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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
49 gay men confirmed to be infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and 9 HIV seronegative gay men participated in a pilot study comparing clinical status and enteric parasite load with gastrointestinal structure, function and symptomatology. Cases included 16/49 (33%) men who were CDC stage II, 7/49 (14%) who were CDC stage III, and 26/49 (53%) who were CDC stage IV. The mean CD4-lymphocyte count was 476 +/- 199 (SD)/microliter. The prevalence of enteric parasitic flora was similar in HIV seropositive patients and controls. Seven cases had enteric infection with pathogenic agents including 3 patients with Entamoeba histolytica, and 4 patients with Giardia lamblia, one of whom also had
cryptosporidiosis
. Other cases were most frequently colonized with Blastocystis hominis (44%) and Endolimax nana (41%) regardless of the HIV clinical status. HIV seropositive patients with enteric parasitic colonization tended to have lower mean levels of serum IgA than cases without parasites. Duodenal morphometric mucosal changes demonstrated a significant decrease in the mean villous height (p < 0.01) with no elongation of the crypt depth in HIV-infected patients with and without diarrhea compared to controls. Despite gastrointestinal symptoms including diarrhea and weight loss being more prevalent in HIV infected individuals than controls, no correlations were found between the presence of particular enteric parasites, gastrointestinal symptomatology, the clinical HIV status of the CD4-lymphocyte count, the
malabsorption
of D-xylose or morphometric changes in the duodenum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Absence of an association between enteric parasites in the manifestations and pathogenesis of HIV enteropathy in gay men. The GI/HIV Study Group. 136 Dec 41
The pathologic changes associated with human
cryptosporidiosis
have not been well characterized. In this report, 15 cases of
cryptosporidiosis
in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients are described. Organisms were found in autopsy tissue specimens in 13 cases, and only in antemortem stool samples in two. Gastrointestinal/hepatobiliary distribution of organisms was as follows: small intestine (13 cases), extrahepatic bile ducts (eight), intrahepatic bile ducts (seven), large intestine (six), pancreas (five), stomach (three), and esophagus (one). At all sites, infection was usually associated with nonspecific reactive epithelial changes, architectural abnormalities such as villous flattening in the small intestine, and interstitial edema with mixed inflammatory cell infiltrates. Presence of organisms and associated mucosal injury were patchy and of variable severity in the intestine. In the biliary tract, injury was commonly diffuse and severe. Pancreatic duct injury was generally mild and often limited to hyperplastic squamous metaplasia. In late-stage acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients with
cryptosporidiosis
, widespread infection in the gastrointestinal and biliary systems by this coccidian was more common and severe than previously suggested. Although the mechanisms have yet to be determined, infection usually is accompanied by pathologic changes that may be causally related to pathophysiologic abnormalities, such as diarrhea and
malabsorption
, and may account for other clinical manifestations of pancreatitis, cholangitis, and obstructive cholestasis.
...
PMID:Cryptosporidiosis in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a study of 15 autopsy cases. 174 28
Chronic diarrhea and
malabsorption
accompanied by simultaneous infection with the protozoa Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium occurred in a 22-year-old homosexual man with antibody to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Small bowel biopsy demonstrated total villous atrophy and marked mononuclear infiltration in the lamina propria simulating celiac disease. Treatment with metronidazole resulted in resolution of diarrhea, clearance of parasites, and marked improvement in small bowel histology. Although diarrhea and
malabsorption
in immunocompromised patients with
cryptosporidiosis
are regarded as ominous, our patient remained disease free for the next 3 years. Thus, infection with Cryptosporidium in patients with HIV does not always lead to intractable diarrhea or death.
...
PMID:Cryptosporidium infection in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: not always a poor prognosis. 200 56
Thirty three consecutive patients infected by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV1) with persistent diarrhoea which remained undiagnosed after microbiological examination of six stool samples and rectal histology were investigated for
malabsorption
. All had xylose and Schilling tests, distal duodenal biopsy, comprehensive barium studies, microbiological examination of six further stool samples, and repeat rectal histology. A microbiological or histological diagnosis of infection was made in 12 patients (multiple organisms in three). Cryptosporidia were identified on five occasions, cytomegalovirus on four, Giardia lamblia on two, and herpes simplex, Campylobacter jejuni, Salmonella enteritidis, and Entamoeba histolytica once each. No organism was found when weight loss was less than 5 kg or stool volume less than 400 ml/day (n = 9). Pathogens were identified in nine of 13 patients (69%) with weight loss greater than 10 kg and stool volume more than 800 ml/day. Barium studies were normal except for ileal flocculation in two patients with
cryptosporidiosis
. Evidence for
malabsorption
existed in 24 patients--impaired xylose absorption (n = 19) and abnormal Schilling test (n = 21). Of the patients with a severely abnormal Schilling test, a pathogen was identified in 11 (79%) (including all five with cryptosporidia, and two of the patients with only moderate diarrhoea and weight loss). A simple scoring system based on degree of weight loss and Schilling test result may help to identify the HIV positive patient with seemingly pathogen-negative diarrhoea in whom further investigations are likely to show a specific cause.
...
PMID:Investigation of seemingly pathogen-negative diarrhoea in patients infected with HIV1. 238 12
Chronic intestinal
cryptosporidiosis
was diagnosed as the cause of chronic diarrhea and weight loss in an adult dog without obvious signs of immunosuppression. Results of tests for digestive function suggested that the dog had impaired intestinal absorption or bacterial overgrowth. The nutrient
malabsorption
might have resulted in or have been caused by the
cryptosporidiosis
. Temporary clinical improvement without reduction in fecal oocyst concentration was noticed following treatment with clindamycin. The dog was euthanatized. At necropsy, the dog was found to have chronic lymphoplasmacytic enteritis and
cryptosporidiosis
. A veterinary student that worked in the ward where the dog was kept developed cryptosporidal diarrhea.
