Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
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The biological markers for determining as early as possible the progression in the infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are very important for the health care of patients, and to adapt their anti-retroviral treatment. Among those, four independent biological markers for predicting a pejorative evolution in the following 36 months are used in medical practice: two specific for HIV, p24 antigenemia and serum titre of antibodies to the p24 core antigen, and two non-HIV specific surrogate markers, the beta 2-microglobulinemia and the absolute number of CD4 T cell in blood. P24 antigenemia corresponds to an active retroviral in vivo replication. The cut off for detection is about 10 pg/ml. It is difficult to detect in black people, and in the asymptomatic or pauci-symptomatic stages of the disease. The apparition or the increase of the serum p24 antigen levels suggest the occurrence of opportunistic infections. P24 antigenemia decreases or disappears during the treatment by zidovudine. The diminution or the disappearance of serum antibodies directed to the p24 core protein are secondary to the deficiency of the humoral immunity, and to an increase of the viral replication, which occur at the late stage of the disease. The diminution or the disappearance of serum antibodies to p24 precede the occurrence of AIDS by several months. The increase of the serum beta 2-microglobulin level is associated with the severity of the disease. In the San Francisco prospective cohort, the progression to AIDS in 36 months was 69% when beta 2-microglobulinemia was more than 5 mg/l, 33% when it was between 3.1 to 5 mg/l, and 12% when it was less than 3 mg/l. The beta 2-microglobulin intra-thecal synthesis level could serve as a marker for the specific HIV encephalitis. The CD4 lymphocyte count constitutes an independent provisional marker for progression to AIDS, probably the most important, but mainly of statistical value. A lymphocyte count of 200 CD4/mm3 is considered as the threshold of full blown AIDS. Beside these classic biological markers, numerous other parameters have been evaluated, without knowing their practical interest. Although the predictive markers for AIDS have a real statistical significance, their interpretation could be difficult or hazardous when applied to a sole individual. In a relatively short delay, the actual biological markers will probably be completed or changed, in the routine medical practice, by the use of direct virological markers evaluating the viral load (plasmatic or cellular viremia).
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PMID:[Estimated biological markers of progression in human immunodeficiency virus infection]. 129 68

Since the original description of oral hairy leukoplakia among homosexual men in San Francisco in 1984, this white lesion of the tongue has been seen in the mouths of persons infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) worldwide. Its presence in HIV-positive persons usually but not always indicates fairly rapid progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. Although the lesion appears to be common in HIV-positive persons, it is also, albeit rarely, seen in other conditions associated with immunosuppression. Epstein-Barr virus is associated with and presumably causes hairy leukoplakia, and the lesion offers insights into the biology of this ubiquitous DNA-oncogenic virus.
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PMID:Significance of oral hairy leukoplakia. 131 89

As clinicians have come to realize, patients who have AIDS are uniquely predisposed to drug-associated toxic effects and allergic reactions. In San Francisco General Hospital's first clinical trial involving patients with pneumonia due to Pneumocystis carinii, only one-third of all patients who were treated initially with either trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or pentamidine were able to complete the 3-week course. Because of drug-related toxic effects, most patients required an alteration in therapy. In addition, with the multi-drug approach to management of infection due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and its complications, drug-drug interactions commonly complicate the pharmacokinetics and toxicities of the therapeutic agents used. Both factors make caring for HIV-infected patients a complicated and perplexing process for the clinician. We've invited Drs. Belle Lee and Sharon Safrin of the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine to contribute the AIDS Commentary this month. Drs. Lee and Safrin are active investigators in the field of pharmacokinetics and conduct clinical trials of agents used in the treatment of patients who have AIDS. In this commentary, they review what is known about the complexities involved in treating patients with AIDS and offer some practical suggestions for management.
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PMID:Interactions and toxicities of drugs used in patients with AIDS. 145 53

