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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Geophagia, the consumption of nonnutritive dirt, has previously been shown to be increased when rats have been made acutely ill. The present paper reports two experiments in which geophagia in response to stress and arthritis was measured. In the first experiment, experimental rats were injected with Freund's Complete Adjuvant (FCA), a mineral oil suspension of killed
Mycobacterium
butyricum. They ate significantly more kaolin (a nonnutritive substance) than controls, suggesting that geophagia is a behavioral measure of illness. In a second study, kaolin consumption was similarly elevated in stressed and/or arthritic animals as well as in control rats living in the same room. Nonstressed controls housed in a remote room ate significantly less kaolin than rats in all other groups. It was concluded that geophagia may occur in response to any homeostatic alteration (stress state). Furthermore, this state can presumably be communicated to naive rats from adjacently-housed stressed animals. Geophagia was postulated to occur in animals who experience a generalized stress reponse since this state may involve gastro-intestinal
malaise
.
...
PMID:Geophagia in response to stress and arthritis. 56 21
In eight (25%) of 32 consecutive AIDS patients between 1986 and 1989,
Mycobacterium
avium infection was diagnosed: in seven disseminated, in one as a local lymph node process. Six patients were treated as consistently as possible with a combination of ethambutol, rifabutine, clofazimine and protionamide (or cycloserine) in relatively large dosages. Median survival of treated patients was 15.5 (4-22) months. Protionamide inhibited most M. avium strains (7 of 8) in vitro, but often caused intolerance (nausea). Treatment of disseminated cytomegalovirus infection in our opinion was necessary in 5 of 6 patients during longterm M. avium therapy. HIV therapy (Zidovudine) during M. avium treatment was not possible due to bone marrow depression. A low maintenance dose of corticosteroids was necessary in 3 of 6 patients (one with adrenal insufficiency) to suppress symptoms such as fever and
malaise
.
...
PMID:[Mycobacterium avium disease in AIDS patients; diagnosis and therapy]. 175 16
Persons with AIDS (PWAs) are 100 times more likely to develop tuberculosis (TB) than the general population. The TB incidence rates in PWAs in the US range from 4-21%, especially among intravenous drug users and Haitians. In Florida, 60% of Haitian AIDS patients also had TB compared to 2.7% of non-Haitian AIDS patients. At a hospital in London, England, 25% of PWAs also had TB and 42% of all AIDS patients at this hospital were members of racial groups with a high prevalence of TB. In developed countries, reactivation of a latent TB infection is generally what occurs in AIDS patients. The absolute number of AIDS patients with TB in these countries is low and unlikely that it will spread to non-HIV seropositive patients. On the other hand, 30-60% of adults have been infected with
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis in central Africa and HIV seroprevalence is also high. So many AIDS patients here can develop TB through reactivation or exogenous primary infection. This situation significantly increases the risk of TB for HIV seronegative persons. In fact, TB is 1 of the most frequent opportunistic infections in PWAs in developing countries, such as central Africa. In patients at an early stage of HIV infection, TB manifests itself classically. The clinical presentation in patients in the late stages includes fever, weight loss,
malaise
, productive cough accompanied with labored breathing, an atypical chest radiograph, and extrapulmonary TB. This atypical pattern often results in delays of diagnosis and treatment. Many sputum samples do not test positive for M. tuberculosis therefore if a physician suspects TB, treatment should begin immediately. Some studies demonstrate that isoniazid prophylaxis substantially decreases the incidence of TB in HIV seropositive patients in Zambia. There is no conclusive evidence of the harm or effectiveness of the BCG vaccine in HIV children and adults.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis in HIV infection. 186 45
Among 60 patients with AIDS seen at our institution, two had splenic abscesses due to
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis without pulmonary tuberculosis. In both cases splenic abscess was the first manifestation of AIDS; the patients had prolonged fever and had lost weight and experienced
malaise
; slight hepatomegaly was noted in both instances and peripheral lymphadenopathy in one. Chest radiography gave normal results in one case and showed hilar lymphadenopathy in the other. Ultrasonographic findings were characteristic: homogeneous hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, with multiple filling defects of variable size. Diagnosis required splenectomy in one case and biopsy of cervical lymph nodes in the other. In both cases Ziehl-Neelsen staining gave positive results; M. tuberculosis grew from a culture of splenic tissue of one patient and from a culture of lymph nodal tissue of the other. There was a rapid response to antituberculous therapy. Splenic tuberculosis seems to be a distinct extrapulmonary entity in patients with AIDS. Ultrasonographic images are useful for diagnosis and follow-up.
...
PMID:Splenic abscesses due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in patients with AIDS. 196 84
Increasing rates of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) related tuberculosis have been noted and recently the clinical importance of the disease has been mentioned. The diagnosis of tuberculosis is more difficult in those patients with HIV seropositive than those with seronegative, because those with seropositive have atypical clinical features. A 29-year-old male, who was infected with HIV heterosexually in Central Africa in 1986, was admitted to our hospital with a history of general
malaise
and weight loss in April, 1989. Laboratory and physical examinations revealed anemia, thrombocytopenia, the elevation of LDH, and giant intraabdominal lymphadenopathies, suspecting malignant lymphoma.
Mycobacterium
was isolated from the sputa in April and was confirmed as M. tuberculosis using a DNA probe in May, 1989. Clinical symptoms including giant lymphadenopathies and laboratory abnormalities improved with antituberculosis therapy. Development of a rapid method for the diagnosis of tuberculosis was warranted in this case.
...
