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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The increase in cases of tuberculosis that has occurred with the increasing number of individuals infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) has focused attention on the problems in diagnosing and treating tuberculosis. While it is primarily considered a pulmonary disease, tuberculosis has the potential to infect almost every organ system via lymphohematogenous dissemination during the initial pulmonary infection. Since 1984 the incidence of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
has increased at an even faster rate than that of pulmonary tuberculosis.
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
is considered a diagnostic criterion in the case definition of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Immunocompromised individuals, such as patients with HIV, are at increased risk for
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. The clinical manifestations are often nonspecific and insidious, and diagnosis may be delayed for years. Cases of miliary and meningeal tuberculosis are an exception, and they often constitute medical emergencies. Tuberculosis skin tests should be performed on all individuals suspected of having tuberculosis, but a negative test result does not exclude the diagnosis. Chest roentgenograms will often show signs of old or active pulmonary tuberculosis. Microscopic examination and culture of infected body fluids and/or tissue are necessary for definitive diagnosis. Treatment is with standard antituberculous medications. Short-course therapy (6 or 9 months) is probably adequate in most patients with
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, but patients with human
immunodeficiency
viral infection need longer treatment.
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
is a persistent problem in the United States and will become more prevalent as the number of patients with HIV increases. A high index of suspicion is needed to diagnose and treat
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
in a timely and health-preserving manner.
...
PMID:Extrapulmonary tuberculosis. A review. 134 93
Tuberculous infections of the breast are considered rare in the developed world. We describe a case of mammary tuberculosis in a woman who was not initially known to be seropositive for the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and who was thought to have a pyogenic breast abscess. This uncommon presentation of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
as an AIDS-defining condition highlights the necessity for performing mycobacterial smears and cultures in such cases when patients are at risk for HIV infection.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis of the breast as a presenting manifestation of AIDS. 142 Jun 82
A retrospective study was conducted at the Childrens Hospital Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, FL, to evaluate the natural history of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in nine children with vertically acquired human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 infection. The patients' ages ranged from 6 months to 7 years (median age, 42 months). Common presenting symptoms included prolonged fever, cough and anorexia. Only one patient had a positive tuberculin test. Five patients evidenced only pulmonary disease, three patients had pulmonary and extrapulmonary disease and one patient developed
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(mastoiditis) and pulmonary interstitial disease that could not be attributed to mycobacterial infection because of lack of information. Organisms isolated before January, 1989, were susceptible to isoniazid and rifampin whereas isolates from three patients cultured after that time were resistant to multiple antituberculosis drugs. The median survival time after M. tuberculosis diagnosis for all children was 20 months. Our study suggests that children with human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1 infection who have tuberculosis have an increased risk for extrapulmonary disease. A high index of suspicion for the diagnosis of M. tuberculosis should be maintained in human
immunodeficiency
virus type 1-infected children with prolonged fever and respiratory symptoms. In areas of high endemicity of multidrug-resistant organisms, therapy with a broader panel of drugs may need to be instituted until susceptibility testing becomes available.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium tuberculosis in children with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. 145 38
Between 1983 and 1989, we cared for 56 patients with tuberculosis and human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection. In 37 patients (66%), tuberculosis occurred before any other AIDS-defining disease (group 1); in 10 (18%) it occurred during the same month as another AIDS-defining disease (group 2); and in 9 (16%), after the diagnosis of AIDS (group 3). Tuberculosis was entirely pulmonary in 14 patients (25%), entirely extrapulmonary in 9 (16%), and both pulmonary and extrapulmonary in 33 (59%). The frequency of extrapulmonary involvement was similar in patients from group 1 and from groups 2 and 3 (combined): 76% versus 74%. Needle biopsy of the liver revealed hepatic involvement in 18 patients (32%). The mean CD4 lymphocyte count was 232/mm3 when tuberculosis was entirely pulmonary, and 243/mm3 when extrapulmonary disease was present (difference not significant). In group 1, the onset of both pulmonary and
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
occurred at the same stage of HIV infection, 12 and 10 months, respectively, before any other AIDS-defining disease. Treatment, planned to last 1 year, was highly effective, despite frequent side-effects. Among the 32 patients who completed treatment, relapse of tuberculosis occurred in 2 (6%) with a mean follow-up of 16 months (0-53 months) after completion. Our results suggest that pulmonary tuberculosis should be included in the criteria for diagnosis of AIDS.
...
PMID:Should pulmonary tuberculosis be an AIDS-defining diagnosis in patients infected with HIV? 152 76
With the resurgence of active tuberculosis in the United States, surgeons may be called upon to participate in the management of primary tuberculosis as well as major complications of the disease. To define the role of surgery in the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis in the 1990s, a 5-year retrospective review of 121 tuberculosis patients requiring invasive procedures in the course of their work-up was performed. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was cultured in 68% of patients, and atypical mycobacteria in 19%. Tissue was required to achieve the definitive diagnosis in 36%. Of the 93 patients with pulmonary evidence of tuberculosis, 54% presented with a pulmonary complication, 19 of whom required operative intervention.
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
affected 45% of patients, including nine with miliary tuberculosis. Patients testing seropositive for human
immunodeficiency
virus accounted for 11% of the patients seen, emphasizing that the re-emergence of tuberculosis is not confined to the immunosuppressed.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis and the surgeon. 157 8
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.
...
