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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 4 years (1984-1987), 183 bone marrow examinations were performed on 155 human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) antibody positive patients. One hundred and fifty three had category IV AIDS. One-third of the marrows yielded specific information. This included opportunistic infection, in particular
Mycobacterium
Avium Intracellulare Complex (MAI) (24%), malignancy (4%), consistent with ITP (9%) and iron deficiency (1%). In the remaining two thirds of the bone marrows the most frequent non-specific abnormalities were dyserythropoiesis, erythroid hypoplasia, reticuloendothelial iron block, granulomas, lymphoid aggregates, plasmacytosis and histiocytosis. Common peripheral blood findings were anemia, lymphopenia, anisocytosis, rouleaux and atypical lymphocytes. Peripheral blood and bone marrow examinations on 16 patients on AZT are included. These patients have more pronounced blood and bone marrow abnormalities. The causes of these abnormalities are multifactorial and include low T4 levels, severe viral and other infections and therapy with marrow toxic drugs.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood and bone marrow findings in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 209 Oct 4
Symptomatic tuberculosis (TB) can occur as an opportunistic disease in immunosuppressed persons who are infected with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) and who have been previously infected with
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. Increases in TB cases have occurred in areas which have reported large numbers of cases of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and a high proportion of these TB cases have been HIV seropositive. Therefore, increasing numbers of HIV-infected persons may be found in TB clinics and hospitals. HIV serologic surveys in TB clinics and hospitals providing clinical services to TB patients are needed to assess the local prevalence of HIV infection in TB patients and the consequent need for public health intervention to prevent further spread of HIV and TB infection. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in collaboration with State and local health departments, has initiated HIV surveillance of patients with confirmed and suspected TB in TB clinics and hospitals in the United States. Blinded (serologic test results not linked to identifiable persons) HIV seroprevalence surveys are conducted in sentinel TB clinics and hospitals that provide TB clinical services each year to obtain estimates of the level of HIV infection in TB patients and to follow trends in infection over time. Nonblinded (voluntary) surveys will also be conducted to evaluate behaviors that have placed TB patients at risk for or protected them against HIV infection. Data from these surveys will be used to target education and prevention and control programs for TB and HIV infection and to monitor changes in behavior in response to such programs.
...
PMID:Estimating HIV levels and trends among patients of tuberculosis clinics. 210 58
We describe a 41-year-old man with an unusual presentation of tuberculous joint disease involving 3 peripheral joints: right knee, wrist and first metatarsophalangeal. Periarticular "cold" tuberculous abscesses were observed in the ulnar aspect of his right hand and on the lateral aspect of his first right metatarsal bone.
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis was isolated from his knee and both abscesses. Synovial biopsies taken from these 3 joints showed typical tuberculous granulomata. M. tuberculosis was also isolated from 3 urine samples. Neither
immunodeficiency
, or a predisposing condition for tuberculosis could be demonstrated. Combined surgical and antibiotic treatment was effective.
...
PMID:Tuberculous arthritis. Report of a case with multiple joint involvement and periarticular tuberculous abscesses. 206 63
485 HIV-positive patients have been treated at our institution in Bonn during 1985 to 1989. Mycobacterial infections occurred in twelve (2.5%) HIV-positive patients. Of 166 AIDS-manifestations according to CDC, eleven (6.6%) were mycobacterial infections. There occurred one case of miliary tuberculosis, six cases of extrapulmonary, one of disseminated tuberculosis and four cases of atypical mycobacteriosis.
Mycobacteriosis
other than tuberculosis (MOTT) were caused three times by
Mycobacterium
kansasii and once by
Mycobacterium
scrofulaceum. Tuberculosis was seen less often in haemophiliacs. Disseminated tuberculosis and atypical mycobacteriosis developed in late stages of HIV-infection with underlying severe
immunodeficiency
. The lung was the main target organ of tuberculosis. MOTT most often affected the gastrointestinal tract additionally. Noninvasive materials, first of all sputum and gastric acid, were reliably diagnostic but available with delay in particular cases. In those cases histologic studies proved helpful. Application of five-fold regimen (INH, RMP, EMB, PZA and SM) always succeeded in negative cultures in a mean of 15 days in all cases of tuberculosis. Two cases of atypical mycobacteriosis with
Mycobacterium
kansasii were treated with a five-fold regimen (one case with ciprofloxacin additionally) and culture-negative after six resp. 28 weeks of therapy.