PMID:[A case of human-immunodeficiency virus infection related Mycobacterium tuberculosis with atypical clinical features]. 191 20
For the purpose of understanding subclinical infection with
Mycobacterium
leprae among the inhabitants in an endemic area, 3,547 schoolchildren and 1,487 adults in several regions of Okinawa were surveyed by using clinical examinations and immunological tests, i.e. the fluorescent leprosy antibody absorption (FLA-ABS) test and the lepromin test using Dharmendra's antigen, during a period from 1978 to 1984. The enlargement of peripheral nerves, especially that of lateral or bilateral auricular and/or ulnar nerves, without loss of sensation was found in 8.4% of the schoolchildren and in 9% of the adults. A frequency of these signs and symptoms was significantly higher in male than in female and tended to increase with age. The percentage of positive reactions in FLA-ABS tests for schoolchildren and adults was 21.8 and 22.5, respectively, the values suggesting a minimum frequency of subclinical infection with M. leprae among these inhabitants. The percentage of positive FLA-ABS tests was significantly higher in those with neural signs and symptoms than in those without. Such a correlation was not found in the lepromin test.
Ill
-defined depigmentation of the skin without loss of sensation was found in a few percentage of both schoolchildren and adults. However, this sings and symptoms did not correlate with the FLA-ABS test nor with the lepromin test. A history of tuberculin test and BCG vaccination in the schoolchildren seemed to influence the lepromin-reactivity. Among 770 schoolchildren tested with both FLA-ABS and lepromin, 70 (9.1%) were the FLA-ABS positive but lepromin non-positive responders. Neural signs and symptoms were found in 31 of these children.
...
PMID:Immuno-epidemiological studies on subclinical infection in leprosy. I. Clinical and immunological findings in schoolchildren and adults in Okinawa. 213 35
Disseminated
mycobacterial infection
was found at autopsy in a male patient with hemophilia B and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In May 1986, 23 months before death, the patient had encephalitis for one month and in July he developed a fever,
malaise
and generalized lymphoadenopathy. Human immunosuppressive virus (HIV) was positive and the CD 4/8 ratio of lymphocyte surface markers was 0.1, but mycobacterium was not detected. In September 1986, he had severe dyspnea due to interstitial pneumonia and he was treated with high-dose methylprednisolone. He died after a 23-month course of fever, severe weight loss and terminal progressive deterioration, although he was treated with antibiotics, antifungal agents, gamma-globulin, steroid and a Azidothymidine.
...
PMID:Disseminated mycobacterial infection in a hemophilia B patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 227 30
A 39-year-old Ugandan student is described presenting with general
malaise
, fever and a pulmonary infiltrate. Open lung biopsy showing infarction and positive ANCA lead to a diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosis and a treatment with immunosuppressive drugs was instituted. Five weeks after admission, however, sputum cultures turned out to be positive for
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. The importance of ANCA-interpretation and the possibility of false positive results is discussed.
...
PMID:Pitfalls with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA). 251 23
A detailed account and definition is given of the previously inadequately described "giant reactions" to tuberculin occasionally seen in leprosy patients. The reaction is an accelerated and exaggerated response to species-specific antigens of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis found in both PPD and New tuberculin. Our studies were performed in Malaysia, Uganda, Spain, and England. There was a significantly higher incidence of the phenomenon in Malaysia than in the other centers, but this may have been because there alone previously untreated lepromatous (LL and BL) patients were serially tested for up to three years after starting chemotherapy. Of the 28 patients exhibiting giant reactions, 27 occurred among lepromatous patients (24 LL and 3 BL), of which only 3 (1 LL and 2 BL) were untreated. One treated BL patient had developed, and one untreated BL patient was a family contact of, active tuberculosis. Giant reactions are uncommon in untreated and in very long-term treated LL patients, but may occur in up to a fifth of those receiving their first 1-3 years of chemotherapy. Although the mechanism is not yet understood, it appears to be a coincidence of delayed hypersensitivity of the tuberculin type and a less-delayed phenomenon of excessive local edema associated with local lymphadenopathy and short-lasting symptoms of
malaise
and pyrexia. It is suggested that the majority of giant reactions occur during a period of temporary lack of immune regulation associated with changing levels of antigenic load.
...
PMID:Giant reactions to tuberculin in lepromatous leprosy patients. 408 18
Youmans, Anne S. (Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago,
Ill
.), and Guy P. Youmans. Preparation of highly immunogenic ribosomal fractions of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis by use of sodium dodecyl sulfate. J. Bacteriol. 91:2139-2145. 1966.-Ribosomal fractions of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, strain H37Ra, were prepared by treatment of the intracellular particulate fraction with 0.25 or 0.5% sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) followed by centrifugation at 144,700 x g for 3 hr. This procedure has greatly simplified the preparation of ribosomal fractions and has given fractions composed of approximately 50% ribonucleic acid (RNA) and 15 to 20% protein. When incorporated into Freund's incomplete adjuvant and injected intraperitoneally into CF-1 mice, the SDS ribosomal fractions were more immunogenic than the particulate fractions from which they were prepared. They were as much as 100 times more immunogenic than ribosomal fractions prepared by differential centrifugation, 1 mug (dry weight) per mouse being sufficient for the induction of some immunity. However, none of these ribosomal preparations, in comparable doses, was as immunogenic as the living cells from which they were prepared. It was also shown that the addition of 10(-4)m MgCl(2) to the final diluent increased immunogenic activity, whereas larger concentrations (10(-3)m) reduced immunogenic activity. Preparation of the ribosomal fraction from ruptured cells in one continuous process during the course of 1 day increased the activity. Two-week-old H37Ra cells contained more RNA and were more immunogenic than the older cultures which have been used in the past.
...
PMID:Preparation of highly immunogenic ribosomal fractions of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by use of sodium dodecyl sulfate. 495 9
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