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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (
lymphopenia
)
4,859
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fungal infections are increasing in frequency, especially among patients with haematological malignancies. The fungi which cause most of the infections in cancer patients are Candida spp. and Aspergillus spp. These fungi seldom infect individuals with normal host defence mechanisms. Many factors predispose patients to fungal infection, including neutropenia,
lymphopenia
, gastro-intestinal ulceration, intravenous catheters and adrenal corticosteroid therapy. Candida spp. cause 5 major types of infection: dermatitis,
thrush
, gastro-intestinal, primary organ and disseminated infection. Aspergillus spp. and Phycomycetes cause pulmonary, disseminated or rhino-cerebral infection. Cryptococcus neoformans usually causes meningitis but may cause pneumonia or disseminated infection. The diagnosis of fungal infection is often made only at postmortem examination, because it is difficult to isolate the aetiological agent from sites of infection. Amphotericin B remains the mainstay of antifungal therapy, but is seldom effective in the patient with compromised host defences. Successful management of these infections in the future will depend upon improvement in diagnostic capabilities as well as the introduction of more effective and less toxic antifungal agents.
...
PMID:Fungal infections in the cancer patient. 60 7
A clinical AIDS case definition is needed for surveillance in countries where the CDC case definition is not practical. To derive such a definition, we compared 110 HIV-seropositive and 135 randomly selected HIV-seronegative adult medical-ward inpatients in Brazil. Multivariate analysis of clinical signs and symptoms and simple diagnoses resulted in a discriminant function with sensitivity of 89% and specificity of 96% in predicting for AIDS. These data were the empirical basis for a clinical definition of AIDS in adults drafted in a Caracas, Venezuela, workshop sponsored by the Pan American Health Organization. The revised "Caracas" definition presented here requires a positive HIV serology, the absence of cancer or other cause of immunosuppression, plus > or = 10 cumulative points, as follows: Kaposi's sarcoma (10 points); extrapulmonary/noncavitary pulmonary tuberculosis (10);
oral candidiasis
or hairy leukoplakia (5); cavitary pulmonary/unspecified tuberculosis (5); herpes zoster < 60 years of age (5); CNS dysfunction (5); diarrhea > or = 1 month (2); fever > or = 1 month (2); cachexia or > 10% weight loss (2); asthenia > or = 1 month (2); persistent dermatitis (2); anemia,
lymphopenia
, or thrombocytopenia (2); persistent cough or any pneumonia except TB (2); and lymphadenopathy > or = 1 cm at > or = 2 noninguinal sites for > or = 1 month (2). This definition has a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 100% (91% without HIV serology) when applied to the Brazilian patients in this study. The Caracas definition has been adopted by Brazil, Honduras, and Surinam, and is in validation elsewhere. The use of a reasonably sensitive and specific case definition commensurate with available diagnostic resources should facilitate AIDS surveillance in developing countries.
...
PMID:A simplified surveillance case definition of AIDS derived from empirical clinical data. The Clinical AIDS Study Group, and the Working Group on AIDS case definition. 145 32
During the 5-year period from 1981 to 1985, we have observed 8 cases of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) among our 85 patients with hemophilia A. Thus, the prevalence of AIDS with hemophilia A is 9.4% in our patient population. By utilizing stored serum or plasma samples dating back to 1978, antibody against HTLV-III was detected in all 8 cases with AIDS. Based on the time interval from the appearance of antibody to HTLV-III to the diagnosis of AIDS in these patients, the incubation period ranged from 27 months to 60 months, with a median of 36 months. Before the diagnosis of full-blown AIDS, all patients exhibited a variety of prodromal manifestations of non-specific nature, including weight loss,
oral candidiasis
, unexplained non-productive chronic cough, generalized lymphadenopathy, and thrombocytopenia lasting several months to several years. Serial T-lymphocyte subset studies were available in some patients during the HTLV-III seropositive period and showed progressive
lymphopenia
, depletion of T4 cells with an average absolute count of 94 +/- 128 per mm3 (mean +/- 1 S.D.), and a markedly reversed T4/T8 ratio of 0.26 +/- 0.19 (mean +/- 1 S.D.). These findings suggest that the incubation period of AIDS is considerably long and that prospective study of serial immunologic markers and HTLV-III markers may be warranted in hemophilic patients at risk.
