Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intravenous (i.v.) drug users are a key factor in the transmission of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection, yet epidemiologic information about this population, especially those with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, is scarce. The demographic characteristics, drug use behavior, and sexual practices of i.v. drug users who developed AIDS were prospectively studied at the Montefiore Medical Center from October 1984 to February 1988. The early wave of i.v. drug users with AIDS was characterized by poverty, minority overrepresentation (more than 80 percent were black or Hispanic), and initiation of i.v. drug use at an early age (median age 19 years). Injection of drugs and sharing of needles was frequent. Most had used so-called shooting galleries, but only for a minority of injection episodes.
Heroin
or cocaine use was almost universal, nearly always accompanied by abuse of another substance, usually alcohol or marijuana. Fewer than a third had ever participated in a methadone maintenance program, but more than 40 percent had been in prison since 1978. All patients had been sexually active, often with partners who were not i.v. drug users. The research suggests a complex interaction existing between high-risk demographic characteristics, drug use practice, and certain types of sexual behavior, all of which contributed to the early spread of HIV infection in this population. Efforts that are directed toward interrupting i.v. drug user-related transmission of HIV need to include consideration of these characteristics.
...
PMID:Demographic characteristics, drug use, and sexual behavior of i.v. drug user with AIDS in Bronx, New York. 189 44
To ascertain the incidence of infections in intravenous users of illicit drugs, we performed a retrospective study of 270 intravenous drug users (IVDUs) and 562 controls who did not use drugs over a seven-year period from 1978-1985. IVDUs had an increased overall incidence of infections (P less than 0.001) compared to controls, which was explained to a large degree by an increased incidence of hepatitis. Endocarditis and disseminated gonococcal infection were seen with increased frequency in IVDUs (P less than 0.05), but abscess and cellulitis were not. Neither acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), tuberculosis, Pneumocystis pneumonia, nor disseminated viral or fungal infection were seen in IVDUs or controls.
Heroin
users, but not other IVDUs, had an increased incidence of infections not thought to be associated with needle use, suggesting impaired immunity. This study demonstrates that IVDUs have an increased incidence of infection compared to control subjects, but the kinds of infections have changed substantially over the past two decades. The presence of opportunistic pathogens in these patients should suggest concurrent infection with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV).
...
PMID:Increased incidence of infections in intravenous drug users. 278 3
Heroin
-associated nephropathy (HAN), a complication of intravenous heroin abuse, was initially recognized at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, NY, in the early 1970s. Our recent experience indicates that after a steady incidence of new cases of HAN throughout the mid-1980s, a sharp decrease in incidence of new cases occurred starting in 1989. We sought to explore possible explanations for what amounts to disappearance of a previously prevalent disease. By means of retrospective analysis of a hospital-specific registry of new cases of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, incidence curves from 1981 through 1993 for new cases of HAN, diabetes-induced renal disease, and human
immunodeficiency
virus-associated nephropathy were constructed. From hospital computer records, the number of admissions directly related to opioid abuse were extracted and charted. Unpublished surveillance records of the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services as well as reports from the New York City Department of Health, Office of AIDS Surveillance and the US Department of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration were used to determine the pattern of change in the prevalence of heroin abuse. Additionally, we used analysis of "street" heroin by the Drug Enforcement Administration to draw curves detailing drug cost and purity in New York City. There were no new cases of ESRD due to HAN for the years 1991 through 1993. The rates for new cases of ESRD due to diabetes and hypertension remained relatively constant throughout this interval.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Disappearance of uremia due to heroin-associated nephropathy. 774 21
A discriminant function analysis was performed with data from 409 high-risk heroin addicts at intake into a methadone maintenance treatment program to determine the characteristics of cocaine users. Cocaine users presented a higher-risk profile for human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), engaged in a wider variety of criminal activities, were more likely to be African-American, reported more alcohol use, and showed more signs of psychological disturbance. A second discriminant function analysis determined that crack smokers differed from non-crack cocaine users in ethnicity, alcohol use, criminal activity, needle use, and marital status.
Heroin
addicts who use cocaine, in particular crack, represent a sub-group at higher risk and in need of targeted treatment planning and monitoring.
...
PMID:Cocaine and crack use and HIV risk behaviors among high-risk methadone maintenance clients. 788 69
This study examined sexual and drug use behavior in 247 methadone maintenance patients, to explore the association of cocaine use with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) risk behavior. In univariate analyses, cocaine use was positively associated with any drug injection, number of injections, and sexual intercourse without condoms. These relationships remained significant after controlling for other drug use and demographic factors.
Heroin
use also contributed to injection-related risk. We conclude that cocaine use represents a continued source of risk for exposure to HIV in this population, and that more aggressive efforts are warranted to reduce illicit drug use, particularly of heroin and cocaine, in methadone patients.
...
PMID:Cocaine use and HIV risk behavior in methadone maintenance patients. 788 71
Drug injection and other practices affecting the risk of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection were studied among 154 heroin users and 45 methamphetamine users in San Antonio, Texas. Amphetamine users were younger, mostly white, and had less-severe drug dependence.