We reviewed the medical records of 44 adults with 50 consecutive episodes of thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura (TTP) or hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) seen at the University of California, San Francisco affiliated hospitals during the past decade. Patients were treated according to a uniform plan in which initial therapy included daily large volume plasmapheresis using fresh frozen plasma. Patients not responding completely to initial therapy were treated with a salvage regimen including splenectomy, dextran, and corticosteroids. At the time of diagnosis, the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was elevated in 98% of cases, with a median value of 1,208 U/L. Other clinical features were present inconsistently, and only 34% of "TTP" episodes involved the classic pentad of hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, neurologic disorders, noninfectious fever, and renal impairment. Primary treatment with plasma exchange produced complete remission in 56% (27 of 48) of the episodes. Previously splenectomized patients uniformly responded to plasma therapy (12 of 12). In patients not responding completely to primary therapy, salvage splenectomy produced complete responses in 81% (13 of 16) of the cases. The pattern of clinical response to therapy was consistent, with initial resolution of neurologic dysfunction (median, 3 days) followed by normalization of LDH levels (5 days) and platelet count (7 days). Normalization of renal function occurred significantly later (15 days). Although short-term responses to plasma therapy in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-seropositive patients did not differ from other patients, no HIV-positive patient survived more than 2 years from diagnosis of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA). We conclude that the diagnosis of TMA requires a high degree of clinical suspicion and that the diagnostic criteria should consist of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and an elevated LDH. Initial therapy with plasma exchange leads to disease control in the majority of cases, but an optimal treatment strategy requires the use of alternative methods if initial remission is transient or not achieved. Salvage therapy with splenectomy, steroids, and dextran is highly effective in this setting.
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PMID:Thrombotic microangiopathies in the 1980s: clinical features, response to treatment, and the impact of the human immunodeficiency virus epidemic. 139 52

Five strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) were isolated from five Japanese hemophilia patients. Two isolates, HIV-1[GUN-1] and HIV-1[GUN-2], were from brother patients with hemophilia B and the other three isolates, HIV-1[GUN-3], HIV-1[GUN-4], and HIV-1[GUN-5], were from hemophilia A patients. Another HIV-1 strain, HIV-1[GUN-6], was isolated from a Canadian male homosexual with AIDS. The restriction endonuclease cleavage maps of the proviral genomes of these six HIV-1 strains revealed that they were apparently different from each other. The phylogenetic trees constructed using restriction maps and nucleotide sequences were quite similar, indicating that phylogenetic analyses of Japanese HIV-1 isolates can be done using restriction maps of the proviruses. Phylogenetic analyses showed that they were more closely related to HIV-1s which had been reported to be isolated from homosexual patients in the United States than those isolated from African patients. In particular, GUN-1 and GUN-2 isolates were on the branch of a San Francisco isolate, ARV2, while GUN-5 and GUN-6 isolates were on the branch of HTLV-IIIB-related isolates.
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PMID:Six strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolated in Japan and their molecular phylogeny. 140 18

To examine the actual and potential spread of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epicenter to surrounding neighborhoods, we studied the prevalence of the viral infection and AIDS risk behaviors from 1988 to 1989 in a representative sample of unmarried whites, African Americans, and Hispanics living in San Francisco. We surveyed 1,770 single men and women aged 20 to 44 years (a 64% response rate) in a random household sample drawn from 3 neighborhoods of varying geographic and cultural proximity to the Castro District where the San Francisco epidemic began. Of 1,369 with blood tests, 69 (5%) had HIV antibodies; all but 5 of these reported either homosexual activity (32% HIV-positive; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 23%, 41%), injection drug use (5% HIV-positive; CI = 1%, 14%), or both (59% HIV-positive; CI 42%, 74%). Homosexual activity was more common among white men than among African-American or Hispanic men, but the proportion of those infected was similar in the 3 races. Both the prevalence of homosexually active men and the proportion infected were much lower in the 2 more outlying neighborhoods. Risk behaviors in the past year for acquiring HIV heterosexually--sex with an HIV-infected person or homosexually active man or injection drug user, unprotected sexual intercourse with more than 4 partners, and (as a proxy) having a sexually transmitted disease--were assessed in 1,573 neighborhood residents who were themselves neither homosexually active men nor injection drug users. The prevalence of reporting at least 1 of these risk behaviors was 12% overall, and race-gender estimates ranged from 5% among Hispanic women to 21% among white women. We conclude that in San Francisco, infection with HIV is rare among people who are neither homosexually active nor injection drug users, but the potential for the use spread of infection is substantial, as 12% of this group reported important risk behaviors for acquiring the virus heterosexually.
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PMID:Risk for AIDS in multiethnic neighborhoods in San Francisco, California. The population-based AMEN Study. 141 40

