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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As the number of cases of AIDS increases, it is important to determine whether ICUs can be productively and safely used for this patient population. From July 1981 to March 1987, 216 patients were admitted to the medical ICU: 166 (77%) were admitted for procedures and 50 (23%) were admitted for life-sustaining support. Most of the patients were admitted for
respiratory failure
(36 of 50), primarily as a result of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Other patients were admitted for cardiovascular instability (six of 50 patients), CNS dysfunction (four patients), or other reasons (four patients). Of 50 patients admitted to the ICU, 13 (26%) were alive 3 months after hospital discharge. Despite 25 needle-stick injuries and 56 mucosal splashes involving human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV)-infected patients and staff, no staff member converted HIV serology. These results suggest that AIDS patients may benefit from ICU admission. These patients appear to pose a low risk to the hospital staff in terms of occupationally acquired HIV infection, but strong emphasis needs to be placed on minimizing accidental exposures to potentially infected body fluids and to adhering to universal precautions.
...
PMID:Admission of AIDS patients to a medical intensive care unit: causes and outcome. 230 66
We describe a case of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) in a woman with recurrent breast cancer without human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection. The PCP was associated with severe lymphocytopenia due to treatment with anticancer agents in combination with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). Despite the severe lymphocytopenia, the total leucocyte count never fell below 3000/mm3 during the treatment. It was difficult to determine whether the patient's
respiratory failure
was caused by severe infectious pneumonia, hypersensitivity pneumonia or pneumonitis carcinomatosis. She was treated with steroid for suspected drug-induced hypersensitivity pneumonia. However, as her condition did not improve, PCP was suspected, and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim was administered. At the same time, anticancer drugs were administered to half the progression of the cancer, since lymphangitis carcinomatosa was also suspected. The severe
respiratory failure
did not improve, and the patient died on day 23 after admission. At autopsy, the cause of death was confirmed to
respiratory failure
due to PCP.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia during treatment for recurrent breast cancer: a case report. 747 11
Acute pancreatitis, reported in 17% of pediatric patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), is said to have a poor prognosis. We describe the pancreatic changes observed at autopsy from 71 children with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and document their nature, extent, and clinical relevance. The median age at autopsy of the children was 17 months (range, 2 months to 19 years); 38 were boys and 33 were girls. Parental intravenous drug use was the most frequent risk factor for AIDS, followed by blood transfusions.
Respiratory failure
and sepsis constituted the predominant causes of death. Nonspecific changes, such as edema, inflammation, fibrosis, inspissated material in acini and ducts, and enlarged Langerhans' islet predominated. Acute and chronic pancreatitis were mild except in one instance of a fatal acute probably dideoxyinosine-associated pancreatitis. Pancreatic involvement by opportunistic infections, such as cytomegalovirus (CMV), Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI), and Candida, was focal and rare despite the high prevalence of these infections at autopsy. Focal lymphoplasmacytic infiltration and vascular calcifications were also observed. We conclude that pancreatic changes were frequently noted at autopsy in children with AIDS. They were usually mild, reflected systemic disease states, and were usually not life threatening. The incidence of opportunistic infections of the pancreas was low.
...
PMID:Pancreatic disorders in pediatric acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 762 49
The patient was a 75-year-old male, who simultaneously showed symptoms of bacterial meningitis during steroid treatment for erythroderma and symptoms of
respiratory failure
. Based on ground-glass shadows in both lungs on chest X ray, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was carried out and strongyloides was detected. In addition to strongyloidiasis, the patient was shown to have the complication of pneumocystis carinii (PC) pneumonia after PC DNA was detected in BAL fluid using a PCR assay. When other causes for
immunodeficiency
affecting the incidence of opportunistic infection were investigated, the ATL virus was detected in peripheral blood cells and monoclonal amplification was indicated, though the presence of anti-ATL antibody was negative. According to the results, this patient was found to have early stage adult T cell leukemia. In conclusion, we treated this adult T cell leukemia patient who had strongyloidiasis and amplification of PC DNA in BAL and for which the PCR assay, a new technology used for diagnosing PC pneumonia, was considered to be effective.
...
PMID:[A case of adult T cell leukemia complicated with strongyloidiasis and amplification of pneumocystis carinii DNA in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid]. 804 Oct 45
A 35-year-old male homosexual, a former intravenous drug abuser, was found to be human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) positive in 1984. He developed AIDS in 1987 and began treatment with zidovudine in 1989. One year later he developed left apical pleural blebs, a pneumothorax and an exudative pleural effusion. A malignant mesothelioma developed at the pleural blebs in the left apex. He was treated with adriamycin but rapid progression of the malignancy occurred and he died three months later. At autopsy, a malignant mesothelioma, causing
respiratory failure
and death, was found. The patient had no exposure to asbestos and asbestosis was not present at autopsy. We postulate that the development of malignant mesothelioma was probably related to HIV immune suppression or HIV and/or cytomegalovirus or zidovudine and is a complication of AIDS similar to the development of other malignant neoplasms in patients with AIDS.
...
PMID:AIDS and malignant mesothelioma--is there a connection? 813 80
A 59-year-old woman, diagnosed as adult T-cell leukemia (ATL), was admitted because of fever and disturbance of consciousness. Peripheral blood examination demonstrated leukopenia and anemia, and subsequently thrombocytopenia. Bone marrow aspiration showed the increase of mature histiocytes with hemophagocytosis and a diagnosis of hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) was established. She died due to
respiratory failure
on the eighth hospital day. Autopsy histological examination revealed systemic cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection with CMV pneumonia, and also demonstrated the findings of HPS in bone marrow, lymph nodes, and spleen. This case was considered as virus associated hemophagocytic syndrome (VAHS) developed by CMV infection. CMV is one of the causative viruses of VAHS and the opportunistic infection. In the patient with ATL in the
immunodeficiency
state, VAHS accompanied with opportunistic infection might be one of the causes of pancytopenia.
