Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifteen patients with AIDS were hospitalized on the pulmonary service during the period from 1981 to 1983. We were impressed with the frequency and severity of lung involvement in these patients and evaluated them with respect to their pulmonary manifestations of AIDS. The 13 men and two women had a mean age of 32 years. Ten were active intravenous drug abusers with a mean drug use of 8.1 years. All presented with profound weight loss, ten with nonproductive cough, and eight with significant
dyspnea
. Fourteen of 15 patients had Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) at the time of our evaluation. Chest radiographs in these 14 patients showed no uniform pattern which was predictive of PCP. However, all 13 patients tested had a widened alveolar arterial oxygen gradient (mean: 59 mm Hg) which correlated well with the presence of PCP. The most common pulmonary finding in our AIDS patients was infection: 14 had PCP which was readily diagnosed by transbronchial lung biopsy in eight patients, and five patients were found to have disseminated
Mycobacterium
avium-intracellulare which often developed after "recovery" from PCP. Therapy for PCP with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMZ) was unsuccessful in eight of ten patients; four of these eight TMP/SMZ failures responded to pentamidine. Mortality was 100 percent in patients who had AIDS for more than one year, and 70 percent in those less than one year. Despite some symptomatic responses to therapy for pulmonary infections, the mortality in AIDS seems to be unaffected by appropriate therapy for the pulmonary manifestations of this disease.
...
PMID:Pulmonary manifestations of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). 660 53
Previous reports of infection due to
Mycobacterium
kansasii among patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have conflicted with regard to the significance of the isolate; the clinical, radiographic, and laboratory features of the disease; and the response to therapy. To clarify the spectrum of M. kansasii infection in this population, we conducted a retrospective study of 35 patients. Twenty-eight of these patients were believed to have disease due to M. kansasii, while the remaining seven patients were probably colonized with the organism. All but two patients presented with advanced HIV infection; the median CD4 cell count was 12/microL. Most patients with pulmonary disease presented with fever, cough, and
dyspnea
, but only eight of these 22 patients had radiographic findings of either pulmonary cavitation or predominantly upper-lobe disease. Ten patients had M. kansasii isolated from blood or bone marrow. The majority of patients with pulmonary or disseminated disease responded to therapy. However, 11 patients died either before
mycobacterial infection
was diagnosed or early in the course of treatment, and two had a relapse of infection during therapy.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium kansasii among patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus in Kansas City. Kansas City AIDS Research Consortium. 801 22
In the course of 8 weeks, a 62-year-old woman with chronic bronchitis developed increasing
dyspnoea
on effort and reduced well-being. The chest radiograph revealed a round focus, 2 x 3 cm, in the region of the left ventricle which, from the results of echocardiography and left-heart catheterization, suggested myxoma. At open-heart surgery under extracorporeal circulation an encapsulated tumour was found on the mural leaflet of the mitral valve, directly caudal of the atrioventricular plane. On opening, the capsule contained dough- or paste-like, yellowish-white substance with scattered polygonal granules, typical of a tuberculoma. The entire contents and capsule were excised. Immediately after operation tuberculostatic treatment was initiated (three times daily ethambutol, 400 mg, and once daily rifampicin, 600 mg, and isoniazid, 300 mg), even though acid-fast rods were not demonstrated histologically and by culture. Polymerase chain reaction, however, established the presence of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis in the resected material. There was no evidence of florid tuberculosis in the subsequent course.
...
PMID:[An isolated tuberculoma in the left ventricle]. 829 17
The chest radiograph of a 35-year-old man with fatigue, exertional
dyspnoea
and haemoptyses revealed a cavity in the left upper lobe and a shrunken left lung with radiolucency greater than that on the right. Acid-fast rods in sputum were identified as
Mycobacterium
kansasii on culture. Scintigraphy showed a 9% residual perfusion on the left and abnormal ventilation, compatible with Swyer-James syndrome. This had favoured the development of a
mycobacterial infection
. There was also a decrease in ciliary function (rate of 4-7 Hz, normal: 10-11). Treatment, begun when tuberculosis had been suspected, was after sensitivity tests changed to a combination of rifampicin (600 mg), ethambutol (1600 mg) and protionamide (500 mg) daily. There was marked regression of the findings within 4 weeks, but treatment was prematurely stopped after 11 months. Two years later there was a recurrence which again responded well to the same drug regimen with additional sulphamethoxazole (1600 mg/d).
...