...
PMID:Natural history of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in hemophilic patients. 310 90
The current rate of progression of persistent generalized lymphadenopathy to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was tested in a cohort of 105 homosexual men in London, UK. 5 patients were lost to follow-up, and the remaining 100 were seen every 3 months. All tested positive for the human immunodeficiency virus antibody. Previous clinical observations had shown oral candida; anemia; leucopenia; thrombocytopenia; enthrocyte sedimentation rate 15 mm in the 1st hour to be possible predictors of AIDS. 5 of the 13 patients who developed AIDS during a mean follow-up period of 22 months (range 12-32) developed Pneumocystis carinii; 5 Karposi's sarcoma; 1 both; 1 P carinii and cryptosporidiosis; and 1 cryptococcal meningitis. A life table technic calculation showed that over 3 years the probability of patients with persistent generalized lymphadenopathy progressing to AIDS was 20.9%. Of the clinical features examined, those most likely to indicate progression to AIDS were
Oral candida
(relative risk (RR)=12);
Lymphopenia
(RR=7); Erythrocyte sedimentation rate 15mm (RR=7); and anemia (RR=6). There were figures for median time before AIDS onset and the range of variation of these median times for these symptoms, e.g. oral candida, 8 months median; range of 1-24 months. Similar prospective studies performed in the US are reviewed. It is determined that a clinical examination and hematological measurements are useful in determining progression risk.
...
PMID:From persistent generalised lymphadenopathy to AIDS: who will progress? 310 80
Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy during HIV infection is now a well classified syndrome featuring multiple chronic lymph node enlargement frequently associated with further symptoms (diarrhea, nocturnal sweating, loss of weight, fever): it is invariably accompanied by serious alterations of the cell-mediated immunity including
lymphopenia
, reduced number of helper lymphocytes in circulation, inversion of the helper/suppressor ratio, lower proliferative response in vitro and deficient delayed skin sensitivity tests. Minor opportunistic infections are also more frequent, the most widespread being chronic
oral candidiasis
. Whenever several of these signs are associated in a single patient, especially if the immunitary deficit is severe, an immunomodulating treatment is indicated to improve the lymphocyte functionality and finally to modify any evolutive tendency. The Authors give the preliminary results of a pilot study carried out on 12 patients with LAS/ARC treated with Thymopentin at a dosage of 50 mg by intra muscular injection on alternate days for cycles of 30 days. Compared with 14 untreated patients, the subjects receiving therapy showed a more stable immunological picture, and improvement in subjective symptoms and a better therapeutic response to minor opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Thymopentin (TP-5) therapy during lymphadenopathy syndrome (LAS/ARC): preliminary report. 333 53
The clinical findings in 13 drug abusers and one homosexual man with tuberculosis and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) from New York City are described. Tuberculosis preceded the diagnosis of AIDS in nine of the 14 patients by a mean of 7 months and occurred within the same month in the remaining five. The presence of
thrush
, generalised lymphadenopathy,
lymphopenia
, cutaneous anergy and chest radiographs showing hilar adenopathy and/or lower lobe infiltrates was common among the patients in whom tuberculosis preceded AIDS. Eight of our patients had extra-pulmonary tuberculosis, six had disseminated tuberculosis and five had tuberculous lymphadenitis. Cultures of tissue biopsies may be positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis despite the absence of acid fast bacilli or granulomas on microscopic examination. Tuberculosis generally responded to chemotherapy, but the majority of patients died from opportunist infections.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A review of 14 patients. 366 Apr 57
We report here nine children with AIDS. The risk factors of these patients were hemophilia in one, blood transfusions in four, maternal intravenous drug use in three and paternal AIDS in one. One baby was also of Haitian parentage. The major clinical symptoms included failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, lymphadenopathy, interstitial pneumonia, recurrent bacterial and viral infections and persistent
oral thrush
. Three infants had chronic recurrent parotitis. Five infants developed opportunistic infections primarily Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and all five died of bacterial sepsis. None of the infants were lymphopenic but all had reversed T4/T8 ratios and poor in vitro lymphocyte responses to pokeweed mitogens. Although many of the clinical and laboratory features of pediatric and adult AIDS are similar, there are some unique features for pediatric AIDS such as the absence of
lymphopenia
and the high prevalence of recurrent bacterial infections and sepsis.
