Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (acute appendicitis)
3,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We determined the HIV-1 RNA and Gag p24 protein expression in gastrointestinal tract-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), deep lymph nodes (LNs), and inflammatory lesions, acquired during surgery on HIV-infected patients. Surgically excised gastrointestinal tract specimens, LNs, and cervices removed from HIV-1-infected patients for various clinical conditions were studied by immunohistochemistry (IHC) for Gag p24 HIV protein and in situ hybridization (ISH) for HIV-specific RNA. Fragments of some specimens were also submitted in glutaraldehyde for TEM analysis. Germinal centers (GC) in the GALT had at least as much HIV RNA and p24 protein deposited on their follicular dendritic cell (FDC) networks as did GC in LNs draining or associated with areas of inflammation or ulceration. The level of viral expression in the deep LNs, e.g., mesenteric and retroperitoneal, was at least equivalent to that seen in superficial LNs, i.e., inguinal, axillary, and cervical, and tonsils and adenoids. HIV expressing T and B lymphocytes and macrophages were seen in GALT and LNs. Virus-expressing mononuclear cells (MNC) were also seen in inflammatory lesions such as gastrointestinal ulcers and acute appendicitis. Abundant virus was seen in the cervix of patients with and without cancer and in LNs of patients with metastatic cancer. Individual and clusters of mature HIV particles were identified by TEM in LN GC and in GALT. Gastrointestinal tract lymphoid tissue, inflammatory lesions, and deep LNs showed levels of HIV RNA and Gag p24 protein expression in the range seen in superficial LNs.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2008 Jul
PMID:HIV expression in surgical specimens. 1867 77

197 patients with acute appendicitis were observed. HIV-infection was diagnosed in 82 (42%) patients. 115 (58%) patients without HIV-infection formed the comparison group. Patients with HIV-infection were arranged in the following way: II B stage--65 (79%) patients, II C stage--7 (8.5%), III A stage--6 (7.5%), III B stage (AIDS)--4 (5%). Annual increase of appendectomies in HIV patients is observed. Amount of patients with more serious stages of HIV infection also increases resulting from time factor of the disease.
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PMID:[Clinical course and surgical treatment of acute appendicitis in HIV-infected patients]. 1915 92

This is a case of a 34 years old male Hispanic patient with history of AIDS who presented to the ER with severe right lower quadrant abdominal pain of three days of evolution, associated with fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea, weakness and general malaise. Acute appendicitis, Clostridium Difficile Colitis and Ischemic Colitis were the most important clinical conditions to consider in the differential diagnosis. Abdominal CT with IV contrast demonstrated thickening of the ascending colonic wall a finding highly suggestive of a transmural inflammatory necrotizing colitis of infectious etiology. Broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy, cancidas and ganciclovir were started with mark clinical improvement. IgG antibodies against CMV were elevated. Typhlitis is a serious illness that affects patients with impairment in immunity. It is important to include it in the differential diagnosis of an HIV/AIDS patient that presents with RLQ pain and fever. Contrast enhanced CT-Scan is mandatory to establish the diagnosis and to differentiate typhlitis from other intra-abdominal pathologies. Therapy needs to be individualized.
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PMID:Right lower quadrant abdominal pain in an immunocompromised patient: importance for an urgent diagnosis and treatment. 2169 4

The aims of this study were to compare outcomes of appendectomy between acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and nonAIDS patients and laparoscopic appendectomy (LA) versus open appendectomy (OA) in AIDS patients. Using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample database, from 2006 to 2008, clinical data of patients with AIDS who underwent LA and OA were evaluated. A total of 800 patients with AIDS underwent appendectomy during these years. Patients with AIDS had a significantly higher postoperative complication rate (22.56% vs 10.36%), longer length of stay [(LOS) 4.9 vs 2.9 days], and higher mortality (0.61% vs 0.16%) compared with non-AIDS patients. In nonperforated cases in patients with AIDS, LA was associated with a significantly lower complication rate (11.25% vs 21.61%), lower mortality (0.0% vs 2.78%), and shorter mean LOS (3.22 days vs 4.82 days) compared with OA. In perforated cases in patients with AIDS, LA had a significantly lower complication rate (27.52% vs 57.50%), and shorter mean LOS (5.92 days vs 9.67 days) compared with OA. No mortality was reported in either group. In patients with AIDS, LA has a lower morbidity, lower mortality, and shorter LOS compared with OA. Laparoscopic appendectomy should be considered as a preferred operative option for acute appendicitis in patients with AIDS.
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PMID:Outcomes of laparoscopic and open appendectomy for acute appendicitis in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 2212 92

The fourth, fifth and sixth Millennium Development Goals relate directly to improving global healthcare and health outcomes. The focus is to improve global health outcomes by reducing maternal and childhood mortality and the burden of infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. Specific targets and time frames have been set for these diseases. There is, however, no specific mention of surgically treated diseases in these goals, reflecting a bias that is slowly changing with emerging consensus that surgical care is an integral part of primary healthcare systems in the developing world. The disparities between the developed and developing world in terms of wealth and social indicators are reflected in disparities in access to surgical care. Health administrators must develop plans and strategies to reduce these disparities. However, any strategic plan that addresses deficits in healthcare must have a system of metrics, which benchmark the current quality of care so that specific improvement targets may be set.This concept paper outlines the role of surgical services in a primary healthcare system, highlights the ongoing disparities in access to surgical care and outcomes of surgical care, discusses the importance of a systems-based approach to healthcare and quality improvement, and reviews the current state of surgical care at district hospitals in South Africa. Finally, it proposes that the results from a recently published study on acute appendicitis, as well as data from a number of other common surgical conditions, can provide measurable outcomes across a healthcare system and so act as an indicator for judging improvements in surgical care. This would provide a framework for the introduction of collection of these outcomes as a routine epidemiological health policy tool.
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PMID:A concept paper: using the outcomes of common surgical conditions as quality metrics to benchmark district surgical services in South Africa as part of a systematic quality improvement programme. 2394 51


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