PMID:Extrapulmonary tuberculosis--a simple diagnosis? A retrospective study at Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. 181 3
The annual number of cases of culture-proven
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(TB) at our hospital increased from 47 cases in 1983 to 113 cases in 1988. At least 43% (199) of 464 consecutive patients with extrapulmonary TB during this 6-year period were infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV); since HIV serologic testing was not performed routinely the true HIV prevalence is likely to be higher. Of the HIV-infected patients, 59% were intravenous drug users, 31% were Haitian, 3% were homosexual males, 1% were perinatally-infected infants, and 6% did not have a known risk factor for HIV infection. Ninety-eight percent of the HIV-infected patients were black (84%) or hispanic (14%). The HIV-infected patients were more likely than the control patients to have either disseminated, genitourinary, intra-abdominal, mediastinal, or concurrent pulmonary TB. Fever was nearly universal among the HIV-infected patients, but was absent in about one-third of the control patients. Among untreated HIV-infected patients, disease progression was rapid and nearly always fatal. Among HIV-infected patients who received treatment, the response to therapy, as judged by hospital survival and time to defervescence, was similar to that of the control patients. Despite the extensive tuberculous dissemination among the HIV-infected patients, the diagnosis of TB was difficult and often delayed. In addition to the decrease in tuberculin reactivity and the atypical chest radiograph patterns, there was a need to consider other HIV-related infections in the differential diagnosis. Although sputum specimens grew M. tuberculosis in greater than 90% of the HIV-infected patients in whom they were obtained, sputum AFB stains were positive in less than 50%. Blood and urine specimen cultures were positive in 56% and 77% of the HIV-infected patients in whom these specimens were obtained, but did not provide a means of early diagnosis. Cerebrospinal fluid and pleural fluid were abnormal in nearly all patients with involvement of these sites but were rarely AFB-positive and were, therefore, only suggestive of TB. Procedures such as biopsies and aspirates of peripheral lymph nodes, visceral lymph nodes, liver, and bone marrow provided the highest immediate diagnostic yields with rates between 50% and 90%. These procedures must be considered early in the course of illness in HIV-infected patients with suspected extrapulmonary TB due to the rapidly progressive nature of this often fatal but usually treatable infection.
...
PMID:Extrapulmonary tuberculosis in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 195 80
The clinical characteristics and immunological parameters are characterized in different groups of infection by human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) in patients infected by HIV, and the prognostic markers of survival in patients diagnosed of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). This study was carried out in 312 patients from June 1984 to March 1989. The most common risk group was intravenous drug addicts (IVDA) 80.9%. We observed that during the last years there was an increase in the number of cases of heterosexual transmission. Through follow up, 17.6% of patients developed acquired
immunodeficiency
(AIDS). The incidence rate for AIDS was higher amongst homosexuals than IVDA (35.4/14.6). Esophageal candidiasis and
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
were the AIDS indicators most frequently encountered. Once the study period was over, with a follow up of 19.3 +/- 3.4 months, the probability of survival after 12 months was 70 +/- 0.07% and after 24 months was 42% +/- 0.09%. The risk group (homosexuals), the appearance of a neoplasia as the first diagnosis of AIDS, and the immunological parameters (CD3 less than 500, CD4 less than 400, CD4/CD8 ratio less than 0.5 and total lymphocyte count of less than 1700 were the markers with worst prognosis which correlated with survival rates (p less than 0.01). We confirmed that when comparing immunologic parameters amongst HIV infection groups, IgA levels were higher (p less than 0.05); the total number of lymphocytes, the number of helper lymphocytes and the CD4/CD8 ratio were lower (p less than 0.01) in IV and AIDS group with respect to group II and III, in patients with AIDS with respect to group IV-non-AIDS and in those who died with relation to AIDS.
...
PMID:[An epidemiological and immunological study of human immunodeficiency virus infection in the southern area of Madrid]. 206 23
It is now clear that tuberculosis is one of the major diseases associated with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome both in developing countries and in disadvantaged groups in the northern hemisphere. In the USA, and probably several other countries, the annual incidence of tuberculosis is rising as a result of the HIV epidemic. This is probably a result of an increase in both pulmonary and, especially,
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, due to reactivation of latent infections, but a secondary increase in the infection rate is also possible. The hard-won gains in tuberculosis control of the last 30 years are thus in jeopardy. This article focuses on the effect HIV is likely to have on the known risk factors for infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and for reactivation. Whilst HIV-associated tuberculosis may be indistinguishable from HIV-negative disease, it is likely in other cases to present diagnostic difficulties, to respond poorly to treatment with more adverse effects, and to result in high early mortality, although this may not be due directly to tuberculosis. HIV-associated tuberculosis thus represents a major challenge to physicians, especially in developing countries, but like other forms of tuberculosis it is (i) treatable and (ii) preventable.
...
PMID:Impact of human immunodeficiency virus on transmission and severity of tuberculosis. 220 Nov 13
We report a microepidemic of tuberculosis (TBC) in a family of 12 members, 4 of which were parenteral drug abusers and 3 had anti-human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) antibodies. Four new cases were simultaneously diagnosed in the investigation of the contacts of a patient with
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. We review the requirements for the development of these epidemic outbreaks, both in noninfected communities and in the family contacts, where positive anti-HIV antibodies may increase the risk. We emphasize the importance of a systematic study of contacts in these families and the indication of chemoprophylaxis in all those sharing the same household, without age limit.
...
PMID:[Familial microepidemics of tuberculosis]. 225 May 47
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