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Query: UMLS:C0344232 (blurred vision)
2,072 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report the case of an AIDS patient with rare neurologic manifestations: primary vasculitis of the central nervous system and VIII cranial nerve dysfunction. The authors make a review on the subject, and call special attention for the differential diagnosis. In fact, the patient, a 36 year old woman, with promiscuous life, presented with dizziness, gait ataxia, nausea, headache and hypoacusia. Seven days after the admission, she noted blurred vision in both eyes and soon she became blind. The physical examination showed bilateral optic neuritis and vestibulocochlear dysfunction, stiff neck and fever. No abnormalities were detected on CT scan. CSF showed 40 mononuclear cells/mm3, 79 mg/dl of proteins and normal glucose content. Microbiological research was negative. Serum anti-HIV test was positive. The hypothesis of primary CNS vasculitis was made, and pulse methylprednisolone therapy was introduced with good recovery of neurological syndrome except for persistent amaurosis.
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PMID:[Isolated vasculitis of the central nervous system and involvement of the 8th cranial nerve: rare manifestations of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 130 67

A 38-year-old bisexual man with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) who was being treated with oral acyclovir for herpetic stomatitis had a history of blurred vision OS that was diagnosed as cytomegalovirus retinitis. The patient refused ganciclovir administration. Two additional lesions developed OS in the succeeding four months. All clinical evidence of active retinitis cleared after zidovudine was administered, and the patient has remained free of any clinically active retinal lesions for 28 months while continuing to receive acyclovir and zidovudine. Although ganciclovir and foscarnet are the drugs of choice to treat cytomegalovirus retinitis, this observation may be fortuitous for patients whose other AIDS manifestations suggest using zidovudine rather than ganciclovir or for patients whose cytomegalovirus retinitis appears to be resistant to agents currently used to treat this infection.
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PMID:Zidovudine and cytomegalovirus retinitis. 132 8

We report a case of presumed cryptococcal endophthalmitis that occurred in a patient with severe disseminated cryptococcosis and AIDS. Multiple small, spherical lesions appeared bilaterally on the surface of the retina 2 weeks after cryptococcal meningitis was diagnosed; the lesions were associated with multiple blind spots, blurred vision, and the perception of flaring of light. Over the next week, many more lesions with adjacent hemorrhages appeared. Therapy with itraconazole over the next 3 months resulted in complete resolution of the lesions. Cryptococcal endophthalmitis is a rare disease. Fewer than 20 cases, including five in patients with AIDS, have previously been reported. None of these patients regained normal vision.
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PMID:Endophthalmitis in a patient with disseminated cryptococcosis and AIDS who was treated with itraconazole. 166 51

Cytomegalovirus retinitis, the most frequently encountered ophthalmologic manifestation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), emerges in up to 46% of such patients. In the period between april 1989-May 1990, 4 cases of AIDS-related cytomegalovirus retinitis were diagnosed in Singapore and treated at Tan Tock Hospital. Presenting complaints included blurred vision, visual field scotoma, and a field defect. Clinically, cytomegalovirus retinitis is characterized by lesions, usually in the posterior pole, that take the form of fluffy white infiltrates with irregular, translucent, granular appearing margins. There is associated retinal hemorrhage and inflammatory sheathing, leading eventually to a profound loss of vision. The treatment of choice is ganciclovir, and the lack of enlargement of existing lesions is the indicator of successful maintenance therapy. Since ganciclovir is virustatic rather than virucidal, continuous treatment is required to prevent reactivation. Even with full maintenance therapy, 30-50% of patients experience breakthrough infection. Complications of ganciclovir include conjunctival scarring, scleral induration, and neutropenia. Moreover, ganciclovir cannot be taken concurrently with zidovudine, a drug that promotes the overall well-being and survival status of AIDS patients. The development of new drugs such as foscarnet is expected to eliminate the need for AIDS patients to make a choice between preserving their eyesight and controlling virus replication.
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PMID:AIDS-CMV retinitis: Singapore's first cases. 196 62

