Literature DB >> 10565137

[Factors for the onset of and the exacerbation of tuberculosis. 5. The infection and prognosis of tuberculosis among patients with immunodeficiency, especially HIV-infected patients].

H Nagai1.   

Abstract

The number of people infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is gradually increasing in Japan, and the morbidity rate from tuberculosis in the Japanese people is high. Accordingly, the number of cases with both infections is considered to increase in the future. Our hospital has already encountered 22 cases of HIV associated tuberculosis. HIV infects mainly CD4-positive cells. The extreme decrease in the cell count results in serious cellular immunological disorder. CD4-positive cell disorder induces disorders of B lymphocytes, cytotoxic T cells, natural killer cells, and macrophage functions. These destructive conditions show the state of immunodeficiency including macrophage that are most important for defense of acid-fast bacterial infection. Migration and activation of macrophages with cytokines derived from T cells are impaired to induce the following phenomena: hypoplasia of granuloma, failure of tubercle bacillus sppression, the spread to regional lymph nodes (hilar or mediastinal lymph nodes), and hematogenous dissemination. On this occasion, caseous necrosis and cavitation are unlikely to occur, and false-negative tuberculin reaction is often observed. The incidence of severe cases, which include miliary tuberculosis, tuberculous meningitis, etc., and extrapulmonary tuberculosis, are high among acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-associated tuberculosis cases. HIV-infected tuberculosis cases are generally regarded as endogenous exacerbation, but they include primary infection and reinfection as well. Even during the treatment for drug-sensitive strains particularly, some cases may have reinfection with multidrug-resistant bacteria, suggesting that caution should be taken against this point. Conversely, the association of tuberculosis is a factor for the poor prognosis of HIV infection, since it facilitates the development of HIV infection. If the bacteria belong to a drug-sensitive strain, the infection with them responds well to antituberculous drugs, the same as in tuberculosis cases without HIV infection, showing a favorable prognosis. However, the mortality rate of infection with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is extremely high.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10565137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kekkaku        ISSN: 0022-9776


  1 in total

1.  Opportunistic diseases among HIV-infected patients: a multicenter-nationwide Korean HIV/AIDS cohort study, 2006 to 2013.

Authors:  Youn Jeong Kim; Jun Hee Woo; Min Ja Kim; Dae Won Park; Joon-Young Song; Shin Woo Kim; Jun Yong Choi; June Myung Kim; Sang Hoon Han; Jin-Soo Lee; Bo Youl Choi; Joo Shil Lee; Sung-Soon Kim; Mee-Kyung Kee; Moon Won Kang; Sang Il Kim
Journal:  Korean J Intern Med       Date:  2016-04-27       Impact factor: 2.884

  1 in total

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