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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To further characterize the clinical features, response to therapy, and outcome of Pneumocystis carinii choroiditis in patients with AIDS, we retrospectively reviewed the course of choroiditis for eight patients identified from two institutions through April 1991. Seven patients had prior Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and had received aerosolized pentamidine prophylaxis for a median of 10 months; one patient had no prior history of pneumonia or prophylaxis. The median CD4+ lymphocyte count for six patients was 11 cells/mm3. Choroiditis was a preterminal diagnosis for three patients--two with associated disseminated pneumocystosis. Ocular manifestations improved or resolved with therapy for five of the six treated patients. All five subsequently received prophylaxis with dapsone (n = 2), dapsone/trimethoprim (n = 2), or aerosolized pentamidine (n = 1). Choroiditis recurred at 15 months in the one patient receiving aerosolized pentamidine. The median survival from time of diagnosis was 44 weeks. A literature review including an additional 40 cases support the conclusions that (a) Pneumocystis choroiditis is a rare complication of advanced HIV disease, occurring often in the context of systemic pneumocystosis; (b) ocular signs and symptoms may improve or resolve with specific antipneumocystis therapy; and (c) relapse may occur, particularly in those not receiving systemic prophylaxis.
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PMID:Pneumocystis carinii choroiditis in patients with AIDS: clinical features, response to therapy, and outcome. 145 21

Pneumocystis carinii choroiditis is a well-documented but rare infection that has been described as a bilateral, multifocal process. Treatment efficacy has not been well established. In this report, three cases of presumed P. carinii choroiditis that developed during aerosolized pentamidine therapy for the prophylaxis of P. carinii pneumonia are described. All patients had unilateral choroiditis, and two patients were first observed to have unifocal choroiditis. In all patients, choroidal lesions decreased in size with intravenous pentamidine treatment. Choroiditis exacerbated in the two unifocal cases after the frequency of maintenance intravenous pentamidine therapy was decreased. P. carinii choroiditis may appear as a unifocal, unilateral lesion that may represent an earlier stage of infection than previously described. Intravenous pentamidine therapy appears to control P. carinii choroiditis but may need to be continued to prevent exacerbation. Patients receiving prophylactic aerosolized pentamidine therapy are not protected against extrapulmonary disease, and presumed P. carinii choroiditis may serve as a marker for disseminated infection.
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PMID:Presumed Pneumocystis carinii choroiditis. Unifocal presentation, regression with intravenous pentamidine, and choroiditis recurrence. 194 9