...
PMID:[Tuberculosis and atypical mycobacterioses in HIV infection. Results from the Bonn Center 1985 to 1989]. 211 68
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis bacteremia is being reported more frequently in patients with human
immunodeficiency
virus, type 1 (HIV-1) infection. We report 9 patients with bacteremia due to M. tuberculosis and HIV infection who were identified over a 36-month period. Of the 9 patients studied, 8 were male, 8 were black, 6 were born in Haiti, 3 were homeless, 2 were intravenous drug users, and 1 was homosexual. At the time of diagnosis, 3 patients had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and 5 patients had CD4 lymphocyte counts less than or equal to 170 cells/mm3, indicating marked
immunodeficiency
. All 9 patients presented with temperature greater than 38.3 degrees C, 5 (50%) had abnormal chest roentgenogram on admission, and each of the patients tested had elevations of at least 2 liver function tests. Eight patients (80%) had M. tuberculosis isolated from sputum or other body fluids and tissues. All blood isolates of M. tuberculosis were identified from Dupont Isolator tubes. Antibiotic-resistant isolates of M. tuberculosis were cultured from 3 of the 6 patients born in Haiti. One patient died before diagnosis and received no antimycobacterial therapy; 7 of the remaining 8 patients appeared to respond to treatment. Our data, and a review of the literature, suggest that bacteremia due to M. tuberculosis is becoming more frequent, and that blood cultures may be helpful in establishing or confirming a diagnosis of tuberculosis in patients with HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Bacteremia due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. A report of 9 cases and a review of the literature. 212 71
The Authors have tested the new Tb-Elisa method to detect specific antibodies, raised against A60 major mycobacterial antigen complex, in patients of groups II, III and IV of CDC classification suffering from acquired
immunodeficiency
and in HIV-1 negative control subjects. The test results support laboratory diagnosis of acute phase and reactivation of
mycobacterial infection
.
...
PMID:A serological study of mycobacterial infections in AIDS and HIV-1 positive patients. 213 26
Three rhesus monkeys were experimentally inoculated with sooty-mangabey-derived
Mycobacterium
leprae and were inadvertently infected with the simian
immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) as well. They died of an
immunodeficiency syndrome
, and at autopsy all had lesions caused by M. leprae. One monkey was inoculated twice with M. leprae, initially with an inoculum from a sooty mangabey that was not infected with SIV and, subsequently, with an inoculum from a mangabey that was SIV infected. The monkey did not develop clinical lesions and became strongly lepromin skin test (LST) positive after the first inoculation, but became infected with both agents and LST negative following the second inoculation. These observations suggest that SIV-infected rhesus monkeys have an increased susceptibility to M. leprae infection and, by analogy, imply that HIV-infected human beings may have an increased susceptibility as well.
...