...
PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in infants and children: report of nine cases. 383 Feb 64
Three cases of small bowel lymphoma in young homosexual men are presented. All three had acquired immune deficiency syndrome as demonstrated by demography, sexual history, cachexia, opportunistic infections by Cytomegalovirus, Pneumocystis carinii, atypical Mycobacterium, Candida, and/or evidence of immune deficiency, such as skin test anergy,
lymphopenia
, inversion of T-helper/T-suppressor ratio, and diminished lymphocyte response to either phytohemmaglutinin or pokeweed mitogen. All had peripheral and/or abdominal lymphadenopathy, and gastrointestinal symptoms, e.g., diarrhea, spasms, constipation, and
oral candidiasis
. The diagnosis of lymphoma was made at laparotomy in all cases. All three had complete removal of localized tumor (stage Ie or IIe), yet died within 6 months of surgery and/or chemotherapy. Thus gastrointestinal complaints may not always be related to "gay bowel" syndrome, or other infectious diseases in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Small intestinal lymphoma should be added to the list of neoplasms to which this group is susceptible.
...
PMID:Small intestinal lymphoma in three patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 396 49
Fourteen previously healthy young patients with unusual community-acquired opportunistic infections were seen over a period of three years. They differ from patients previously described in that 11 were heterosexual drug abusers (including two women) and only three were homosexual men. There were eight Puerto Ricans, five blacks, and one white. Infections included Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (seven), disseminated Mycobacterium intracellulare infection, histoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, and cytomegalovirus infection (one each),
oral thrush
(13), and Candida esophagitis (two). All patients had impaired cellular immunity manifested by cutaneous anergy and
lymphopenia
, and all 11 tested had a markedly decreased ratio of T helper/inducer cells to T suppressor/cytotoxic cells. Twelve had evidence of associated viral infection (Epstein-Barr virus in nine, cytomegalovirus in five, Herpes simplex type 2 in two). Clinical presentation was with a severe opportunistic infection or with a prodrome consisting of
oral thrush
and nonspecific findings including malaise, fever, lymphadenopathy, or cough. The syndrome of immunodeficiency and opportunistic infection occurs in nonwhite heterosexual drug abusers, not exclusively in white homosexual men, and patients may present for medical care before the onset of a severe opportunistic infection.
...
PMID:Community-acquired opportunistic infections and defective cellular immunity in heterosexual drug abusers and homosexual men. 621 79
The clinical files were reviewed of eight pediatric patients who died between 1976 and 1990, having the pathological diagnosis of aspergillosis. During the clinical evolution seven displayed malnutrition and respiratory symptomatology, four had slow evolving fever and
oral candidiasis
. The image in all the chest X-Rays was opaque. In the laboratory four had leukopenia,
lymphopenia
and neutropenia: two with a positive culture of Aspergillus. Five received four to eight different antibiotics during the last clinical evolution. All showed a combination of diverse forms of aspergillosis, all with the invasive form, five with the disseminated form, three bronchopulmonary allergic and one with aspergilloma. All had invasion of the respiratory system. Septicemia had the cause of death in four and three was direct relation with Aspergillosis.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary aspergillosis. Report of 8 children]. 858 74
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