...
PMID:[Adult T cell leukemia with cytomegalovirus associated hemophagocytic syndrome]. 813 17
We have described a patient, immunocompromised from an infection with the human
immunodeficiency
virus, who had rapidly progressive measles complicated by measles pneumonia and
respiratory failure
. Rapid improvement in the patient's condition followed therapy with inhaled ribavirin and intravenous immune globulin. Patients who have measles pneumonia associated with
respiratory failure
may benefit from combination therapy with ribavirin and IV immune globulin.
...
PMID:Ribavirin and intravenous immune globulin therapy for measles pneumonia in HIV infection. 827 26
Pulmonary infections are a very common complication in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. These infections may be severe enough to initiate the admission of these patients to intensive care units (ICU). Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is the most frequent cause of ICU admission because of acute respiratory failure. Mortality of ICU-admitted patients with this infection has changed with time. Initial reports confirmed a high mortality (80% to 90%). After 1985, the mortality rate decreased (50%). Factors such as the use of corticosteroids, better patient care, and a better knowledge of the disease probably explain this change. In recent years (1990 to 1995), mortality has worsened again, perhaps, because ICU facilities were offered more liberally to patients failing aggressive conventional treatment, including adjuvant therapy with corticosteroids. However, for those patients able to be discharged, the prognosis is not worse than expected according to the stage of their human
immunodeficiency
virus-1 (HIV-1) infection and immunologic status. Consequently, at least a limited period of ICU care and some respiratory support (either continuous positive airway pressure or mechanical ventilation) should be considered and offered to all HIV-1-infected patients with PCP and
respiratory failure
. Cytomegalovirus may be another cause of severe pulmonary infection in AIDS patients. This infection is difficult to diagnose; hence, it should be suspected when patients with PCP do not progress appropriately, or when no responsible pulmonary pathogen is found. When associated with PCP, mortality is very high. Disseminated tuberculosis is another potential cause of severe
respiratory failure
and respiratory secretions should be routinely examined for acid-fast bacilli in AIDS patients with pulmonary infiltrates. Finally, bacterial pneumonia (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria catarrhalis, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) may also be the etiological agents of severe acute respiratory failure. Empiric antibacterial treatment to cover these microorganisms should be given when a bacterial agent is suspected.
...
PMID:Severe pulmonary infections in AIDS patients. 877 81
Neuropathological studies were carried out on 180 human
immunodeficiency
virus-seronegative intravenous drug addicts. The findings in victims of acute heroin intoxication (n = 116) were congestion (99.1%), capillary engorgement (68.1%), and/or perivascular bleeding (68.1%) - hemodynamic processes attributable to toxic primary
respiratory failure
. In a high percentage of these cases (88%), cerebral edema was also present. In 18 cases of acute heroin intoxication who survived for periods of hours or days, the sole postmortem finding was ischemic nerve cell damages, resembling that typically seen in systemic hypoxia. Semiquantitative analysis revealed nerve cell loss in the hippocampal formation and/or Purkinje cell layer in 26% of the 162 chronic drug abusers. By contrast, in nearly 80% of these cases, the hippocampus showed enhanced expression of glial fibrillary acid protein by astrocytes and/or a proliferation of microglia, demonstrated by CD68 expression. Since such reactive processes are produced by primary neuronal damages, it can be assumed that chronic intravenous drug abuse results in obviously ischemic nerve cell loss. This could be demonstrated in the hippocampus, but it must also occur throughout the whole brain. The demonstration of ischemic nerve cell damage and neuronal loss or secondary reactive alterations has not been described previously.
...
PMID:Neuropathology in non-human immunodeficiency virus-infected drug addicts: hypoxic brain damage after chronic intravenous drug abuse. 878 64
Pulmonary infections, including mixed infections, are common in patients with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), and a specific diagnosis is desirable to direct therapy. In a retrospective study of patients suspected of having Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, we examined the usefulness of fiberoptic bronchoscopy in the immediate diagnosis of tuberculosis. In 267 patients, pneumocystis pneumonia was diagnosed in 115 (43%), of whom 5 (4%) also had concomitant tuberculosis. Bronchoalveolar lavage gave an immediate diagnosis of tuberculosis by positive acid-fast bacilli stain in 3 patients, while the transbronchial biopsy was suggestive in a fourth. Four of these patients developed
respiratory failure
, and 2 died. In patients with pneumocystis pneumonia,
respiratory failure
was significantly more common in those with tuberculosis (P = .0077). In 156 (58%) of the 267 cases, bronchoalveolar lavage was negative for pneumocystis pneumonia, while tuberculosis was diagnosed in 14 (9%), and an immediate diagnosis was made in 10 (71%). In a series of HIV-infected patients suspected mainly of having pneumocystis pneumonia, tuberculosis was found instead in 19 (7%), and both diseases were present in 5 (2%). Bronchoscopy provided an early diagnosis of tuberculosis in 63%. Patients with concomitant pneumocystis pneumonia and tuberculosis had a high rate of
respiratory failure
.
...
PMID:Early bronchoscopic diagnosis of concomitant tuberculosis and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 893 36
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