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Query: UMLS:C0041296 (tuberculosis)
76,850 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reviewed laboratory-acquired infections occurring in Utah from 1978 through 1982. Written and telephone interviews of supervisors of 1,191 laboratorians revealed an estimated annual incidence of 3 laboratory-acquired infections per 1,000 employees. Infections, in order of frequency, included hepatitis B (clinical cases), shigellosis, pharyngitis, cellulitis, tuberculosis (skin test conversion), conjunctivitis, and non-A, non-B hepatitis. One-half of large laboratories (over 25 employees), but only 12% of smaller laboratories, reported infections. The annual incidence, however, at smaller laboratories was more than three times greater than at large laboratories (5.0 versus 1.5 per 1,000; P less than 0.05, chi-square test). Microbiologists were at greatest risk of infection, with an incidence of almost 1%, followed by generalists and phlebotomists. Shigellosis was acquired only by microbiologists and accounted for more than half of their infections. The most common laboratory-acquired infection, hepatitis B, affected a microbiologist, a hematologist, a phlebotomist, a pulmonary blood gas technician, and a blood bank technologist who died from her illness. Clinical cases of hepatitis B occurred at a rate 10 times higher than the rate in the general U.S. population. The incidence of tuberculosis skin test conversion was intermediate between rates reported for hospital employees and for the state of Utah.
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PMID:Infections acquired in clinical laboratories in Utah. 315

Techniques adapted from population and community ecology, quantitative geography, and epidemiology are applied to ecosystem and environmental index data on the Bronx in an attempt to understand the origins and potential impacts of rampant spread of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and its sequelae of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in that borough: Recent work by Drucker and Vermund (1987), ("Estimating Prevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in Urban Areas with High Rates of Intravenous Drug Abuse: A Model of the Bronx in 1987," Poster presented at the Third International Conference on AIDS, June 2, 1987) estimates HIV seroprevalence levels of from 8 to 21% among men of age 25-44 in the south Bronx, at this writing, comparable to the cities of Central Africa. It is found that the "South Bronx" process of fulminating, contagious urban decay which devastated the region in the 1970s, and its associated forced population migrations, spread intravenous drug abuse, the principal HIV vector in the Bronx, from a geographically contained center in the South-Central Bronx to a virtually borough-wide phenomenon. This has significantly complicated attempts to contain HIV infection, both by shredding the social networks which are the natural vehicles for education, and by vastly enlarging the area requiring intensive targeting. Since the "planned shrinkage" municipal service cuts which triggered the "South Bronx" burnout persist, and since levels of housing overcrowding now approach those of the early 1970s in the Bronx, it is expected that a new outbreak of contagious urban decay will occur, likely again dispersing population and seriously compromising any in-place HIV control strategies. If overt AIDS itself becomes a contributor to urban deterioration in overcrowded neighborhoods susceptible to "South Bronx" process, we could then see a nonlinear ecosystem coupling between AIDS, contagious urban decay, and population shift. Elementary mathematical models are provided. Thus, in striking contrast to the middle-class male homosexual community, successful control of HIV infection in the Bronx, and by inference in other devastated ghetto communities, seems predicated on quick reestablishment of demographic stability: The tools to make the tools for control must first be reconstructed. Necessary elements of any program toward this end are briefly outlined. AIDS in the Bronx and similar areas, like tuberculosis, seems increasingly a marker disease of extreme poverty, and again like tuberculosis, seems increasingly a marker disease of extreme poverty, and again like tuberculosis, may well form an important reservoir for further spread or resurg
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PMID:A synergism of plagues: "planned shrinkage," contagious housing destruction, and AIDS in the Bronx. 316 63