Heroin
users had significantly higher levels of needle risk, as indicated by frequency of injection, number of persons sharing equipment, and place of injection. Methamphetamine users tended to buy syringes in lots of 10 or more from pharmacies and to use a syringe less than 5 times before discarding it.
Heroin
users tended to buy 1 needle at a time from an illicit source and to use it more than 20 times. Of methamphetamine users, 71% had more than one sex partner, compared to 39% of heroin users. Partners of methamphetamine users were more likely to be drug injectors than were partners of heroin users. Fewer methamphetamine users reported a behavior change in response to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic, and fewer had been contacted by AIDS Education/Outreach. We suggest that efforts to promote risk reduction among methamphetamine users be stepped up because this population has been underserved and because less-sweeping behavior changes are needed to reduce needle-related risks to acceptable levels.
...
PMID:An ethnographic comparison of HIV risk behaviors among heroin and methamphetamine injectors. 1007 75
The objective of this article is to critique a study conducted by the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health to evaluate Switzerland's heroin maintenance project.
Heroin
abusers (N = 1,146) were enrolled in 18 research clinics. Subjects were recruited into three study arms--heroin, morphine, or methadone maintenance, but randomization was unsuccessful, and all received heroin. Medications were self-administered by injection on site. Patients were interviewed at intake and 6-month intervals up to 18 months. A review of the study revealed design weaknesses, including the absence of control groups, lack of corroboration of self-reports, failure to control for the influence of social services on outcome, and the absence of follow-up on those who left the trial prematurely. The program's ability to avert human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) transmission could not be fully evaluated because patients did not consistently submit to HIV testing. The Swiss trials of supervised heroin prescription trials do not withstand scientific scrutiny.
...
PMID:The Swiss heroin trials. Scientifically sound? 1120 69
Heroin
abuse is a common route of acquiring HIV-1 infection. However, the effects of opiates on lentivirus disease progression are not well understood. Feline
immunodeficiency
virus is recognized as a good animal model for HIV-1, but characterization of the opiate receptor system in cats is lacking. Here we report the partial sequencing of the feline mu opiate receptor (MOR) and demonstrate a homology of 92 and 93% to the published human MOR sequences. Additionally, MOR transcripts were detected in the feline brain and tonsil but not in the spleen. Also, specific receptor ligand interactions were observed using microphysiometry.
...
PMID:Partial characterization and tissue distribution of the feline mu opiate receptor. 1124 68
For various ethnic and socioeconomic reasons the pattern of renal disease in the inner city displays distinctive features. Hypertension is frequent, often intractable, and generally conditioned by salt sensitivity and a high sodium intake. Chronic hypertensive nephrosclerosis, found predominantly in African Americans, comprises marked cardiomegaly, renal shrinkage, and hypertensive retinopathy. It has been overdiagnosed in the past, but actually accounts for less than 20% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in African Americans. Malignant hypertension, less frequent nowadays, may cause renal shutdown, which is reversible in a few cases; the heart and kidneys are often of normal size. Idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is the most common cause of the primary nephrotic syndrome in blacks, but its incidence has also been rising in whites and Hispanics; it does not respond well to treatment, and almost one half of the patients develop ESRD within 10 years. Systemic lupus erythematosus is also more common in African Americans, in whom the severe proliferative forms of lupus nephritis pursue a more virulent course: one half of such patients develop ESRD in 5 years. Cocaine, the use of which has assumed epidemic proportions, may cause accelerated hypertension, acute renal failure from rhabdomyolysis, and progression of preexisting renal disease.
Heroin
nephropathy has all but disappeared and has been replaced by human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) nephropathy. The prognosis of HIV-infected patients maintained by dialysis has greatly improved. Sickle glomerulopathy, consisting of mesangial expansion, basement membrane duplication, and the absence of immune deposits, may cause the nephrotic syndrome in 4% of patients with severe sickle cell anemia, heralding death within 2 years in one half of patients and ESRD in two thirds; survival has not improved with dialysis. Diabetes is now the most common cause of ESRD. Familial aggregation of ESRD is frequently encountered. Interventions useful in the general population, such as vascular bypass procedures, should be undertaken with great caution and restraint in dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Renal disease in the inner city. 1145 21
Heroin
, one of the most addictive and "hardest" drugs of abuse, carries significant morbidity and mortality. Although its use is usually associated with the adult population in the United States, the last decade has witnessed a decrease in the median age of heroin users. An increase in the availability of inexpensive and pure heroin that could be snorted rather than injected made the drug accessible to adolescents and reduced the fear associated with the transmission of the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). Because of the atypical demographics and the alternative drug use patterns, this young population of heroin users is not easily identified by parents or by healthcare providers. Lack of social support or access to healthcare prevents young heroin users from participation in detoxification programs, suggesting that changes may be needed in our healthcare and social systems to properly target and provide care to the youngest heroin abusers.
...
PMID:The resurgence and abuse of heroin by children in the United States. 1264 Feb 81
1
2
Next >>