This article presents electronmicroscopy evidence of retrovirus-like particles with bar shaped cores in salivary and prostate glands as well as testicles of 2 acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. The 1st case, a 38-year old black male homosexual, presented in 1982 with diarrhea, malabsorption, and weight loss. In the following 1 1/2 years, he experienced recurrent Candida esophagitis, cutaneous and pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and cytomegalovirus. Autopsy in 1984 revealed residual Kaposi's sarcoma, disseminated cytomegalovirus, and M avium-intracellulare. The 2nd case, a 31-year old white male homosexual, presented in 1984 with Pneumocystis carinii penumonia and subsequently developed persistent fever, hepatomegaly, headaches, blurred vision, progressive liver function deterioration, and disseminated histoplasmosis infection. Autopsy in 1984 revealed an overwhelming disseminated histoplasmosis infection. Tissues taken at postmortem were examined by electron microscopy. Particles that conformed with the morphologic characteristics of AIDS retrovirus (a size of about 140 nm, a round shape with a double membrane, and an elongated core) were detected in the prostate gland of patient 2 and in the salivary glands and testes of both patients. This finding suggests that saliva and semen may be body fluids by which transmission of the AIDS virus occurs.
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PMID:Retrovirus-like particles in salivary glands, prostate and testes of AIDS patients. 298 94

In this discussion of infection control in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), attention is directed to nursing. Due to the fact that the majority of individuals who suffer with AIDS will be homosexual, intravenous drug users, or both, it is essential that the nurse historian be aware of his/her own feelings about the lifestyles of these patients. History-taking should be done in a nonjudgmental manner. A major pitfall to be avoided when taking a history is making assumptions about an individual's sexual preferences or activities based on the response to a simple question about marital status. It is important to note whether or not the person has a monogamous relationship or leads a polyandrous lifestyle. Another area that should be tactfully but explicitly explored when interviewing an individual who is homosexual or bisexual is the number of different sexual partners that he/she has been involved with on a weekly or monthly basis. Whether the patient has a history of sexually transmitted diseases should be determined. The use of recreational drugs should be explored. When taking the history of a client who uses intravenous drugs, it is important for the nurse to record the agents and sites of injection as well as to note whether the individual uses his/her own equipment. When reviewing the major body systems and the presence or absence of related symptoms, the nurse should note whether the client has experienced skin rashes/lesions, swollen lymph nodes, fever, extreme fatigue, weight loss, shortness of breath, changes in bowel habits, cuts or bruises that do not heal, and headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, or stiff neck. The physical examination of the individual with AIDS and an opportunistic infection usually will reveal positive findings in the central nervous system, respiratory system, gastrointestinal system, and/or the integumentary system, as well as the lymphatic system. As the leading cause of morbidity in the compromised host is infection, infection prevention should be regarded as a pragmatic necessity. 2 major things that nurses can do in the acute care setting to control infection are to limit the frequency of invasive or traumatic procedures and to reduce the acquisition of new potential pathogens.
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PMID:Infection control in the patient with AIDS. 608 77

In June 1993, in Taiwan, a woman admitted to a local hospital with cough, fever, chills, and difficult breathing who tested positive for HIV-1 infection was transferred to Taipei Veterans General Hospital. In January 1985, at a provincial hospital, then 46 years old, she underwent an anterior total hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy during which she received two units of whole blood. One of the blood donors was an AIDS patient who had been treated at the same hospital in 1991 and who had died in 1993. In the interim between hospitalizations, she had two episodes of herpes zoster infection, including oral ulcers diagnosed as herpetic gingivostomatitis, and an episode of oral candidiasis. Physicians at the Taipei Veterans General Hospital diagnosed oral candidiasis, herpes simplex type 1 virus infection forming ulcers on her lips, and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in June 1993. Her CD4 count was 0 and her CD8 count was 20%. Treatment consisted of intravenous (IV) trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) and oral zidovudine, fluconazole, and acyclovir. She continued this medication after discharge in August 1993. She was readmitted to Taipei Veterans General Hospital in February 1994 for blurred vision. She was diagnosed with cytomegalovirus retinitis. Her CD4 count was up to 1% and her CD8 count was down to 8%. The candidiasis infection had extended from her oral cavity to the esophageal mucosa. She was put on IV ganciclovir, TMP/SMX, and fluconazole. She was discharged 3 weeks after admission. Her condition deteriorated thereafter, resulting in her death in August 1994. Up until this study, this HIV/AIDS case was listed with 79 other HIV/AIDS patients as unknown cause. During the 8 years between HIV exposure and her diagnosis of AIDS, she had unprotected sexual intercourse with her husband. Neither the husband nor any of her four children have AIDS. Screening for HIV-1 in Taiwan began in January 1988. The authors urgently recommend that anyone who received a blood transfusion between 1984 and 1987 in Taiwan and who currently suffers repeated episodes of opportunistic infections undergo an HIV-1 blood test.
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PMID:Transfusion-acquired AIDS in Taiwan. 864 96