This is a general discussion of the interrelationships between tuberculosis and AIDS in both developing countries. Breakdown with active tuberculosis is more likely in AIDS patients because of the virulence of mycobacterium as well as loss of cell-mediated immunity. A review of the prevalence of AIDS worldwide as reported to WHO in 1987 is presented. One key difference between the 2 diseases is that HIV- infected persons are infectious for long periods of time, and while the breakdown rate of tuberculosis decreases with time, progression to AIDS increases with time. In developed countries such as Netherlands, the prevalence of tuberculosis has fallen in recent decades from 20% in 1954 to 0.5% in 1987. Infection prevalence decreases with age in developed countries so that young adults have a very low rate. In developing countries, especially Africa, high proportions of young adults have been infected with tuberculosis and are still exposed to substantial risk of primary or reinfection. Although it appears likely that the number of tuberculosis cases will increase in countries with a major AIDS problem, AIDS will cause a shorter infectious period than usual. The Tanzanian National Tuberculosis/Leprosy Programme reports that 12,000 new cases appear annually, 7000 smear-positive. Related problems include replacing the antibiotic streptomycin, lack of sterilization facilities, inappropriate use of BCG vaccine in the AIDS epidemic, and added risks for health workers of tuberculosis combined with AIDS in Africa.
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PMID:The potential impact of AIDS on the tuberculosis situation in developed and developing countries. 322 2

Infections with the human immunodeficiency virus(es) (HIV) are likely to have a profound impact on the health of those in many parts of Africa over the next several decades. If there are adverse interactions between HIV infections and the endemic tropical diseases the overall impact of the HIV epidemic will be worse than that predicted based on observations on the natural history of HIV infections in developed countries. With the exception of tuberculosis, the evidence for such interactions is presently lacking, but this may be largely due to the dearth of informative studies. In this paper we outline the kinds of epidemiological studies required to investigate such interactions and discuss some of the problems associated with the investigations.
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PMID:Epidemiological study designs appropriate for investigating interactions between HIV infection and tropical diseases. 325 96

The group B streptococcus has been shown to be a major cause of meningitis in the newborn and an occasional cause of endocarditis and sepsis in postpartum women. Little attention has been devoted to this organism as a cause of bacterial endocarditis. Twelve patients with group B streptococcal endocarditis were seen at The Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY, between 1974 and 1985. There were seven women, five men. Ages ranged from 32 to 81 years. Serious underlying disease was present in all - diabetes mellitus in seven, carcinoma in three (bladder in two, and breast in one), alcoholism in three, malnutrition in two, heroin addiction in one, tuberculosis in one, serious prior valvular heart disease in two. The aortic valve was affected in four patients - mitral in two, mitral and aortic in one, tricuspid in four, unknown in one. The presentation was acute in seven patients. Metastatic infection occurred in seven, heart failure in six, major emboli in four, septic pericarditis in one, myocardial abscess in one. The group B streptococcus should be considered as a pathogen capable of causing acute endocarditis in certain patients with defects of host defense, particularly patients with diabetes mellitus, carcinoma or alcoholism. Cardiac surgery may be necessary in these patients due to the rapid destruction of the valves which occurs, in spite of the fact that the organisms are usually highly susceptible to penicillin.
Infection
PMID:Streptococcus agalactiae (group B) endocarditis--a description of twelve cases and review of the literature. 330 82

A review of 85 patients aged 60 years or more, treated in a southern Indian hospital for conditions requiring renal biopsy, showed that diffuse poliferative glomerulonephritis was the most frequent diagnosis, being present in 24 cases of whom 11 had elevated serum streptococcal antibody titres. Infections were also important in 2 patients with amyloidosis secondary to tuberculosis, in 3 patients with acute tubular necrosis following infectious gastroenteritis and in a patient with acute pyaemic interstitial nephritis with septicaemia. Drugs including indigenous medicines were the other important cause of renal disease, being implicated in 11 cases.
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PMID:Medical renal disease in the elderly in a southern Indian hospital. 338 Feb 27