PMID:[Nontuberculous mycobacteriosis as a complication of the Swyer-James syndrome]. 843 33
Between August and December 1991 in Tanzania, a study to determine the prevalence of Pneumocystis carinii and of tuberculosis occurred among 83 18-38 year old HIV seropositive people living in the rural area of Malenga Makali in Iringa district. The adults had
difficulty breathing
, cough, fever of at least 2 weeks duration, or overt pneumonia. 3.6% of the sputum samples were confirmed positive for P. carinii. 38.5% of preparations and 13.2% of cultures tested positive for
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. All these isolates were completely sensitive to standard antibiotics. 2 of the 3 patients testing positive for P. carinii also had pulmonary tuberculosis. These findings showed that sputum contains many mycobacteria. They also confirmed that TB is associated with HIV infection in several African countries and that P. carinii infection occurs less frequently than it does in Europe and the US, but occurs nevertheless. A possible explanation for the low prevalence of P. carinii infection in Africa is that more virulent infections kill AIDS patients before P. carinii pneumonia has a chance to develop. The researchers admit that their inability to use more suitable specimens obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage or transbronchial biopsy could have resulted in considerable underdiagnosis. They recommended further clinical research to determine the real importance of P. carinii in developing countries.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and tuberculosis in Tanzanian patients infected with HIV. 846 96
In suspected pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), tracheobronchial examination is required for patients with clinical and radiographic features consistent with tuberculosis disease but with negative sputum for
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. We report the endoscopic findings of 84 patients who underwent fibreoptic bronchoscopy in recent years, and whose cultures of biological specimens grew M tuberculosis. Cough (86%) and fever (69%) were the most common symptoms, followed by sputum (67%),
dyspnoea
(30%) and haemoptysis (27%). Chest radiographic abnormalities were mostly localized (60%) with prevalence in the upper lobes; in two cases chest radiography was normal. Sixty two patients (74%) showed endoscopic abnormalities: 1) mucosal inflammation; 2) submucosal granulomas and polyps; and 3) stenoses. They were localized in 58% of patients and diffuse in 42%. Five patients were checked several times during the year following the diagnosis because of a high degree of tracheobronchial involvement. Only one subject recovered, whilst in the other four stenotic sequelae were found. Fibreoptic bronchoscopy confirmed its usefulness in the diagnosis of tuberculosis and in monitoring the course and the outcome of the bronchial tuberculosis involvement.
...
PMID:Tracheobronchial involvement in 84 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis. 854 17
We identified 31 patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and lung abscess. All patients had advanced HIV disease, and the mean CD4 cell count was 17/mm3 (range, 2-50/mm3). Twenty-two patients (71%) had previous opportunistic infections, and 24 (77%) had previous pulmonary infections. Symptoms at the time of presentation included fever (90% of patients), cough (87%),
dyspnea
(35%), pleuritic chest pain (26%), and hemoptysis (10%). The microbiological etiology was established for 28 patients, and the pathogens recovered were bacteria (65%), Pneumocystis carinii (6%), fungi (3%), and mixed microorganisms (16%). The pathogens included Pseudomonas aeruginosa (11), Streptococcus pneumoniae (6), P. carinii (5), Klebsiella pneumoniae (5), Staphylococcus aureus (4), Aspergillus species (3), viridans streptococcus (2), Haemophilus influenzae (1), Streptococcus milleri (1), Proteus mirabilis (1), and Cryptococcus neoformans (1).
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis was not isolated; two patients for whom a microbiological etiology was not established responded to antituberculous therapy. Patients were treated for 2-12 weeks; 25% of the patients received > 4 weeks of therapy. The outcome was poor: 36% of the patients had recurrences, and 19% died. In patients with AIDS, lung abscess is associated with advanced HIV infection, is due to a broad spectrum of pathogens, responds poorly to antibiotics, and has a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Lung abscess in patients with AIDS. 882 70
A 57 year old man, receiving compensation for talc pneumoconiosis since 1977, was admitted to hospital for the first time in 1987, with symptoms of weight loss, fever,
dyspnoea
and productive cough. A chest roentgenogram showed bilateral cavitation. Two years later,
Mycobacterium
xenopi was found in sputum cultures. Despite specific oral antibiotherapy, the patient's health deteriorated and he died in 1990. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported case of an association of talcosis with a M. xenopi pneumonia. The relative timing of the two diseases suggests that talc pneumoconiosis predisposed to the infection by M. xenopi.
...
PMID:Atypical mycobacteriosis as a complication of talc pneumoconiosis. 886 7
Five case of intestinal cryptosporidiosis with pulmonary involvement in patients with AIDS are reported. The diagnosis was based on the recognition of acid-fast oocysts in sputum or aspirated bronchial material and stool specimens. Coughing and excess secretions were present in all cases. Four patients had other associated pulmonary pathogens: two
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, one
Mycobacterium
fortuitum and one Cytomegalovirus + Pneumocystis carinii; all of them had a previous (three cases) or simultaneous (one case) diagnosis of intestinal cryptosporidiosis, presenting with diarrhoea and vomiting. In the fifth patient Cryptosporidium was the only pulmonary pathogen found in a bronchial aspirate, and the onset of diarrhoea was 1 month after respiratory detection. Fifty-seven cases of respiratory cryptosporidiosis have been reported since 1980. In 17 of them, no other pathogen was found. Diarrhoea was present in 77% of the patients, cough in 77%,
dyspnea
in 58%, expectoration in 54%, fever in 45%, thoracic pain in 33%.
...
PMID:Respiratory cryptosporidiosis: case series and review of the literature. 892 43
A 46-year old man was admitted to a hospital because of cough and
dyspnea
. He was diagnosed as interstitial pneumonia and was treated with prednisolone (PSL) and antibiotics. The symptoms improved temporarily but he soon developed acute respiratory failure and was transferred to our hospital. Chest X-ray and CT revealed ground-glass opacities in both lung fields. He was treated with methyl PSL, antibiotics, and antimycobacterial drugs but he died on the fourth hospital day. Retrospectively, hematologic laboratory examinations revealed that CD4+ cell count was 0/microliter and serological tests for HIV were positive by both EIA and Western blot methods. The culture of the bone marrow specimens was positive for mycobacteria other than M. tuberculosis, and the bacilli were identified as
Mycobacterium
avium. Thus, his disease was eventually diagnosed as disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection. In the past reports, the diagnosis of disseminated MAC infection was most often made by blood cultures, however, the isolation of MAC from bone marrow is another sensitive and specific method for the diagnosis of this infection. In some cases, bone marrow examination would be useful to diagnose disseminated MAC infection.
...
PMID:[A case of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome with disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex infection in which M. avium was isolated from bone marrow]. 907 Oct 89
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>