The authors developed a union sponsored 2-day human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) "train the trainer" program for healthcare workers in the San Francisco Bay Area. The program incorporated the "education for action" approach in an effort to respond to the inadequacies in many traditional, institutional trainings. Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and Labor Occupational Health Program (LOHP) conducted the HIV/AIDS "train the trainer" program for approximately 100 healthcare workers in county public hospitals and community health clinics. After completing the program, these workers went back to their healthcare facilities, or community organizations, and led additional classes on HIV/AIDS transmission and prevention for approximately 600 more people. The goal of the program was to empower healthcare workers to: 1) identify the occupational risks associated with exposure to blood and potentially infectious body fluids at the workplace; 2) develop strategies to reduce those risks; 3) discuss their feelings about caring for an HIV/AIDS patient; and, 4) conduct HIV/AIDS workshops at the workplace.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome training from a union perspective. 144

To determine the frequency and distribution of pneumonia in an intensive care unit (ICU), we retrospectively examined the records of 1,854 consecutive ICU admissions between January 1987 and April 1990. A total of 266 patients met criteria for pneumonia (unilateral or bilateral infiltrate by chest roentgenogram, plus 2 of the following: leukocyte count > 10 x 10(9) per liter, temperature > 38.5 degrees C, or culture of blood or sputum positive for pathogens). Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus was the most frequent cause (28%) precipitating an ICU admission in this series of patients. Streptococcus pneumoniae (13%), Staphylococcus aureus (8%), Haemophilus influenzae (4%), and viruses (4%) were also commonly observed. Overall mortality was 20%. An APACHE II score of greater than 24, the need for intubation, and the presence of P carinii were predictive of increased mortality. Age, sex, and length of stay did not predict final results. Patients with P carinii pneumonia who required intubation had an overall mortality of 54%, which was higher than patients without P carinii pneumonia who required intubation (P < .05). Our experience shows the changing spectrum of pneumonia in ICUs. In contrast to reports of a decade ago in which S pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa are cited as most common, P carinii is now most prevalent in our ICU. Although our findings reflect the increasing incidence of human immunodeficiency virus infection in San Francisco, California, they may also be pertinent to other areas in the United States where the incidence of this infection continues to increase.
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PMID:The effect of human immunodeficiency virus infection on the distribution and outcome of pneumonia in intensive care units. 147 45

Hairy leukoplakia was first described as an oral marker of human immunodeficiency virus infection in 1984. The clinical significance of this lesion in an otherwise healthy, high-risk symptom-free person is that it can be an early manifestation of human immunodeficiency virus infection. Because of its benign nature and the lack of clinical evidence that treatment of the lesion improves the prognosis of human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients, systemic therapy with antiviral drugs does not seem warranted at this time. Topical retinoids (Retin-A sol) and systemic antivirals such as acyclovir have been previously tried; however, lesions tend to recur a few days after treatment is discontinued. Nine patients with oral hairy leukoplakia seen at the Oral Medicine Clinic, University of California San Francisco were offered treatment with podophyllum resin 25% sol. All patients had a complete remission of their condition within 1 week (5 patients) or after the second application a week later (4 patients). Side effects were transient and reversible. These remissions of oral hairy leukoplakia lasted from 2 to 28 weeks, which suggests that podophyllum may be a relatively safe and cost-effective treatment of this otherwise symptom-free lesion.
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PMID:Retrospective findings of the clinical benefits of podophyllum resin 25% sol on hairy leukoplakia. Clinical results in nine patients. 151 42

Ready access to condoms can be an important means of slowing the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and human immunodeficiency virus. We identified the factors associated with keeping or carrying condoms in a random-digit dialing survey of 522 Hispanic adults aged 18 to 65 years in San Francisco. Overall, more Hispanic men reported having condoms than Hispanic women (55.2% vs 23.8%). Hispanic men also reported much higher levels of risky sexual behavior than Hispanic women. Condom promotion efforts with Hispanics will require different approaches for each gender.
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PMID:Predictors of condom accessibility among Hispanics in San Francisco. 154 83


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