Infections of face and neck represent serious and potentially life threatening conditions that are sometimes difficult to differentiate from neoplastic tumours, especially in subacute clinical forms. Conventional radiographic techniques offer interest for cervical masses, except Ultra-Sonographic exam, in sites regarding vascular axes, but carries little value for evaluating their spread into the different cervical spaces. On the other hand, C.T. is valuable to precise the location and the extent and to determine its inflammatory nature by studying the fats and the aponeurosis around it. It help in the analysis of associated adjacent signs: soft tissue swelling, extensive obliteration of adjacent fats, swelling of cervical aponeurosis, thickening of adjacent muscles. These findings are documented by the study of fourteen patients, admitted in St-Antoine hospital. All abscesses, except one, were easy to diagnose because of their low central attenuation. False negative cases are possible and noted by other authors. So, in absence of response to appropriate therapy, surgery is necessary to eliminate a misdiagnosed abscess. Furthermore, it's sometimes possible to suspect an etiology (foreign body, tuberculosis).
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PMID:[Use of X-ray computed tomography in cervical infections]. 339 90

Mycobacterium szulgai is an unusual pathogen that accounts for less than 1% of all cases of non-tuberculosis mycobacterial infection. Infections with this organism usually involve the lung but may involve soft tissues. Although similar to tuberculosis in its clinical presentation, infection due to M. szulgai requires different management, and it is therefore important to distinguish disease caused by M. szulgai from that caused by M. tuberculosis. Isolation of M. szulgai implies the presence of clinical disease, and when the organism is identified, treatment based on sensitivity testing should be initiated. Although no standard recommendations for treatment exist, most infections due to M. szulgai have been treated with combined high doses of isoniazid, ethambutol, and rifampin for 18-24 months. M. szulgai has been isolated worldwide; the first case of infection reported from Canada is described, and the clinical presentation, microbiologic diagnosis, and therapeutic management of M. szulgai infections are reviewed.
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PMID:Mycobacterium szulgai: an unusual pathogen. 360 95

The behavior of leukocytes, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) in tularemia caused by Type B of Francisella tularensis was analyzed in different clinical forms and severities of disease in 101 adult tularemia patients. The mean leukocyte count was 8.3 X 10(9)/l and the leukocyte differential count was also usually normal. The behavior of leukocytes was similar in different clinical forms and severities of tularemia. The changes in differential counts were milder than reported earlier. Both CRP and ESR were higher in severe than in milder forms of tularemia (p less than 0.05 and p less than 0.01, respectively), and CRP was higher in pulmonary than in ulceroglandular tularemia during the second week (p less than 0.05). There were high individual CRP concentrations of up to 225 mg/l in acute tularemia but there were also low CRP values (10-40 mg/l). Thus the behavior of CRP in tularemia resembled that seen in tuberculosis, and CRP did not always allow differentiation of tularemia from viral diseases.
Infection
PMID:Peripheral blood leukocyte counts, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein in tularemia caused by the type B strain of Francisella tularensis. 371 May 92

The majority of staghorn calculi (branched calculi)--25 per cent bilateral--is mainly composed of calcium phosphates, in about 2/3 with varying fractions of Struvite. Pure Struvite stones are rare. Large fractions of Struvite form a soft concrement. Infection with urea splitting bacteria arises ascending, therefore predominantly in female kidneys, except for the first decennium. Staghorn calculi without Struvite (1/3 of our cases), show extremely large growth and sterile urine. Some Struvite stones have sterile urine or Struvite without urea splitting bacteria. The shape of branched calculi depends on the form of hilus renalis and the aggressiveness of the alkaline urine and the infection. Renal cirrhosis--almost always present--follows bacterial or abacterial obstruction, depending on the degree of vascular obliteration by reactive fibrosis of the intima, with or without pyonephrotic, xanthomatous necrosis, similar to renal tuberculosis. The so-called "large stone kidney" is obstructive, aseptic and lipomatous special form of staghorn calculus and cirrhosis. Stone formation and grade of cirrhosis may be determined by tomography.
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PMID:[Classification of staghorn calculus disease of the kidney based on 105 personal cases and a review of the literature]. 371 38


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