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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.
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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

A retrospective study was done to determine the prevalence of anti-HTLV-I antibodies in patients with pulmonary cryptococcosis. None of the 19 patients with pulmonary cryptococcosis had underlying immunodeficiency. Anti-HTLV-I antibody was present in 6 (32%) of 19 patients with pulmonary cryptococcosis, a significantly higher prevalence than found in patients with bronchial asthma (4 (7%) of 58) (p less than 0.01, chi-square test). No statistical difference was noted when anti-HTLV-I antibody seropositivity was compared to that of patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (16% (17/105)), lung cancer (17% (22/129)) and pneumonia (9% (6/64)). A reduced cellular immunity as shown by lymphopenia, the CD4/CD8 ratio, and purified protein derivative skin test was found in only 1 (5%) of 19, 2 (12%) of 17, and 6 (33%) of 18 patients, respectively. These results do not explain the susceptibility to pulmonary cryptococcosis in HTLV-I carriers. This is the first report of high prevalence of pulmonary cryptococcosis in HTLV-I carriers and it raises the question whether HTLV-I carriers are more susceptible to opportunistic infections and other malignancies probably due to subtle immunological abnormalities.
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PMID:Prevalence of HTLV-I antibody in pulmonary cryptococcosis. 145 16

The present article describes the clinical and pathological findings in 5 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients with muscle toxoplasmosis. The patients had marked lymphopenia (5/5), with less than five CD4+ cells/mm3 (3/3), when they developed fever (5/5), and multiorgan failure (5/5), including diffuse encephalitis, pneumonia, pancytopenia, and myopathy. Muscle involvement included weakness and wasting (4/5), myalgias (3/5), and high serum creatine kinase levels (3/3). Serology for toxoplasmosis showed high IgG titers in 3 patients (3/4). Anti-Toxoplasma therapy resulted in complete recovery in 2 patients. Muscle toxoplasmosis was detected by biopsy (3/5) or postmortem evaluation (2/5), and was identified using immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy. Toxoplasma cysts were detected in 0.5 to 4% of muscle fibers close to or remote from necrotic fibers and inflammatory infiltrates. Muscle fibers strongly expressed the major histocompatibility complex class I antigen (2/2) as in polymyositis. We suggest that Toxoplasma gondii should be sought by muscle biopsy in patients who have acquired immunodeficiency syndrome with fever, encephalitis, multiorgan dysfunction, and elevated serum creatine kinase levels of obscure origin.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle toxoplasmosis in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a clinical and pathological study. 145 37

The safety and efficacy of a 10-day course of ganciclovir therapy was assessed in 17 consecutive patients with proven cytomegalovirus infection. The patients were receiving immunosuppressive therapy for a variety of non-malignant renal conditions, including renal transplantation (seven patients), small vessel vasculitis (six patients), systemic lupus erythematosus (three patients) and Goodpasture's disease (one patient). Fifteen patients were pyrexial at the time of their cytomegalovirus infection. Twelve patients had pneumonitis manifesting as a pulmonary parenchymal infiltrate or a reduction in gas transfer. Fourteen patients had a significant lymphopenia (lymphocyte count less than 1 x 10(9)/l), nine were leucopenic (white cell count less than 3.5 x 10(9)/l) and nine had abnormal liver biochemistry. One patient had an infection of the ileum and one an infection of the larynx. All these disease manifestations responded completely to a single course of ganciclovir therapy. There were no clinical relapses and no side effects were observed. Ganciclovir is a safe and effective therapy when administered early in the course of cytomegalovirus infection in immunosuppressed patients with renal impairment.
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PMID:Ganciclovir treatment for cytomegalovirus infection in immunocompromised patients with renal disease. 166 44

Postoperative chylothorax may occur following any intrathoracic surgical procedure in children. From January 1979 through February 1987, 18 children aged 1 month to 9 years had chylothorax listed among their discharge diagnoses. Initial therapy for all patients consisted of chest tube placement for pleural space drainage and nutritional support with either enteral formulas enriched with medium-chain triglycerides or total parenteral nutrition. Both total parenteral nutrition and medium-chain triglyceride-enriched enteral regimens provided adequate nutritional support in these children. Five of the 18 experienced lymphopenia secondary to chylous lymphocyte loss. Infections were diagnosed in 5 patients during hospitalization; one was a fatal viral pneumonitis. No correlation between infectious complications and lymphocyte count could be demonstrated.
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PMID:Management of nutritional and infectious complications of postoperative chylothorax in children. 177 26

The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was first diagnosed in burundi in 1983 when a large number of patients were registered with Kaposi's sarcoma, cryptococcal meningitis, and disseminated candidiasis. In the 1st phase of the disease the vi rus is dormant. In the 2nd phase seroconversion appears; and in the 3rd phase generalized adenopathy emerges. In the 4th phase the full-blown disease appears as a result of cellular immunity deficit with emaciation, fever, sweating, chronic diarrhea, asthenia, blood parameter changes (lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, anemia, and specific immune disorders). The early phases can be diagnosed by serological tests. During 1989 a group of 155 patients with 1st signs of seropositivity were studied in the central hospital of Bugumbura. The available clinical diagnostic markers were: 56 cases of herpes, 26 cases of generalized adenopathy, 25 cases of inflammatory infiltration of paraganglionic zones, 13 abscesses and phlegmons, 8 cases of chronic proctitis, 8 prurigo cases, 7 cases of chronic pneumonia and bronchitis, 4 cases of paresis of the facial nerve, 4 cases of Kaposi's sarcoma, 2 cases of fresh syphilis, 2 cases of anemia, asthenia, dizziness, and weight loss. Tomo- and zonographical X-ray study of the thorax of 80 patients aged 20-65 (51 men and 29 women) was performed. In 62 patients changes in the lungs were evident. In 2 patients tuberculosis of the lungs was diagnosed: miliary TB in a 26-year woman and disseminated TB in a 31-year man. 2 chronic and 3 bronchial, and 10 interstitial pneumonia cases were diagnosed in 15 patients with average age of 30 years. 4 patients had peribronchial and pneumonic infiltrations. In a group of 45 patients magnified picture showed no deformation in the lungs; and only 5 had respiratory organ pathology. Interstitial pneumonia was the most often diagnosed ailment by X-ray inpatients infected with HIV.
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PMID:[X-ray pulmonary manifestations in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus]. 196 22