PMID:Pathology of dual Mycobacterium leprae and simian immunodeficiency virus infection in rhesus monkeys. 216 11
The transmission of tuberculosis is a recognized risk in health-care settings. Several recent outbreaks of tuberculosis in health-care settings, including outbreaks involving multidrug-resistant strains of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, have heightened concern about nosocomial transmission. In addition, increases in tuberculosis cases in many areas are related to the high risk of tuberculosis among persons infected with the human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). Transmission of tuberculosis to persons with HIV infection is of particular concern because they are at high risk of developing active tuberculosis if infected. Health-care workers should be particularly alert to the need for preventing tuberculosis transmission in settings in which persons with HIV infection receive care, especially settings in which cough-inducing procedures (e.g., sputum induction and aerosolized pentamidine [AP] treatments) are being performed. Transmission is most likely to occur from patients with unrecognized pulmonary or laryngeal tuberculosis who are not on effective antituberculosis therapy and have not been placed in tuberculosis (acid-fast bacilli [AFB]) isolation. Health-care facilities in which persons at high risk for tuberculosis work or receive care should periodically review their tuberculosis policies and procedures, and determine the actions necessary to minimize the risk of tuberculosis transmission in their particular settings. The prevention of tuberculosis transmission in health-care settings requires that all of the following basic approaches be used: a) prevention of the generation of infectious airborne particles (droplet nuclei) by early identification and treatment of persons with tuberculous infection and active tuberculosis, b) prevention of the spread of infectious droplet nuclei into the general air circulation by applying source-control methods, c) reduction of the number of infectious droplet nuclei in air contaminated with them, and d) surveillance of health-care-facility personnel for tuberculosis and tuberculous infection. Experience has shown that when inadequate attention is given to any of these approaches, the probability of tuberculosis transmission is increased. Specific actions to reduce the risk of tuberculosis transmission should include a) screening patients for active tuberculosis and tuberculous infection, b) providing rapid diagnostic services, c) prescribing appropriate curative and preventive therapy, d) maintaining physical measures to reduce microbial contamination of the air, e) providing isolation rooms for persons with, or suspected of having, infectious tuberculosis, f) screening health-care-facility personnel for tuberculous infection and tuberculosis, and g) promptly investigating and controlling outbreaks. Although completely eliminating the risk of tuberculosis transmission in all health-care settings may be impossible, adhering to these guidelines should minimize the risk to persons in these settings.
...
PMID:Guidelines for preventing the transmission of tuberculosis in health-care settings, with special focus on HIV-related issues. 217 38
It is now clear that tuberculosis is one of the major diseases associated with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and the acquired immune deficiency syndrome both in developing countries and in disadvantaged groups in the northern hemisphere. In the USA, and probably several other countries, the annual incidence of tuberculosis is rising as a result of the HIV epidemic. This is probably a result of an increase in both pulmonary and, especially, extrapulmonary tuberculosis, due to reactivation of latent infections, but a secondary increase in the infection rate is also possible. The hard-won gains in tuberculosis control of the last 30 years are thus in jeopardy. This article focuses on the effect HIV is likely to have on the known risk factors for infection with
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and for reactivation. Whilst HIV-associated tuberculosis may be indistinguishable from HIV-negative disease, it is likely in other cases to present diagnostic difficulties, to respond poorly to treatment with more adverse effects, and to result in high early mortality, although this may not be due directly to tuberculosis. HIV-associated tuberculosis thus represents a major challenge to physicians, especially in developing countries, but like other forms of tuberculosis it is (i) treatable and (ii) preventable.
...
PMID:Impact of human immunodeficiency virus on transmission and severity of tuberculosis. 220 Nov 13
We examined 19 patients (17 men) with human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection and gastrointestinal symptoms to determine whether those symptoms were due to either a gastrointestinal tract infection or a defect in mucosal absorption because of an enteropathy. The erythrocyte folate and serum vitamin B12 levels were within normal limits in all of the patients. The serum ferritin level was elevated in 12. The xylose absorption test results were abnormal in 8 of the 13 patients able to complete the study. None of the duodenal aspirates yielded a pathogen. Light microscopy revealed nonspecific lymphocytic inflammation without infection in the stomach (in seven patients), the esophagus (in five), the duodenum (in two) and the rectum (in two). However, biopsy specimens were positive for Candida albicans in the esophagus (four patients), cytomegalovirus in the esophagus (one) and the rectum (two), Helicobacter pylori in the antrum (two), Treponema infection in the rectum (two) and
Mycobacterium
avium-intracellulare in the small intestine (one). Only three patients had a normal series of biopsy specimens. All of the patients had similar ultrastructural changes at the epithelial-stromal junction of the antral glands and in the intestinal crypts. We conclude that abnormal biochemical and endoscopic findings are common in HIV-positive patients with gastrointestinal symptoms. Defects in carbohydrate absorption and ultrastructural changes may be responsible for some aspects of HIV enteropathy.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal function and structure in HIV-positive patients. 220 20
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