Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0344232 (
blurred vision
)
2,072
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Transfusion-acquired AIDS in Taiwan. 864 96
Invasive Candida (IC) infection is the most common cause of endogenous endophthalmitis. Ocular candidiasis develops within three days and at least two weeks of fungemia. There are two characteristic ocular signs: Candida chorioretinitis defined as retina and choroid lesions without vitreal involvement, and Candida endophthalmitis defined as chorioretinitis with extension into the vitreous with characteristic fluffy balls. The most common initial visual symptoms are
blurred vision
and floaters. Amphotericin B, fluconazole and voriconazole are effective in the treatment of chorioretinitis; however, when vitreous is involved vitrectomy seems necessary. Early antifungal systemic treatment at first evidence of infection in patients at risk of IC, appears to decrease dramatically the incidence of endogenous fungal endophthalmitis, probably healing minimal chorioretinal infections. Routine ophthalmoscopic examination seems of little value in patients with positive blood culture, with early implementation of antifungal treatment, without symptoms of ocular infection and without impairment of the level of consciousness during the episode. However, periodic ophthalmoscopic examination should be performed in children with candidemia and critically ill patients with documented deep
Candida infection
.
...
PMID:[Ophtalmoscopic examination in critically ill non-neutropenic patients: Candida endophtalmitis]. 1649 24
A 45-year-old man presented with an unclear rapidly growing, infiltrating tumour of the anterior chest wall. Biopsies were non-specific, serologies remained unremarkable. Shortly after admission the patient developed
blurred vision
. Ophthalmoscopical findings were typical of candida endophthalmitis. Meanwhile, the tumour continued to grow. When it was resected, hyphae of Candida albicans were yielded from the tissue revealing it as a manifestation of deep candidosis. The infection had probably been acquired endogenously during abdominal surgery for early stage rectal carcinoma which the patient had undergone several weeks ago and which was followed by an unexplained fever. Interestingly, deep candidosis presenting as an infiltrating tumour of the anterior chest wall often combined with candidal endophthalmitis has been described almost exclusively in intravenous drug users after the injection of contaminated heroin [Collignon PJ, Sorrell TC. Disseminated candidiasis: evidence of a distinctive syndrome in heroin abusers. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1983;287(6396):861-2; Dupont B, Drouhet E. Cutaneous, ocular, and osteoarticular
candidiasis
in heroin addicts: new clinical and therapeutic aspects in 38 patients. J Infect Dis 1985;152(3):577-91; Bisbe J, Miro JM, Latorre X, Moreno A, Mallolas J, Gatell JM, et al. Disseminated candidiasis in addicts who use brown heroin: report of 83 cases and review. Clin Infect Dis 1992;15(6):910-23.]. Why the tumours only develop on the anterior thoracic wall is unknown. To our knowledge this is the first case described in literature in which endogenously acquired deep candidosis manifested as an infiltrating tumour in a patient who was neither immunosuppressed nor had a history of intravenous drug use.
...
PMID:An unusual case of deep candidosis presenting as an infiltrating tumour of the chest wall. 1660 50