...
PMID:Intestinal malabsorption and cryptosporidiosis in an adult dog. 239 Dec 74
Intestinal cryptosporidiosis
commonly results in severe protracted diarrhea that contributes significantly toward morbidity and mortality in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. No satisfactory therapy for
cryptosporidiosis
currently exists. We describe a patient with severe secretory diarrhea and
malabsorption
who had clinical, microbiologic, and histologic resolution of
cryptosporidiosis
after therapy with zidovudine.
...
PMID:Resolution of intestinal cryptosporidiosis after treatment of AIDS with AZT. 236 8
Cryptosporidium is an enteric coccidial protozoan recognized in humans in 1976. Since its manifestation as an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related infection, new diagnostic techniques have improved recognition of Cryptosporidium oocysts, making apparent its true prevalence in human populations. Cryptosporidium represents 5 to 15% of all enteric pathogens in children in warm climate countries. It is responsible for both endemic and epidemic disease. Day-care center spread is well known, and evidence is strong for person-to-person transmission. The spectrum of illness caused by Cryptosporidium is broad, and while self-limited in immunocompetent individuals, gastrointestinal symptoms can be severe. Asymptomatic infection has been described in population surveys and outbreak investigations. Severe dehydration with
malabsorption
and failure-to-thrive in children from developing countries has been attributed to this organism. Intractable, incurable diarrhea can be fetal in immunosuppressed adults.
Cryptosporidiosis
in human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals is declining in frequency in New York City, possibly reflecting changing sexual behaviors and comparatively low infectivity. No effective treatment for Cryptosporidium has been documented, but clinical trials are in progress.
...
PMID:Human cryptosporidiosis. 306 76
In this review I have examined the vast literature which has accumulated on Cryptosporidium, particularly in the past 3 years, in an attempt to highlight areas in which progress has been made in relation to the organism and the disease, and to indicate areas in which knowledge is still lacking. Since 1982, a global effort by scientists and clinicians has been directed towards determining the nature of the disease in humans and the relative contribution of
cryptosporidiosis
to gastroenteritis. From published data, the incidence of diarrhoea is 1-5% in most developed countries, and 4-7% in less developed countries, when measured throughout the year and in all age groups. The frequency of
cryptosporidiosis
is highest in children aged between 6 months and 3 years, and in particular locations (e.g., day-care centres) and at particular times of the year. Although susceptibility to infection is life-long, one suspects that the lower prevalence among older children and adults is due to immunity acquired from frequent exposure. Other important factors contributing to higher prevalence are the season--it is more frequent in a wet, warm climate--association with travel to particular destinations, poor hygiene, intimate contact with certain animals, and congregation of large numbers of young previously unexposed children in day-care centres. The association between
cryptosporidiosis
and giardiasis presumably results from the existence of a common source of infection. The immune status of the host appears to be a major determinant of whether the infection is self-limiting or persistent. It is clear that both branches of the immune system are required for complete recovery, since T-lymphocyte dysfunction or hypogammaglobulinaemia can both lead to persistent illness. Chronic diarrhoea and
malabsorption
attributed to
cryptosporidiosis
also occur in the absence of evidence of immune defect. The importance of respiratory tract infection in humans, other than in the terminal stages of chronic illness, requires investigation. The infection has now been identified in all classes of vertebrates; it has been observed in all domestic animals including pets, and a wide range of wildlife including birds.
Cryptosporidiosis
seems to cause diarrhoea in young ruminants, less frequently in pets. In birds the parasite has been observed in the gastrointestinal tract, without ill effect, and in the respiratory tract, in which clinical symptoms of variable severity have been described. The mucosal response of the gastrointestinal tract to infection appears to vary among mammals and may be the key to the variable clinical manifestations observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cryptosporidiosis in perspective. 328 31
Ten patients were identified at Jackson Memorial hospital/University of Miami Hospitals and Clinics with enteric coccidial infection due to Cryptosporidium spp. or Isospora belli. All had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome as manifested by Kaposi's sarcoma or multiple opportunistic infections, or both. They presented with profuse diarrhea associated with weakness, anorexia, and weight loss. Routine examinations of stools for eggs and parasites as performed by the hospital laboratory were negative in all patients. Sugar flotation and modified acid fast techniques were used in the Tropical Disease Laboratory to identify oocysts of Cryptosporidium spp. in stools of seven patients.
Malabsorption
, characterized by a low 5-hour D-xylose and positive fecal fat, was observed in 6/6 of these patients. In three other patients Isospora belli oocysts were identified in stool specimens or via a duodenal string test. Spiramycin was the only drug found to be effective in treating patients with
cryptosporidiosis
. Patients with Isospora belli responded to a prolonged course of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
...
PMID:Enteric coccidiosis among patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 633 48
In summary, it appears that giardiasis, coccidiosis,
cryptosporidiosis
, strongyloidiasis, capillariasis and perhaps P. falciparum malaria are the only parasitic diseases which cause
malabsorption
of many nutrients. D. latum and A. lumbricoides interfere with vitamin B12 and vitamin A absorption, respectively. In view of the increasing use of immunosuppressive therapy, it is likely that
malabsorption
caused by intestinal parasites may become even more evident in the future.
...
PMID:Parasites and malabsorption. 640 70
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