A 17-year-old, previously healthy woman developed an acute "mononucleosis-like" illness with an associated "atypical" pneumonitis, followed by years of debilitating chronic fatigue, fevers, a 10-kg weight loss, night sweats, and neurocognitive symptoms. Thereafter, her sister developed a similar but less severe illness. The patient developed marked, chronic lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, with associated persistent relative lymphocytosis and atypical lymphocytosis and with thrombocytopenia. After 3 years of illness, a splenectomy was performed, which resulted in some symptomatic improvement, prompt weight gain, and resolution of all hematologic abnormalities. Serial immunologic studies revealed a strikingly elevated number of activated B lymphocytes and a T lymphopenia, which improved but did not return to normal postsplenectomy. No causal association was found with any of several infectious agents that could produce such a lymphoproliferative illness. However, both the patient and her sister had evidence of active infection with the recently discovered human herpesvirus-6. Seven years after the onset of the illness, the patient and her sister remain chronically ill.
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PMID:A chronic "postinfectious" fatigue syndrome associated with benign lymphoproliferation, B-cell proliferation, and active replication of human herpesvirus-6. 196 94

In order to study the lesions produced by lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) adult guinea-pigs were inoculated intraperitoneally with 1000 PFU of the WE or the Armstrong strain of LCMV. The animals were sacrificed at 3, 7, 10 and 14 days p.i. and samples were taken for hematological, histopathological and virological studies. In the guinea-pigs infected with the WE strain there was destruction of the splenic red pulp with high titers of virus and different degrees of pneumonitis. The hematological studies showed lymphopenia from day 7 p.i. onwards and focal bone marrow necrosis. In the animals infected with the Armstrong strain there was a very moderate neutropenia and virus multiplication was less than 2 logs, comparing with WE, in every case. The presence of large numbers of polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) in the splenic red pulp and in the lung infiltrate previous to the mentioned lesions, encourage the interpretation that the damage is somehow mediated by these cells. The guinea-pigs infected with the WE strain could represent a very convenient model to study the role of PMN in viral diseases, as well as the non-immune pathogenetic mechanisms for LCMV.
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PMID:Infection of guinea pigs with two strains of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. 213 Feb 8

To diagnose cytomegalovirus pneumonia in a hetergeneous population of patients, three methods for detection of CMV in bronchoalveolar lavage specimens were compared as follow: (1) spin amplification followed by staining with a monoclonal antibody to the early nuclear antigen (EA-assay); (2) conventional tissue cell culture; and (3) cytology. Cell differentials were performed on most specimens. Cytomegalovirus was detected by one or more method in 55 BAL specimens from 39 patients. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) pneumonia was diagnosed by lung tissue (primarily autopsy) histologic findings and conventional culture results or the presence of CMV in extrapulmonary tissue, fulfillment of specific clinical and radiographic criteria plus failure to recover a pathogen other than CMV from a respiratory specimen. Probable CMV pneumonia was diagnosed if only the latter two criteria were met. The EA-assay was positive in all patients with proven or probable CMV pneumonia and in 92 percent of those without documented pneumonia. Cytologic findings were positive only in patients with CMV pneumonia but were negative in one-third of those patients. As a diagnostic test for CMV pneumonia, the EA-assay, conventional culture, and cytology had positive predictive values of 45, 57, and 100 percent, respectively. Lymphocyte percentages in BAL specimens from patients with CMV pneumonia were significantly decreased compared with those of patients without CMV pneumonia (p less than 0.005). Although the EA-assay should not be used alone as a diagnostic test for CMV pneumonia in our patient population, the combination of alveolar lymphopenia and a positive BAL CMV EA-assay was highly suggestive of disease.
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PMID:Detection of cytomegalovirus in bronchoalveolar lavage specimens. Spin amplification and staining with a monoclonal antibody to the early nuclear antigen for diagnosis of cytomegalovirus pneumonia. 216 9

Nine black children aged between 3 months and 30 months of age, with human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-I) infection are described to draw the attention of health professionals in southern Africa to special clinical characteristics useful for recognising this problem, which has many shared features with common diseases of infancy and childhood in the Third World. The main presenting complaints were chronic cough and persistent diarrhoea and vomiting. These children frequently had diarrhoea (8 of 9 patients), mucocutaneous candidiasis (8), pneumonia (7), hepatosplenomegaly (9), significant lymphadenopathy (5) and wasting (5). All were infected by common bacteria, such as Gram-negative organisms, Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Campylobacter jejuni, or by opportunistic infections such as Candida or cytomegalovirus (CMV), or by both bacterial and opportunistic organisms. A raised total serum globulin level, anaemia, lymphopenia and a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis were frequent findings. Incomplete data on parental HIV status suggest perinatal transmission. Three of the children were HIV-antigen positive. The diagnosis of full-blown acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), using the stringent Centers for Disease Control criteria, is difficult in our situation because of limited diagnostic resources; however, using these criteria, and the clinical case definition for AIDS recommended by World Health Organisation, it is thought that probably 4 of these children could be considered as having AIDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Some early observations on HIV infection in children at King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban. 223 85


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