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

A 23-year-old man presented with disturbance of consciousness and convulsion. Two weeks prior to his admission, he had general arthralgia, retro-orbital pain, and body temperature increase to 40 degrees C. These symptoms persisted for two weeks. He was admitted to the hospital because of general convulsion, followed by disturbance of consciousness. On admission, he was deeply lethargic. Cerebrospinal fluid obtained on admission showed pleocytosis (247/mm3) and an increased level of protein. Electroencephalogram obtained on admission disclosed diffuse slow waves. Enhanced cranial MR image did not show any abnormal lesions in the cerebral parenchyma. The patient was diagnosed as having meningoencephalitis and the treatment consisting of aciclovir, CTRX, and methylprednisolone was undertaken. A test for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibody was found to be positive on the second day of hospitalization. A Western blot was positive with bands at gp160 and P24 confirming HIV infection. Antibody titers of paired acute and convalescent sera including HSV, EBV, CMV, mumps, measles, and Japanese encephalitis did not show any significant increase. The patient became alert on the 3rd day of hospitalization. Electroencephalogram obtained on the 10th day of hospitalization was normal. Western blot, which was obtained 4 months later, was positive with bands at gp120, p68, p55, p52, gp41, p40, p34, p18, including gp160 and P24. He was diagnosed as having primary HIV infection. Meningoencephalitis was attributed to acute primary HIV infection. Acute HIV infection should be considered as an etiology of meningoencephalitis.
...
PMID:[A case of primary HIV infection presenting as meningoencephalitis]. 1631 72

Western blot (WB) is the most widely accepted confirmatory assay for detecting antibodies to the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1). We report the case of an HIV-1 patient whose WB was negative for over two years. A 41-year-old Japanese man with Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) and pulmonary tuberculosis referred in March 2005 was found to have positive HIV-1 ELISA and HIV RNA PCR, but HIV-1 WB with only two bands, at gp160 and p18, and no WB HIV-2 band. The CD4 count was 37/microL, and total immunoglobulin, IgG, IgM, and IgG subclasses were normal. The man was treated for PCP and pulmonary tuberculosis, then underwent antiretroviral therapy. He had taken short-terms steroids to treat a drug allergy and immune reconstitution syndrome. Six months later, his serological ELISA tests for HIV-1 and HIV DNA PCR were negative and WB showed no positive band. The CD4 count recovered gradually, and exceeded 350/microL two years later, but WB remained negative. Lymphoproliferative assays and interferon y expression against HIV-pl7, p24, and p41 were studied and compared to those of other HIV-1 infected patients. Our patient showed no response to p17 or p24 and only a weak response to p41. Other patients showed a response to HIV-antigens, but patients with antiretroviral therapy or with histories of steroid use responded more weakly than those with neither. These findings show that HIV-specific lymphocytes decline with antiretroviral therapy and steroid treatment within early HIV infection. It is therefore important to interpret negative serological tests carefully in patients such as ours.
...
PMID:[A case of HIV-1 infection that showed Western blot analysis for HIV-1 negative after antiretroviral therapy]. 1952 9


<< Previous 1 2 3 4