr virologic studies were performed in six consecutive cases seen at our institutions. Virus DNA sequences were detected in only one of three tumor specimens studied by Southern blot hybridization. Serologic studies from the entire cohort disclosed past virus infection; however, antibody reactivity to virus-specific antigens in cerebrospinal fluid was limited to the patient harboring genome-positive tumor. Immunologic studies revealed hyperimmunoglobulin-E (range, 720 to 1040 micrograms/ml) in each of four patients tested. Our findings suggest that Epstein-Barr virus is an infrequent pathogen in nonimmunosuppressed patients with
primary CNS lymphoma
. Abnormalities in isotype-specific regulation of IgE production are common in such patients and may have pathogenetic implications.
...
PMID:Primary brain lymphoma in the immunocompetent host: relation to Epstein-Barr virus. 217 60
Nearly 40% of AIDS patients develop neurological complications during the course of their illness, and about 10% experience neurological symptoms as the initial manifestations of AIDS. The most common neurological complication (14% of AIDS patients) is human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) encephalopathy, but opportunistic viral and nonviral infections and neoplasms are also quite common; the most frequent among these are cryptococcal meningitis, toxoplasmosis, primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, and herpesvirus infections. Most of the nonviral infections and neoplasms are potentially treatable. Neurological syndromes include diffuse and regional encephalopathies, myelopathy, meningitis, intraaxial cranial neuropathies, and retinopathy. About 10% of AIDS patients develop a CNS mass lesion; the chief causes of these lesions are toxoplasmosis and
primary CNS lymphoma
. Since the clinical profiles of the various diseases overlap to a great extent, differential diagnosis requires a thorough workup, including magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography brain scanning, examination of the cerebrospinal fluid, and, frequently, brain biopsy. Because AIDS patients have a high incidence of multiple intracranial pathologies, the diagnostic workup may have to be repeated to identify all of the diseases present.
...
PMID:Central nervous system dysfunction in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 306 5
Three children with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and primary lymphoma of the CNS are described. All three children had clinical signs of focal mass lesions and progressive neurologic deficits. In one child the deterioration was extremely rapid. New lesions appeared on serial CT scans every few days, simulating an infectious process and leading to death within 3 weeks. Results of neuroradiologic studies in these patients demonstrated multicentric lesions that were often periventricular. On CT scans, the lesions were hyperdense before contrast and were enhanced with contrast medium. Double-dose delayed contrast CT scans and magnetic resonance imaging studies were more sensitive in indicating additional lesions. Histologically, all three tumors were B cell neoplasms; two lymphomas were large cell type, whereas one was small cell, noncleaved (Burkitt-like).
Primary CNS lymphoma
occurred with an incidence of 1/26 (4%) in our autopsy series and 3/100 (3%) of all pediatric cases of human
immunodeficiency
virus-type 1 infection, living and dead, that have been seen at the Children's Hospital of New Jersey. By comparison, opportunistic and reactivated latent CNS infections were less common in this same population and never appeared clinically as mass lesions. Therefore, in our experience, primary lymphoma is the most common cause of focal or multifocal mass lesions in the brains of children with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. This tumor may be radiosensitive. In most cases, early biopsy is probably necessary to establish the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Primary lymphoma of the central nervous system in children with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 326 18
Primary lymphoma of the central nervous system (CNS), including reticulum cell sarcoma,
microglioma
, and histiocytic lymphoma, represents less than 1% of all primary brain tumors. In the last 10 years, this tumor has tripled in frequency in the nonimmunosuppressed population. By 1991, the tumor will be the most common neurological neoplasm by virtue of the increase in sporadic occurrence and in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) population. Three percent of AIDS patients will develop this tumor either prior to AIDS diagnosis or during their subsequent course. In addition to acquired immunosuppression, patients with inherited disorders (such as Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, severe combined immunodeficiency, and X-linked
immunodeficiency
) and other acquired disorders of the immune system are predisposed to the development of CNS lymphoma. Immunological studies have suggested a role for Epstein-Barr virus in the production of this tumor. Although subtypes exist, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the CNS most commonly consists of histiocytic cells or large immunoblastic cells bearing B cell surface markers in close proximity to the lateral and third ventricles. Sixty percent of these deposits are multiple, and subarachnoid invasion is seen in one-quarter of patients. Vitreous involvement of the eye occurring prior to and during the course of CNS lymphoma has been noted in up to 25% of patients. The involvement of multiple areas of the neuraxis, the eye, and multiple intracranial sites often occurs in the absence of obvious systemic lymphoma. Therapeutic trials of brain radiation therapy are associated with median survivals of less than 1 year. Uniform complete responses of intracranial deposits are recorded following chemotherapy with high-dose intravenous methotrexate, CHOP (cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunomycin/doxorubicin, Oncovin (vincristine), and prednisone), high-dose cytosine arabinoside, and intra-arterial methotrexate with barrier modification.
...
PMID:Primary central nervous system lymphoma. 328 32
A wide variety of neurologic conditions associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have been attributed to human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection of the central nervous system (CNS). Tissue samples from the brains of three patients with AIDS, diagnosed as having CNS toxoplasmosis on the basis of computed tomographic scans of the head, were studied by transmission electron microscopy. In two, HIV particles were observed budding from, in close association with, and in cytoplasmic vacuoles of mononuclear and multinucleated macrophages, but no other cell types. The patient with the greatest number of HIV particles also had large amounts of papovavirus (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy) in the nuclei of oligodendroglial cells and in the cytoplasm of astrocytes. These astrocytes often had atypical features at the light microscopic level. Following an initial biopsy that showed only HIV,
primary CNS lymphoma
was diagnosed by needle biopsy and confirmed at autopsy in a second case. A diagnosis of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy was rendered by transmission electron microscopy in a third case, but no HIV was detected. Toxoplasmosis was not confirmed in any of the three cases. Diagnosis of CNS lesions in patients with AIDS should not rely exclusively on radiography but include biopsy for both light and transmission electron microscopy. Transmission electron microscopy can be employed to reveal HIV and papovavirus infections not discernible at the light microscopic level and should be used as a diagnostic tool in HIV-related infections.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus and papovavirus infections in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: an ultrastructural study of three cases. 334 11
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