The authors studied the clinical histories of 17 patients with AIDS who were hospitalized with the diagnosis of Meningoencephalitis. Laboratory studies showed the causative agent to be Cryptococcus neoformans. All patients had fever and most had localized headache. Some patients had nausea and vomiting, nuchal rigidity and convulsions. One each had blurred vision, photophobia, periods of disorientation, ataxia, lumbar or cervical pain. Cell count, chemical analysis, India ink preparation and culture of the cerebrospinal fluid confirmed the diagnosis and the etiologic agent. Blood cultures were negative in the few patients on whom it was performed. The best results of therapy were obtained in the patients who received Amphotericin B and Fluocytosine (80%) in dosages of 0.3 to 1 mg/k/day and 150 mg/day respectively, for 21 days.
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PMID:[Cryptococcus neoformans meningitis in patients with AIDS at the Saint Thomas Hospital]. 896 38

Progressive outer retinal necrosis syndrome is a recently recognized variant of necrotizing herpetic retinopathy, developing in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) or other conditions causing immune compromise. We report a case in which the diagnosis of retinal necrosis syndrome was made before the diagnosis of AIDS was confirmed. A 41-year-old man presented with a 1-month history of blurred vision in his left eye. Ophthalmologic examination revealed extensive retinal necrosis with total retinal detachment in his left eye and multifocal deep retinal lesions scattered in the posterior fundus as well as in the peripheral retina in his right eye. The serologic test for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was positive. Despite intravenous acyclovir treatment for 1 week, the lesions in the right eye showed rapid progression. High doses of intravitreal ganciclovir were then given in addition to intravenous acyclovir. After combined treatment for 1 month, the lesions became quiescent and the visual acuity improved to 20/30. Although the patient soon developed full-blown AIDS, the vision in his right eye remained undisturbed. Physicians should suspect progressive outer retinal necrosis syndrome in any patient with rapidly progressive necrotizing retinopathy and test the patient for HIV infection. Aggressive combined antiviral agent therapy should be considered to save vision.
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PMID:Progressive outer retinal necrosis syndrome as an early manifestation of human immunodeficiency virus infection. 1008 72

Toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis is an important opportunistic retinal infection in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. It may present as diffuse necrotizing retinochoroiditis instead of a focal lesion and may be the initial manifestation of HIV infection. A 50-year-old heterosexual man presented with blurred vision in his left eye of 3 months' duration. Fundus examination revealed diffuse necrotizing retinochoroiditis, mainly at the posterior pole, with marked vitritis in the left eye. Serologic studies and aqueous fluid antibody titers indicated recent toxoplasmic infection. Positive enzyme immunoassays (EIA) and Western blot tests proved HIV infection. The retinochoroiditis and vitritis improved after an antitoxoplasmic regimen with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX). Nonetheless, toxoplasmic encephalitis developed 6 months after the onset of ocular toxoplasmosis and responded well to TMP-SMX. This is the first case of toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis as the initial manifestation of AIDS reported in Taiwan. We suggest that Toxoplasma infection should be included in the differential diagnosis of diffuse necrotizing retinochoroiditis and vitritis. We also recommend that adults with newly diagnosed ocular toxoplasmosis be screened for HIV infection.
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PMID:Diffuse toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis as the initial manifestation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 1082 Sep 54


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